Yet Florida is on the threshold of passing a bill that will essentially do away with their job security and base a teacher's pay on how a child takes a test.
All of the pay contracts passed by unions and counties through the years will be done away with, and 50% of a teacher's pay will be based the results of one test, written in secret by a company, graded the same way...with no regulation.
The other 50% will be based on the principal's evaluation yearly.
SO...there seems to be a mindset that the only good teachers are at schools with good and honorable principals and high test scores.
Yet some of the best teachers I worked with through the years were at one of the worst-performing schools in the county. The home life of a child, the environment that surrounds that child, will not be considered. There will be no accountability for the child or the parent....only accountability for the teacher.
One of the state legislators, a Republican, had the idea to look at other factors instead of dumping it all on the teacher. He never pursued the idea, it was just dropped.
From the Orlando Sentinel:
Teacher merit pay and “factors outside of the teacher’s control” (plan to consider “home environment” proposed, withdrawn)Sen. Thad Altman, R-Melbourne, suggested this morning that the controversial teacher pay proposal be amended to take into account “the effects of the home environment.”
Altman proposed an amendment that would have added into Sen. John Thrasher’s bill a paragraph that said the new pay system had to consider “factors outside of the teacher’s control, such as, but not limited to, natural disasters, socioeconomic factors, age, home environment, etc.”
He worried, he said, that not looking at those factors would be “intrinsically unfair” to teachers. A friend of his, Altman added, is an excellent teacher who moved from a high-flying school to a struggling one, where teaching was harder in part because of outside factors — like poor dental care.
“How do you learn when you’re teeth are rotting out?” Altman asked.
But Altman, after explaining the reasons for his amendment, then withdrew it, saying there would be time to discuss that later on. So there was no further discussion on his idea in the Senate chamber.
The Sun Sentinel discusses the bill further. Rather critical of it.
Senate bill: Tough on teachers, short on reformNo one should mistake the measure linking teacher salaries to student performance on annual tests for a serious effort to reform education. A pointed jab at teacher unions and school districts is more like it. Unfortunately, the goal of improving classroom teaching, and rewarding the many solid educators in Florida, gets lost in the jabbing.
The bill requires school districts to stop using advanced degrees, contract negotiations and seniority to establish pay. Tenured positions would be eliminated, and salaries and job security instead would be based on annual student test scores and performance reviews. If school districts don't comply, they risk losing state funding and could be forced to raise property taxes to make up the difference.
So imagine the hordes of eager teachers rushing to work in a state where annual contracts are the norm, academic qualifications and experience count for little, and any pay raises, not to mention job security, depend on how well students perform on that year's standardized tests. We can't, and it's not exactly the big incentive Florida needs in its ongoing attempts to attract or keep quality teachers.
Yes, just imagine the teachers rushing to Florida with no job security.
The Democratic party and the teachers' unions in Florida are speaking out against the bill.
Teachers union and FDP v. Thrasher on the airwavesThe state’s teachers union and Florida Democratic Party have opened a broadside media attack on Republican lawmakers who are trying to end teacher tenure in favor of a merit-pay system in an effort to beef up school quality without spending more.
“If your child is a student in Florida public schools, brace yourself because Florida politicians are doing real damage,” Andy Ford, president of the Florida Education Association, says in a TV and Internet ad. Ford goes on to criticize recent school cuts and then says, “Now some of our best teachers are at risk of losing their jobs.”
That is because some of our best teachers are at low-performing schools where other factors like home life and poverty level are affecting the learning environment negatively.
Those teachers keep on working in the trenches, and I was one of them before I retired. At least I had the satisfaction that I would not lose my job if the students did not perform as well as those in schools with better over all learning climates.
It appears Florida is ready to take away any job security for teachers like that.
I will be waiting for the hordes of eager teachers to descend on this state for hardscrabble jobs with no security.