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2. What is tenure for teachers?
Tenure for public school teachers is defined as gaining permanent
employment after successfully completing a probationary period and
cannot be dismissed or disciplined without just cause and due
process. (Baratz-Snowden)
New Jersey in 1909 was the first state to pass a law to protect
teachers from being fired because of arbitrary principals.
Today, every state has a tenure law. These laws may be classified
under; fair dismissal procedures, continuing contract or service,
permanent status, career status, and post-probationary status.
(Baratz-Snowden)
3. Teacher tenure and district seniority has become an extremely
popular debate educationally and politically in regards to its
effect on student achievement. This presentation will look at both
sides of this debate.
Tenure should be in place because it protects our most qualified
and experienced teachers.
Tenure should be eliminated because it allows ineffective teachers
to stay in the classroom.
4. Teachers prove their worth with tenure
Non-tenured teachers work to achieve tenure by meeting necessary
requirements and expectations
specified by the school district.
These teachers go through a
probationary period in which
their teaching and
performance is assessed.
Tenure protects teachers who are willing to stand up to authority
and advocate for the interests of students.(Bratz-Snowden)
5. Districts have agreed to tenure through contracts.
Through collective bargaining, tenure is part of a deal struck with
employers for a sense of job security, assuming they continue to
meet the systems performance expectations.
Often times during collective bargaining with employers teachers
would work for lower salaries in exchange for greater job
security
6. Tenure protects teachers rights.
Due process rights are an important component to teacher tenure
laws because they help to protect teachers from dismissal based
upon unfound or unjust cases.
7. Teachers Need Protection
Tenure protects competent teachers from
arbitrary non-renewal of contract for reasons
unrelated to the educational process, such as:
Personal beliefs, unpopular political opinion, religious beliefs
and practices
Personality conflicts with administrators or school
board members, that dont necessarily reflect teaching
ability.
8. Teacher Layoffs/Budget Cuts
Tenured teachers have put in the time and effort to ensuring that
they dont get laid off before inexperienced younger teachers.
Tenure protects against districts firing senior
teachers for younger ones especially during
lean financial times.
9. Looking at.
THE
OTHER
SIDE
10. Tenure + Effectivness = N/A
In 2008 the National Council on Teacher Quality found:
-only 2 states require evidence of teacher effectiveness when
deciding tenure
-47 states award tenure in three years or less (which is not enough
time to formulate objective data)
-46% of teachers surveyed said they know a teacher who is tenured
but is clearly ineffective and shouldnt be in the classroom.
11. The difficulty of dismissing a teacher
-2008 in New York City only 3 of 30,000 teachers were dismissed for
a cause.
-Between 2005 and 2008 in Chicago only .1% of teachers were
dismissed.
-Akron/Toledo/Denver . 0% Thoma, Evan. Why we must fire bad
teachers, Newsweek. March 6, 2010.
Costs??
*New York State: $250,000 andup to 5 years to fire a
tenured teacher
*Los Angeles school district spent 3.5 million trying to fire
7 teachers out of 33,000 for poor classroom performance
over a ten year period.
*Illinois spent an average of $219,504 in legal fees to get
rid
Of a bad teacher
School districts call this the
dance of the lemons since
teachers cant be removed, they
get moved from school to
school.
12. What happens to students with ineffective teachers???
From the moment students enter a school, the most important factor
in their success is not the color of their skin or the income of
their parents, its the person standing a the front of the
classroom. (President Obama, 2009)
-In a study done by Stanford University: removing 6-10% of the
lower quartile would take the United States from 29th to 7th in
ranking internationally of math scores.
If the effects were to accumulate, having a top-quartile teacher
rather than a bottom quartile teacher four years in a row would
be:
Enough to close the black-white test score gap
Have twice the impact of reducing class size from 22 to 16.
Source: Gordon, R., Kane, T.J., and Staiger, D.O.
(2006).Identifying Effective teachers Using Performance on the Job.
Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution.
13. Last Hired, First Fired
When teacher tenure is followed and school districts need to make
cuts based on finances the newly hired and less experienced
teachers are first to lose their jobs.
Least Effective
Teachers
Most Effective
Teachers
Only 13-16%
of the teachers laid off in a seniority-based system would also
have been cut under an effectiveness-based system.
Layoffs based on effectiveness cut only the lowest-performing
teachersregardless of how long they have taught. Top performers of
all experience levels are protected.
Seniority-based layoffs ignore the fact that novice teachers are
not always the least effective teachers. Teachers of all levels of
effectiveness lose their jobs; 80% of those cut are better than the
lowest performers who continue teaching.
Sources: (1) Boyd, Donald; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; and
Wyckoff, James (2010). Teacher Layoffs: An Empirical Illustration
of Seniority v. Measures of Effectiveness. The Urban Institute,
National Center for the Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education
Research (CALDER). (2) Goldhaber, Dan and Theobold, Roddy(2010).
Assessing the Determinants and Implications of Teacher Layoffs.
Center for Education Data & Research, University of
Washington-Bothell.
14. Tenure makes number of teacher layoffs larger
Budget cuts have resulted in the most rampant layoffs of teachers
and other government employees in decades, as 72,700 education jobs
were eliminated in September (2010) on a seasonally adjusted
basis.
Goldhaber, Dan. A worm in the apple, The implications of Senority
Based Teacher Layoffs. NRI. Jan 13, 2011
15. BIG QUESTION
Does teacher tenure still fit into our educational
system?