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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 17:19:58 -0500, "JimH" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. ~~ snippage Tom, do you believe that all teachers in a school district, regardless of skill or commitment to the job deserve the same pay increase every year? Should the bad teachers get the same increase as the good ones? Should the bad teachers be protected by the union so they keep their jobs? This is a interesting subject and one that can take up terabytes of bandwidth if the discussion turns - um - difficult. :) Let's start with the first comment - to wit:" do you believe that all teachers in a school district, regardless of skill or commitment to the job deserve the same pay increase every year? You have to separate this question into two because the first is totally different than the second. OK. Fair enough New questions so I understand where you are coming from on these 2 points: 1. Do you believe that all teachers in a school district, regardless of skills deserve the same pay increase every year? 2. Do you believe that all teachers in a school district, regardless of commitment, deserve the same pay increase every year? How do you judge commitment? It is self evident to the principal who runs the school. Talk to your wife. She will confirm this. Commitment to the job is evident during my job appraisals and always has been. Is it hours after school doing additional extra help? I do not understand your question. If you mean does *x* amount of after hours work equate to one being a good teacher, the answer is obviously "no". See my example below of a football coach. Committing to a non-paying coaching or mentoring position? How about Union commitment - doing all the dirty work in the organizational trenches so that teachers aren't beat to hell by administration's and Board of Educations? Union commitment? Bzzzzzz. No credit. Self satisfying. Self gratifying. Is bringing home reams of papers to correct on a weekend commitment or a function of the job? Are you in it for yourself or in it for the thrill of teaching kids? I guess you missed my point. And I thought your wife was a teacher. It's a subjective value and nothing that can be objectively valued. Is a gym teacher who does his/her job competently who has little or no out of school commitments or homework assignments less committed to teaching than a language arts teacher with tons of papers to read and correct? Nope. I can cite an elementary school gym teacher who was totally committed to his job. My wife knew it as did the principal. This aunt's rocket science Tom...so stop trying to make it that. Let's move to the second two - this is where the rubber meets the road. To wit: Should the bad teachers get the same increase as the good ones? First, you have to define the objective goals. How does one define acceptable, or outstanding, teaching? How do you define the skill set needed to acceptably teach a mixed classroom? How do you define a "bad" teacher? Again the answer is quite evident. A *bad* teacher? One who skates by. One who gives little concern over her students performance. One who leaves at the bell and does not *punch* in again till the next school day. Should that person *deserve* the union negotiated pay increase as the committed and skilled teachers? I say no. Are you saying yes? If your wife was a teacher perhaps you can also ask her. The simple answer is testing, but that is also a false value. A teacher with all high level learners will do much better on a standard test than a teacher of equal skill who has a mixed class of special education mainstreamers and middle skill level learners. Or a teacher with a mix of high, middle, low and Speds. A good teacher cannot be defined by testing. It is a start however. How do you judge the relative value of a Language Arts teacher vs. a Math or Science teacher - is one more worthy of money than another? Is one easier to teach than the other? Then there is a whole matter of seniority - it costs more for teachers with long term skill sets. Are these more valuable teachers than those who are first timers? How do you define it? If you find the answers to these questions, I know somebody who would really like to talk to you. :) In the end, they all got the same pay increase and the bad teachers continued to do a bad job teaching the students. Is that what the union is all about? No - or at least it shouldn't be. We agree. Unions should be about making sure the field is level and that nobody is taken advantage of. Later, Tom Actually unions are not needed in the teaching profession, amongst others. If we use your definition however (Unions should be about making sure the field is level and that nobody is taken advantage of.) then I guess the teachers union is falling flat on it's face. ;-) |
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