Colorado alters teacher tenure rules. Three other states have already changed the rules: Delaware, Illinois and Tennessee.
Colorado is changing the rules for how teachers earn and keep the sweeping job protections known as tenure, long considered a political sacred cow around the country.
Many education reform advocates consider tenure to be one of the biggest obstacles to improving America’s schools because it makes removing mediocre or even incompetent teachers difficult. Teacher unions, meanwhile, have steadfastly defended tenure for decades.
Poor teachers are only part of the problem. Add the educators that have been screwing the system since the fifties. They are politically correct and bend to the whims of the status quo. They somehow NEVER take responsibility for anything. I once asked someone on the state board why things were going so badly. I didn’t receive an answer, but I suspect that this political appointee didn’t comprehend the question. This is an example of what I mean. This is at the school district level. Another symptom of the problem: Detroit school board President Otis Mathis can’t write (seriously!).
It’s bad enough that Detroit Public Schools (DPS) graduates a pathetic 1 in 4 students, the worst in the nation. That obscene graduation rate is only that high because DPS commits ‘social promotion’ – the practice of passing students onto the next grade who are not ready, a practice that DPS emergency financial manager Robert Bobb has just ended (Detroit Public Schools Finally Ends “Social Promotion” – Passing Students That Can’t Read Their Diplomas). That same Robert Bobb has been fighting with the teachers union and with the Detroit school board for academic control of the district. The school board is lead by Otis Mathis, who wrote a mass email last August:
Do DPS control the Foundation or outside group? If an outside group control the foundation, then what is DPS Board row with selection of is director? Our we mixing DPS and None DPS row’s, and who is the watch dog?And here’s the beginning of an email to supporters a few days ago that started with this:
If you saw Sunday’s Free Press that shown Robert Bobb the emergency financial manager for Detroit Public Schools, move Mark Twain to Boynton which have three times the number seats then students and was one of the reason’s he gave for closing school to many empty seats.
Apparently being a Detroit school board president and having to compose written communications is so easy even a caveman can do it. The above examples are emails in raw, unedited form as per the Detroit News. Laura Berman, a far left writer for the News has this:
The rest of the e-mail, and others that Mathis has written, demonstrate what one of his school board colleagues describes, carefully, as “his communication issues.” But if these deficits have limited Mathis, as he admits they have, they have not stopped him from graduating from high school and college. In January, his peers elected him president by a 10-1 vote over Tyrone Winfrey, a University of Michigan academic officer.
“I’m a horrible writer. I know that,” says Mathis, 56, a lifelong resident of southwest Detroit. His difficulties with language were spotted as early as fourth grade, when he was placed in special education classes. His college degree was held up for more than a decade because he repeatedly failed an English proficiency exam then required for graduation at Wayne State University.
So apparently Mathis himself went through DPS, which explains a lot. Now how can the board claim that they are raising standards for education when their own president can’t write English? Isn’t this like hiring a blind guy to teach sharp shooting? Mathis is the same guy who said this: Question to Detroit School Board President: “What if every kid failed – should someone else step in?” Ans: “NO!”. Detroit’s education system is so bad, 33% of working-age adults, and 44% of all adults, read below the 6th grade level. Not good enough to graduate from elementary school. 60% of students entering community colleges need to take remedial courses. And instead of demolishing the failed DPS experiment that is only creating or saving government dependency, Granholm wants to build adult education centers, RUN BY DPS, to pick up the slack. So the very people responsible for the educational failure will be in charge of bringing adults up to speed (MI to Build Center For Adults Who Can’t Read Good And Wanna Learn To Do Other Stuff Good Too).
Holy cow! Let’s take a look at the parenting component.
Ya Wen drinks three glasses of beer per day and smokes ciggys like a chimney gone wild. She’s three years old.
Then there is Ardi Rizal, age 2 who used to throw fits if his 40 ciggy a day habit was not met. He is down to fifteen per day.
Of course, we can’t forget what elders do with children that they believe are misbehaving either. The elders have been know to bond with goats.
Okay, these are other country incidents, but what about those adults? Why would a mural depicting black children larger than others set adults off? These adults decided to tattoo their kids. Why don’t more parents raise heck about teaching to the test or social promotion (yes, it still happens and we will pay dearly for it)? It’s not just one symptom, it’s many. Getting rid of that Department of Education sounds sooooo good!
June 13, 2010 at 2:43 pm
Excellent post, McN.
As Antony says about obama choosing BP to handle the spew, Detroit in particular, and my experienced estimate is 100′s of other school districts, are having the arsonists put out the fire.
I was one of the earliest members of the teacher’s union in NY, in its second year of existence,so I started from a place of sympathy for the union’s aims. with. Since its beginnings, like virtually all other big unions in the world, the teachers union has increasingly practiced abuses as egregious as those it was founded to stop.
I would not discard tenure. I would recommend a conditional form of tenure, as opposed to the present almost unconditional version (any “conditions” now are either based on a teacher’s political incorretness, or are just on paper, for show).
June 13, 2010 at 4:32 pm
Colorado is setting a conditional tenure however, there are so many other variables that can make or break the success of that teacher.
June 13, 2010 at 3:56 pm
NO TENURE! I speak from parent/taxpayer perspective. Get education back to basics, stop ALL social promotions- and oh- yes- my pet peeve- Can we please require teachers to have a degree in a SUBJECT? Math? English? History? Science? A degree in something other than “education.”
My sister has her Master’s in “early childhood education.” My BS is in Hospitality Administration. Guess who has more English History, Science and Math credits?? (And, for the record, the higher GPA.) Hint- it is NOT the teaching sister. But hey- she has LOTS of curriculum management, classroom management, abnormal child psychology- gag me NOW!
Nope, no tenure. If you do a good job in most professions- you get to keep said job. Teachers and political hacks and weathermen- do a shitty job- we don’t mind- we won’t fire you.
Sorry- does NOT work for me! If I had kids coming up now- I would be home schooling- teachers today? Nope- would not trust them to educate my kids.
June 13, 2010 at 4:31 pm
It’s all about politics PMM. I understand what you are saying about who is allowed in the classroom and who is not. I find it horrendous. I was in the system for 26 years and I know we can do better. Basics skills are forgone for teaching to the test. Administrators eat school district money and produce little. Teaching is an art. Until this country’s attitude becomes reverent toward the profession, you will see mediocrity at its best.
June 13, 2010 at 7:38 pm
She doesn’t need to know. The answers are all in the book.
June 13, 2010 at 7:43 pm
Tenure was described to me by a college instructor as a process to allow educators to teach more controversial material without fear of reprisal. I can understand tenure at the college level, but why have it at grade schools? The unions usually handle how a teacher can be fired, tenure is superfluous.
June 13, 2010 at 10:15 pm
1539 as of late, tenure rewards those who are way out there. Or those that are in sync with the status quo politically. The unions have outlived their usefulness. It has become their entitlement.
You are correct in stating that it should probably be best to leave it for use in college.
June 18, 2010 at 11:01 pm
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