grgr wrote:
What sort of penalties are possible for tenured teachers who receive a poor review?
Ummm in my school and in my state you will be fired..
Tenure is a joke in most Southern states. All it says is that you have to have a reason for firing a tenured teacher. Administrators can make up whatever reason they want and then back it up with evidence that they found two minutes before the meeting. There is no legal recourse in my state.
I think you are under the wrong assumption that every state treats its teachers the exact same way and pays the exact same high salary.
Not ever state is like the top 10 states in America for education.
Here is what my state has done in the last 6 years since the Republicans gained control.
1. Frozen salaries for six years. Also gave a two week notice before cutting $200 dollars from our pay check as an emergence budget fix. But hey I don't mind pay more in taxes than the average citizen.
2. New review system has done away with tenure.
3. Merit based pay scale based on one test from a curriculum that is not finished yet. Common Core is awesome
4. A brand new voucher system in a state where 90% of private schools tested behind their equivalent public schools. The stated goal of this by the state legislature was to put religion back into the schools thus paying for students to go to religious schools with no standards over a higher performing public school. Who cares if they get a good education or not as long as they learn about Jesus in the classroom.
5. Fired almost 10k teachers. Classes sizes in the state went from an average of 19 to 28. But they were able to quote some study out there that said class sizes do not matter.
You probably want believe this one. But my state has NO UNION. I bet you thought every state had a union to didn't you?
Would have left if I was under 50 but I am to close to retirement to move and start a new career somewhere else. I have a degree in Math and a masters to so its not like it would be hard to find a new job.
You can probably guess that the state I am talking about is one of the worst ranked states in education. Also only about 70% of the teaches in the state are considered highly qualified by the federal government standards. I'd say 70% of our staff is within their first 3 years and most will leave once they get the experienced and can get another job in a better state.
But hey all states are the same right.
Is it weird that if you look at the states with the best education levels in the county, they also pay their teachers the highest and have some of the strongest teacher unions. Its not hard to attract the best people in America to teach. The talent goes where the money is.
And please before you tell me to stop complaining every job has the same problems. All I am doing is defending the thousands of threads that start on letsrun about how bad teachers are and how good they have it. It always amazes me how many of these threads start and how uniformed most people are. Its easy to complain about how good teachers have it if all you look at are the top five paying states in America.