Category Archives: K-12 issues

Wales: 300 teachers ‘facing redundancy’

BBC: 300 teachers ‘facing redundancy’

Schools in Neath Port Talbot could be worse hit by the redundancies

As many as 300 teachers in Wales are claimed to be facing redundancy, with falling pupil numbers resulting in tighter budgets blamed.

The National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT) says some 90 schools intend to cut jobs between now and August.

Report Shows Stunning Failures in High-School Graduation Rates

The Chronicle News Blog: Report Shows Stunning Failures in High-School Graduation Rates

Washington — In 17 of the nation’s 50 largest cities, less than half of the students who entered high school in 2003 ended up graduating. In Detroit, which has the lowest graduation rate of the top 50 cities, not even one in four students finished high school.

Those sobering statistics were compiled in a report released today by the America’s Promise Alliance, which intends to draw attention to poor graduation rates, especially in urban areas.

The alliance hopes to convene summits over the next two years in all 50 states, as well as the country’s 50 largest cities, in an effort to focus on what it is calling a graduation-rate crisis. At a press conference here today announcing the effort, a star-studded lineup of officials linked lagging high-school graduation rates and poor college preparation to America’s economic health, and pressed the need for renewed discussion of ways to graduate more students. The officials included Education Secretary Margaret Spellings and Sen. Richard Burr, a Republican of North Carolina.

“From the home all the way through high school and college, it’s a connected system,” said Colin L. Powell, the former secretary of state and a founder of the alliance. —JJ Hermes

UK: ‘Retrain ex-troops’ as teachers

BBC: ‘Retrain ex-troops’ as teachers

Ex-servicemen and women should be retrained as teachers to bring military style discipline to tough inner city schools, a think tank has said.

The government is being urged to adopt a US-style programme returning former soldiers, sailors and airmen to school.

The Centre for Policy Studies says ex-soldiers could have a profound effect on discipline and learning.

Australia: More than 25,000 state school teachers to go on strike

Herald Sun: More than 25,000 state school teachers to go on strike

THE State Government could build a new primary school or hire 250 extra teachers with the $9.67 million it will save by not paying striking teachers.

On Thursday, more than 25,000 state school teachers demanding better pay and conditions are expected to walk off the job for the second time in three months. More than 10,000 will rally at Vodafone Arena before marching to Parliament.

Tunisian teachers stage two-day strike

Magharebia: Tunisian teachers stage two-day strike

The General Syndicate for Secondary Education organised a strike by high school teachers throughout Tunisia on Wednesday and Thursday. The union protested what it calls the Ministry of Education’s politically-motivated actions against teachers.

Tunisian high-school teachers went on a two-day strike this week in response to a call from their union to protest actions by the Ministry of Education. In a message to its members last week, the syndicate asked that teachers strike on January 16th and 17th “to confront the oppression and the injustice with which the Ministry of Education has dealt with the unionists in general, … to claim the right of employment and the unionist right, and to demand the return of those teachers who have been oppressively expelled and transferred”.

Chicago: Thousands working without full pay while union quietly complains

Substance: Thousands working without full pay while union quietly complains

The CTU (Chicago Teachers Union) House of Delegates met at Plumbers Hall, 1340 West Washington Blvd., on October 3, 2007, after a tumultuous month during which stunned delegates witnessed their union chiefs ramrod through, by any means possible, a sweetheart deal of a contract for the mayor. And as the opening months of school unfolded, CTU members discovered that the contract didn’t even say when they would get their pay raises, how soon they would get their back pay, and why those who worked overtime were being paid less than they had in previous years.

New York: Union threatens as Catholic teachers call in sick

Newsday: Union threatens as Catholic teachers call in sick

Four city Catholic high schools were forced to send hundreds of students home early yesterday after lay teachers called in sick to protest failed contract negotiations with the Archdiocese of New York.

Battle Between Big Labor Unions Hits Puerto Rico

New America Media: Battle Between Big Labor Unions Hits Puerto Rico

The competition between the two most powerful labor federations in the United States has moved to Puerto Rico, where “Change to Win”, whose leadership includes New York-based Puerto Rican union leader Dennis Rivera, is trying to compete with the teacher’s union, the island’s largest. By the middle of January, Change to Win expects to hold a meeting on the island in which the union will lay out instructions on how it will try to displace the Teacher’s Federation of Puerto Rico from its position as exclusive representative of the tens of thousands of teachers working in the public school system.

This labor drama is much more than just a challenge to represent workers, but may well be the battle that marks a major step backward for the AFL-CIO in this Caribbean nation. The battle takes place in anticipation of a major teacher’s strike that threatens to paralyze the public school system and in which Change to Win (United for Change) is positioned as a strategic ally of the island’s autonomous government, which wants to push the Teacher’s Federation out.

Pittsburgh: City, teachers continue contract talks

Post Gazette: City, teachers continue contract talks

Negotiators for the Pittsburgh Public Schools and the teachers union met for about three hours yesterday and will meet again Wednesday.

After yesterday’s session, district Chief of Staff Lisa Fischetti said “no conclusions” had been reached. Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers President John Tarka said he wasn’t able to give details.

The union represents about 3,500 teachers and other employees in three bargaining units. The workers have been without contracts since June 30 and have authorized a strike, if necessary.

New York: Plan to expand role of universities in K-12

Inside Higher Ed: A special panel reviewing higher education in New York State is preparing a plan that would call for radically increased role for colleges in working with elementary and secondary schools. In what appears to be a trial balloon, parts of the plan were revealed to The New York Sun, which reported that “education empowerment zones” would be created in which college faculty members would play more of a role in helping with the curriculum, and colleges might set up “early college high schools” and other links between higher ed and K-12. A preliminary report from the panel — appointed by Gov. Eliot Spitzer — is expected by December 1. Sources familiar with the panel’s deliberations told Inside Higher Ed that the emphasis described in the Sun article was correct, but that references to a huge infusion of funds for higher education were not, given the state’s overall budget picture.

New York: Lay faculty union to vote on contract Tuesday

Poughkeepsie Journal: Lay faculty union to vote on contract Tuesday

Some teachers at Our Lady of Lourdes High School may be preparing for a strike.

New York Lay Faculty Association, the union representing 435 non-religious teachers, guidance counselors and other faculty in Catholic schools in New York, will vote Tuesday whether to accept a contract proposal from the Archdiocese of New York.

Ontario: Religious schools set to give Liberals majority

The Globe and Mail: Religious schools set to give Liberals majority

Progressive Conservative Leader John Tory’s proposal to fund faith-based schools has inflicted enormous damage on his party, leaving it trailing 15 points behind the Liberals on the eve of tomorrow’s election, according to a new poll.

Israel: Teachers union may defy order, strike in first week of school year

Haaretz: Teachers union may defy order, strike in first week of school year

The Association of Secondary School Teachers may violate an injunction forbidding them to strike during the first week of the new school year, according to people who attended an emergency meeting called by the union yesterday.

Long Reviled, Merit Pay Gains Among Teachers

The New York Times: Long Reviled, Merit Pay Gains Among Teachers

For years, the unionized teaching profession opposed few ideas more vehemently than merit pay, but those objections appear to be eroding as school districts in dozens of states experiment with plans that compensate teachers partly based on classroom performance.

Under NCLB Pressure, Districts Negotiate School Improvement With Unions

Education Week: Under NCLB Pressure, Districts Negotiate School Improvement With Unions

The school district in Anne Arundel County, Md., this spring entered into what appears to be a unique contract with the local teachers’ union over struggling Annapolis High School: Teachers will work year-round and make a commitment to stay at the school for three years.

Maryland: Universities uneven as guardians of schools

Baltimore Sun: Universities uneven as guardians of schools

Across the nation, big city school districts have been handing off a few of their most troubled schools to universities, just as Baltimore is turning over five schools to Towson University to oversee.

But the success of such partnerships has varied, with scant evidence that public schools do better under the guardianship of the ivory tower.

Detroit: 555 DPS workers face layoffs

Detroit News: 555 DPS workers face layoffs

Detroit Public Schools sent layoff notices to 555 teachers, counselors and other union members who could lose their jobs at the end of this academic year, according to the Detroit Federation of Teachers.

The notices, sent to teachers over the past two days, come as the district and union struggle with finances and declining enrollment.

The district projects a revenue loss in excess of $110 million for next year, spokesman Lekan Oguntoyinbo said. The federation owes about $2 million in past dues to its state and national affiliates and is working out a payment plan to avoid going broke.

This is the second round of layoffs for teachers this academic year. In October, 430 teachers received layoff notices following the 16-day teacher strike.

Two L.A. charter school teachers lose their jobs over a planned Black History Month presentation.

Los Angeles Times: Not the lesson they intended

By Carla Rivera
Times Staff Writer

March 19, 2007

Administrators at a Los Angeles charter school forbade students from reciting a poem about civil rights icon Emmett Till during a Black History Month program recently, saying his story was unsuitable for an assembly of young children.

Teachers and students said the administration suggested that the Till case — in which the teenager was beaten to death in Mississippi after allegedly whistling at a white woman — was not fitting for a program intended to be celebratory, and that Till’s actions could be viewed as sexual harassment.

The decision by Celerity Nascent Charter School leaders roiled the southwest Los Angeles campus and led to the firing of seventh-grade teacher Marisol Alba and math teacher Sean Strauss, who had signed one of several letters of protest written by the students.

The incident highlights the tenuous job security for mostly nonunion teachers in charter schools, which are publicly financed but independently run. California has more than 600 charter schools, and their ranks continue to swell. According to the California Teachers Assn., staff at fewer than 10% of charter schools are represented by unions.

“I never thought it would come to this,” said Alba, who helped her students prepare the Till presentation, in which they were going to read a poem and lay flowers in a circle. “I thought the most that would happen to me [after the event was canceled] is that I’d get talked to and it would be turned into a learning and teaching experience.”

School officials refused to discuss the particulars of the teachers’ firings but said the issue highlights the difficulty of providing positive images for students who are often bombarded by negative cultural stereotypes.

“Our whole goal is how do we get these kids to not look at all of the bad things that could happen to them and instead focus on the process of how do we become the next surgeon or the next politician,” said Celerity co-founder and Executive Director Vielka McFarlane. “We don’t want to focus on how the history of the country has been checkered but on how do we dress for success, walk proud and celebrate all the accomplishments we’ve made.”

McFarlane said details of the Till case were too graphic for an assembly that included kindergartners. The principal, Grace Canada, could not be reached for comment. McFarlane, speaking for the school, said her review of the incident did not support the teachers’ allegations that Canada had used the term sexual harassment to describe Till’s behavior.

But Alba said that when the principal informed the class that they could not recite their poem, she gave the example of a construction worker whistling at her as she walked down the street.

“She said that she would be offended by that and that what Emmett Till did could be considered sexual harassment,” said Alba. “She used the phrase a couple of times and when I objected, she said ‘OK, inappropriately whistled at a woman.’ ”

Many parents said their children affirmed that account. Marcia Alston, mother of a seventh-grader, called the school to say she was appalled at its interpretation of history and the treatment of the teachers. She said that in the conversation, the principal used the term “rude” to describe Till’s actions.

“Mr. Strauss and Ms. Alba were excellent teachers,” said Alston. “The fact that they and the students had signed a letter, I thought, was good; it was something they were passionate about and it could be used as a learning tool.”

Verna Hampton, whose daughter was in Alba’s homeroom and signed a letter, said she was especially offended that the incident occurred during Black History Month. Hampton said her daughter told her there was nothing offensive in the letter she signed.

“Those teachers should not have lost their jobs for standing up for what they felt was right; that sends the wrong message,” Hampton said. “The kids didn’t even get a chance to say goodbye.”

Alba, 30, began teaching at Celerity when it opened in the fall of 2005 shortly after she received her credential. She taught social studies and science and is now looking for another job. She is writing to the school’s board of trustees to request a hearing, and Strauss has drafted a letter to the board complaining that his firing was unjustified. Under the contract signed by the teachers, they can be fired with or without cause.

In the letter terminating his employment, dated March 6, Strauss was said to have been “disparaging the school to students and parents and authorizing by physical signature a nonsupportive message to the administrative staff.”

According to Alba and Strauss, individual students wrote 10 to 15 protest letters, some of which were signed by other students. Neither the teachers nor the students made copies, they said.

“The kids felt strongly about this, and because these are my students, I felt one of my jobs was to pay attention to them,” said Strauss, who is earning a credential at Cal State Dominguez Hills. “It’s important anywhere a teacher works that the employer be willing to listen and keep an open mind and maybe even be willing to change their mind if they learn something new.”

Frank Wells, a spokesman for the California Teachers Assn., said the Celerity incident highlights the importance his group has placed on organizing charter school teachers statewide.

“This points out the vulnerability of teachers in some charters where they don’t have safeguards and can be fired for any or no reason,” Wells said.

Celerity Nascent (the name is derived from words meaning swift or accelerated development) opened in the Jefferson Park area last school year as a K-6 charter campus with about 330 students. Seventh grade was added this year, and there are plans to add eighth grade next year.

Of its nearly 500 students, 80% are African American and about 19% are Latino. McFarlane, who is black, said 65% of the staff members live in the neighborhood and that part of the school’s mission is to create jobs in the community.

Most students are below grade level in reading when they enroll, and many have behavioral problems, school officials said. McFarlane, who worked for 14 years as a teacher and principal in the Los Angeles Unified School District, said that with its focus on project-based, “culturally responsive” learning, student achievement is rising and parents are more involved in their children’s learning.

Gary L. Larson, a spokesman for the California Charter Schools Assn., said Celerity is well-run and its administrators highly regarded. He defended the school’s right to judge the appropriateness of the Till presentation and to dismiss teachers.

“If they felt that it was too sensitive in nature, and as long as they are following approved procedures, they have the authority,” Larson said.

Many parents agreed with the school’s decision to omit the Till presentation. During February’s Black History Month program, the seventh-graders’ poem, based on the book “A Wreath for Emmett Till,” was replaced by a reading on the civil rights struggle as a whole.

“There’s no celebration in the Emmett Till story,” said Stephen Weathers, president of the school’s parent organization. “He was beaten for whistling at a white woman, and I don’t want my daughter to know that in the fourth grade. I don’t think a celebration of Black History Month is a forum for that story. It’s important, but that wasn’t the stage for it.”

Scot Brown, associate professor of history and African American studies at UCLA, said it was unfortunate that school officials and the teachers did not find common ground.

“I’m surprised that the teachers and principal could not work out a way for students to do this presentation in a way that highlights the significance and importance of Emmett Till’s loss to the larger black freedom struggle,” said Brown. “It’s much bigger than the acts of violence you don’t want kids exposed to ….

“It sounds to me that by laying a wreath and saying a poem, the students and teachers were working through the meaning of his sacrifice to the black freedom struggle, and that’s very important.”

India: Annual exams for teachers

Mumbai Mirror: Annual exams for teachers

All teachers will have to sit for an exam in their own subjects and GK; state govt wants to know if they’re fit to give lessons

Mexico: National teachers’ union forms new section in challenge to Oaxaca teachers

El Univeral: Teachers union forms new section

The national teachers union (SNTE) on Friday approved a new regional union to challenge the dominance of the Section 22 union that was at the center of this year´s unrest in Oaxaca