The Chicago conflict, narrowly considered, is
centered on two main issues. First, the
teachers are being asked to work longer hours with no increase in pay, and
refuse to do so. Second, the teachers
refuse to be evaluated, and paid, and risk tenure, based on student performance
when they believe many factors in that performance are beyond their control as
teachers. The school system’s, and city’s,
goal obviously is to improve performance in a period of extremely tight finance
at no additional cost. A longer school
day would most likely benefit the kids, but, as my mother would say, money is
tight and you can’t squeeze blood out of a turnip. The teachers’ goal is to be treated
fairly. They too are struggling in a
tight economy, and some may be “moonlighting” or at least babysitting while
their spouse works two jobs; they also are turnips. Anyone who has been married to, or has
children who are teachers knows that teachers’
workloads extend beyond the classroom. There
are undoubtedly also some “process” issues involving dominance struggles
between city leaders and union officials, but they are common to all
negotiations, and skilled negotiators get past them.
The first issue is one of fair compensation for
increased workload; the villain of course is our own desire to get something
for nothing. We want the best for our
kids, but are unwilling to pay for it, especially in tight times. We are the third turnip in this war. The taxpayer reluctance to properly fund
education means both mayor and teachers are strapped for funds. Times will undoubtedly improve, and so must
taxpayer willingness to pay fairly for necessary services, but in the meantime
other ways must be sought. The teachers
are being asked, in effect, to work required unpaid overtime. A narrow solution commonly used by other
types of organizations in such situations is payment of compensatory time,
creating a balance for each teacher of “unpaid” hours which can, in future
years, be converted into personal leave or vacation time or longevity
calculations at retirement. The “really
real” villain is our tendency to load onto the school system the unpaid burden
of correcting problems from outside the system. A wise old boss of mine maintained that the need for "overtime" usually indicated some deeper problem. In schools, too long a day may simply compensate for too short a school year, or a need to compensate for out-of-control deficiencies. A longer school year would probably be a better goal than a longer day, but that too would cost money the taxpayer is unwilling to pay, or politicians to ask for. But it is a goal this country needs to work toward. Our current school year is a vestige of a rural past this nation can no longer afford.
It so happens that the same villain, along with summer, social inequality and absolute testing standards, complete the gang behind the
second Chicago issue, that of fair evaluation, pay and security of teachers.
And an already recognized educational innovation is available to generate a solution. Studies have shown that much of the difference in grade-level performance
of public school students arises because children from more affluent homes
continue to advance during the summer while the schools are out, through camps,
summer courses, etc., that poorer children cannot afford. A major grade-level attainment gap between
rich and poor children in high-school is actually the product of the many
summers when the well-off advanced while the poor slid back a little. Testing children
at both the beginning and end of the school year reveals their actual progress
during the school year, when the teacher is in fact a responsible party, which
turns out to be much the same between rich and poor. Other inequality factors intervene as well,
like poorer nutrition, lack of home support, etc., but they are apt to be
distributed fairly equally across a school district, or a large region within a
metropolitan school district. A teacher
is much more likely to be fairly evaluated if the progress of students is
measured against the average progress, measured at the beginning and end of the
school year, of same grade-level students in the same school district. A goal of increasing the average progress during
the year of students in the class generates a workable standard for evaluating
teacher performance. It also clearly
defines educational issues for the community that lie outside the control of
the teacher and the school system. That
may in turn sensitize the taxpayer to where the real issues lie. Chicago’s problems are not unique to
Chicago.
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