The Thriller
Well-Known Member
https://www.deseretnews.com/article...en-board-to-include-them-in-negotiations.html
I was wondering what your thoughts on this issue are? Many here have worked in Pub Education.
Personally, I think this is the wrong way to go about to improve education.
First, I think it's ignorant and lazy to put a "one size fits all" cap on education. Some subjects, grades, schools, etc will show more improvement than others.
Secondly, by putting many teachers in no win or hopeless situations, corruption and cheating will undoubtedly follow. Has anyone followed the Atlanta, Georgia situation? The superintendent put so much pressure on principals and teachers to show improvement, that a massive cheating scandal was created. Principals/teachers changed scores and cheated on tests in order to save their own hides.
Do we really want the desperation, greed, the "win at all costs", the corruption and cheating that we see in the private sector to overrun our public education? I've heard that studies have also shown that merit pay often doesn't motivate. anyone else seen studies on merit pay? Help inform me if you can.
Thirdly, which is somewhat tied with the second point, it seems that there's a movement to change public education. As if it has become too unionized? Weird... and move it to a more competitive like situation found in the "private sector." Now, one could argue that the private sector is anything but free right now, as they have taxes, politicians, and other loopholes in their favor... But at the same time, with so much focus being on not letting "one child be left behind" doesn't moving education to a more of a private sector setting kind of work against this ideal? In the private sector, there are winners and losers. Is that really what we want in our education? Some teachers winning and losing... Some kids winning and losing... Some subjects winning and losing...
Fourthly, Ogden School District is the only district in Utah that is moving to a 100 % merit pay system (to my knowledge). What is going to become of that district when teachers recognize that they can find better jobs elsewhere? Ultimately, it's the students and parents who lose out. As their district and schools become the training grounds for new and desperate employees while better ones find better jobs and flee.
To me, moving everything to merit pay works well for politicians and perhaps districts. But it ignores the #1 and #2 problems that are hurting our system, class sizes and those who do not speak English or care about education.
Thoughts? Arguments to the contrary? Experiences? Discussion?
The new contract lays out a performance pay component. It states teacher raises will eventually be based on the results of to-be-developed evaluations. Traditionally, raises have been based on years on the job.
The board voted to continue experienced-based raises for the next two school years while it develops criteria for the performance-based model. By 2013-14, 25 percent of teacher raises will be based on performance, with the other 75 percent based on experience. The following year, 50 percent will be performance based. By 2016-17, 100 percent of raises will be contingent upon performance.
I was wondering what your thoughts on this issue are? Many here have worked in Pub Education.
Personally, I think this is the wrong way to go about to improve education.
First, I think it's ignorant and lazy to put a "one size fits all" cap on education. Some subjects, grades, schools, etc will show more improvement than others.
Secondly, by putting many teachers in no win or hopeless situations, corruption and cheating will undoubtedly follow. Has anyone followed the Atlanta, Georgia situation? The superintendent put so much pressure on principals and teachers to show improvement, that a massive cheating scandal was created. Principals/teachers changed scores and cheated on tests in order to save their own hides.
Do we really want the desperation, greed, the "win at all costs", the corruption and cheating that we see in the private sector to overrun our public education? I've heard that studies have also shown that merit pay often doesn't motivate. anyone else seen studies on merit pay? Help inform me if you can.
Thirdly, which is somewhat tied with the second point, it seems that there's a movement to change public education. As if it has become too unionized? Weird... and move it to a more competitive like situation found in the "private sector." Now, one could argue that the private sector is anything but free right now, as they have taxes, politicians, and other loopholes in their favor... But at the same time, with so much focus being on not letting "one child be left behind" doesn't moving education to a more of a private sector setting kind of work against this ideal? In the private sector, there are winners and losers. Is that really what we want in our education? Some teachers winning and losing... Some kids winning and losing... Some subjects winning and losing...
Fourthly, Ogden School District is the only district in Utah that is moving to a 100 % merit pay system (to my knowledge). What is going to become of that district when teachers recognize that they can find better jobs elsewhere? Ultimately, it's the students and parents who lose out. As their district and schools become the training grounds for new and desperate employees while better ones find better jobs and flee.
To me, moving everything to merit pay works well for politicians and perhaps districts. But it ignores the #1 and #2 problems that are hurting our system, class sizes and those who do not speak English or care about education.
Thoughts? Arguments to the contrary? Experiences? Discussion?