Honestly, it's hard to sympathize with them isn't it? They've been promised a 16% raise over the next 4 years in an economy with over 8% unemployment. Their biggest sticking point seems to be that they are subject to an evaluation system they don't like. Really? Is there an evaluation process that could result in a teacher being fired that they wouldn't object to? Health benefit complaints are laughable given how good they have it compared to an average private sector worker.It's hard for me to see them getting much public support, but Chicago is still a pretty union friendly city so I guess we shall see.Thoughts?
9/11/2012 9:43:02 AM
Typical, entitled government workers. Taxpayers are forced to pay their wages. Taxpayers are forced to send their children to the schools unless they can afford to make other arrangements; the vast majority of people cannot. The children get an abysmal education that is a true disgrace in this day and age. Teachers proceed to demand more money, more benefits, and more "job security", and stop working when they don't get what they want.What else is there to say? Unions can be a great thing, but not when it's an enterprise that the government forces people to participate in. For children in Chicago, there's no outcome that can be seen as a "win" here.
9/11/2012 9:50:47 AM
Fire them. Let the good ones reapply if they wish.I laugh bc the mayor would have been supporting them if he wasnt the mayor and now has to deal with this BS.btw, I think your students' test scores should be one component of an evaluation, not the entire thing. To base pay soley on that is ridiculous. Too many other factors, imo
9/11/2012 9:51:47 AM
http://theotherclass.wordpress.com/2012/09/10/teachers-strike-in-chicago-is-this-an-effective-catalyst-for-change/
9/11/2012 10:01:25 AM
There's no telling how long the Chicago Teachers Union strike — the first strike of its kind in the city in a quarter-century — will last, but, as this photo clearly shows, the protests have already taken a turn for the dirty."Civility has disappeared in Chicago Teachers Union protests," says Daniel Strauss, who snapped the pic. Truly.Make fun of the mayor's mother, declare him worse than Hitler, plant evidence that he's having an extramarital affair. But calling him a Nickelback fan? Unacceptable.http://gawker.com/5942212/chicagos-striking-teachers-take-protest-too-far
9/11/2012 11:20:21 AM
It seems Rahm Emanuel and I have something in common.
9/11/2012 11:41:40 AM
Not commenting on the points in the strike discussions, but there are some interesting national ramifications.http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2012/09/10/why-the-chicago-teachers-strike-is-bad-news-for-president-obama/
9/11/2012 11:43:55 AM
16% is nothing if their base pay is only 30-40 something (i don't know what their base pay is). My rent just went up 20%, gas is up etc., 16% is not much at all. But I do agree that it's hard to sympathize with them, based on the one article i've read. It seems like the city's requirements are very reasonable, i'm not sure what they intend to gain by striking. It almost seems like they were just itching for the attention or something.
9/11/2012 12:27:42 PM
Nickleback is just plain terrible.
9/11/2012 12:33:02 PM
9/11/2012 12:53:44 PM
9/11/2012 1:04:42 PM
^ Agreed... this is the best time to strike. Rahm Emanuel was supposed to begin supporting the White House's re-election bid through a pro-Obama super-pac. However, he's had to delay his activities to deal with the strike. Both he and the White House can't move against the unions aggressively because they're such an important group to Obama's reelection efforts; there is little stomach for a long, public fight. I imagine their hope is to squeeze more concessions out of Emanuel since he'll be under pressure to quickly end this.Also should add that this may be one of the few opportunities teacher unions have to try and slow the trend toward increased "performance-based pay" and charter schools that people like Michelle Rhee have started, particularly since they're going up against a Democratic administration that would be more sympathetic to labor on this issue.[Edited on September 11, 2012 at 1:24 PM. Reason : Added DC influence]
9/11/2012 1:22:11 PM
^,^^Makes sense.
9/11/2012 1:48:30 PM
9/11/2012 2:26:13 PM
9/11/2012 2:30:14 PM
9/11/2012 3:11:12 PM
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/9/11/chris_hedges_dems_owe_chicago_public
9/11/2012 3:42:15 PM
^^^You're citing statistics that do not isolate schools from parents. There is nothing to indicate that schools are failing kids. You put any one of America's primary schools in a developing nation like India, where corporal punishment is standard; where you're not cool if you don't have good grades; where the only two respected fields of secondary study are medicine and engineering. That school would be shitting Rhodes Scholars.[Edited on September 11, 2012 at 3:57 PM. Reason : carrots]
9/11/2012 3:57:33 PM
If Reagan could shitcan all the air traffic controllers and start from scratch, then Chicago ought to be able to do the same with its teachers.
9/11/2012 5:27:02 PM
^I'm sure that would do wonders for student's education.By the way, this isn't about teacher's salaries. Chicago public schools have a mountain of shortcomings, and most of the complaints are about class sizes and lack of access to resources for a successful learning environment.This outward attack on unions started by ^reagan and the air traffic controls leaves a power void that gets instantly usurped by private and corporate interests.For all their faults (and those faults DO exist), unions were one of the few roadblocks for power consolidation for the business and ruling elite.This country needs to develop a populist backbone, but that won't happen until people with a four year degree from run-of-the-mill public universities start to realize that their safety nets are burning right underneath their feet.
9/11/2012 5:41:30 PM
I have to assume that the value added metrics being implemented in Chicago are just as flawed as those that have been implemented elsewhere. See NYC schools for a case study of how far these measure have to go before they should be tied to anything of consequence. I have personal experience with value-added measures. The SAS Institute created the EVAAS system for NC to measure teachers' effectiveness, and while I was totally willing to give it a chance given SAS's reputation, I was very disappointed. Apparently I was a kick-ass teacher during my second year when compared to all other NC teachers (unlikely, to be honest), then I went to being a very average teacher my third year, then jumped up during my fourth year. I promise that my teaching abilities didn't wildly fluctuate. What did fluctuate was the SES of my students-- the very thing value-added measures are supposed to control for. Think about it, CS majors-- would you be willing to stake your career on an algorithm designed to isolate teacher effectiveness from ALL other variables a student might bring into the classroom? The notion is the stuff of science fiction, yet at this very moment teachers are being hired and fired based on these metrics. Admittedly, it's hard to sympathize with Chicago teachers, but they've picked the right fight.[Edited on September 11, 2012 at 6:57 PM. Reason : ]
9/11/2012 6:56:02 PM
As a raging socialist loving liberal, even I think this is turrible
9/11/2012 7:22:17 PM
9/11/2012 7:25:56 PM
9/11/2012 8:15:36 PM
no child left behind continues to be the one of the worst pieces of legislation bush passed
9/11/2012 8:52:41 PM
9/11/2012 9:04:50 PM
Oh look, how refreshing.The old garbage men in NYC make $80k argument.Original.Just admit you don't know shit. It's simple.
9/11/2012 9:32:13 PM
The salary is fine, maybe you could argue a bit high to be honest given the results they've been producing. However, considering chicago public school's awful, awful results compared to the rest of the state and the rest of the country they're going to have to do a hell of a lot to convince me that a pretty strict evaluation system isn't needed. I'm not saying that it should be based solely off of test scores, but you have to start somewhere.
9/11/2012 9:36:20 PM
The schools that get screwed are the rural and inner-city areas. If you can afford an expensive house your kid will be just fine.
9/11/2012 10:02:39 PM
Crime is way above the norm in Chicago. Is the Chicago PD to blame for this?Of course not. The same concept applies to teachers, as well.
9/11/2012 10:16:13 PM
I would say the police (at least management/administrators) would share a component of the blame for high crime.Likewise, teachers should share some of the blame for the particularly bad performance of their students relative to other places. $75k is what all teachers should be making, at least, after being on the job for 13 years. Of course the expectations should be high, but that's not off the wall.
9/11/2012 10:34:44 PM
^You win this thread.
9/11/2012 10:36:00 PM
9/11/2012 11:18:21 PM
If you're performing well below comparable school districts or, to use the police department comparison, comparable cities then yes, things probably need to change.
9/11/2012 11:29:06 PM
What comparable school districts? I'd like to know for my own research.
9/12/2012 9:13:41 AM
9/12/2012 9:23:49 AM
NYC and LA for starters. Both those cities post higher graduation rates than Chicago. Chicago is about on par with Dallas despite the massively higher ESL population in Dallas.Standardized testing scores rank Chicago below NY, Dallas, Boston, Houston, Atlanta, Miami-Dade, and the large city average in math and reading. In addition Chicago public schools score well below state and national averages across the board.http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/districts/It's a poorly run district with poor performance. Teacher's need to share some of the blame and accept that student performance will, and should be, what makes or breaks their evaluation.
9/12/2012 9:52:21 AM
I don't place too much stock in test scores, but I used your tool to look at average scale scores.For 8th grade reading:Chicago is "not significantly different" than Boston, New York City, Albuquerque, and Atlanta.Chicago did better than Baltimore, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, DC, Fresno, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia.Chicago did worse than Austin, Charlotte, Hillsborough Cty, Jefferson Cty, and Miami.For 8th grade math:Chicago is "not significantly different" than New York City and Miami.Chicago did better than Baltimore, Atlanta, Cleveland, Detroit, DC, Fresno, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia.Chicago did worse than Albuquerque, Austin, Boston, Charlotte, Dallas, Hillsborough Cty, Jefferson Cty, and San Diego.For 8th grade writing:Chicago is "not significantly different" than Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Houston, New York City, and San Diego.Chicago did better than Cleveland and Los Angeles.Chicago did worse than Charlotte.Albuquerque, Baltimore, Dallas, Detroit, DC, Fresno, Hillsborough Cty, Jefferson Cty, Miami, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia did not have data available.For 8th grade science:Chicago is "not significantly different" than Cleveland, Fresno, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia.Chicago did better than Baltimore and Detroit.Chicago did worse than Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Charlotte, Houston, Jefferson Cty, Miami, New York City, and San Diego.Albuquerque, Dallas, DC, and Hillsborough Cty did not have data available.I think there are issues in education that need to be explored, but we can't do that honestly if people in the discussion are calling public education abysmal or acting like Chicago is soooo much worse than everywhere else when it's clearly not.[Edited on September 12, 2012 at 11:38 AM. Reason : ]
9/12/2012 11:09:07 AM
So what does it take to make this much money as a public school teacher in NC?
9/12/2012 1:52:10 PM
You guys do realize that pay isn't the only factor in this strike right? Maybe the other reasons aren't getting much national attention. Here's a few others:
9/12/2012 2:14:55 PM
9/12/2012 3:05:08 PM
I didn't have AC in some classrooms in elementary school... in NC... deal with it.
9/12/2012 3:06:15 PM
fuck, WHEN I WAS IN SCHOOL they wouldn't turn the heat on until the last couple of weeks of winter and would blast the AC through the first half of winter.NO SYMPATHY
9/12/2012 3:07:46 PM
^^^^^In North Carolina, for certified teachers...14 years experience + bachelor's degree = $39,65014 years experience + bach + NBTPS = $43,84014 years experience + master's degree = $43,62014 years experience + master's + NBTPS = $48,85035+ years experience + bachelor's degree = $53,18035+ years experience + bach + NBTPS = $59,56035+ years experience + master's degree = $58,50035+ years experience + master's + NBTPS = $65,520County supplements can raise these salaries by a couple hundred dollars more up to a several thousand dollars more a year—the supplement is a percentage of your state pay, and depending on the county, the percentage goes up with more experience. Some counties can't afford to offer a supplement at all. And some counties offer a supplement, but they can’t afford to actually provide it to teachers--LOL if it didn't actually run people out of the job.http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/fbs/finance/salary/schedules/2012-13schedules.pdfhttp://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/fbs/finance/salary/supplements/2010-11supplements.pdf^^^^Yeah. I think the other issues are way more important to teachers than pay. If it was just about a pay, they very clearly would not have gone on strike. They're not assholes, folks.[Edited on September 12, 2012 at 3:08 PM. Reason : ]
9/12/2012 3:07:48 PM
heh, to be honest if I was a teacher in a classroom with no AC I would bring in 1-2 window units at my own cost if the school allowed it Random question: If a teacher teaches during a traditional school year (summers off) then shouldn't their salary be divided by 0.75 to make it equivalent to year round salaries for people in other fields?
9/12/2012 3:12:32 PM
With such a saturated teaching market and so many looking for work, they shouldn't negotiate at all.Fire them all and EASILY fill the spots with people MORE THAN HAPPY to work at the original contracts.Fuck all this 16% raise nonsense.At 75k a year you could cut the shit 16% with no AC etc (bullshit excuses) and still easily fill these positions.Case closed.I'm glad I'm not a public school teacher, not there or NC. Load of shit. I'd be embarrassed if these were my coworkers.[Edited on September 12, 2012 at 3:31 PM. Reason : -]
9/12/2012 3:30:58 PM
^^?Salaries were originally developed on the assumption that teachers would have several weeks off during the summer. So, no, they should not be divided by .75 (multiplied, to be correct). Why would you think that?And a lot of school windows don't typically fit AC units, but teachers do bring in a bunch of fans. But jaZon is right about the AC/heat thing. It's annoying that all buildings are temperature controlled except for the ones we happen to cram a bunch of kids into, but the worst part is definitely when they run the heat on a hot day and AC on a cold one.Typically, on an 80 degree day when the school is blasting heat, and kids are sitting there sweating like field workers, taking their ninth round of standardized tests for the year, tests that often don't line up with the standards or curriculum (what they've been learning in class)...that's when kids'll realize they've been right all along: school is stupid. And middle school is typically when kids will realize (out loud), "Oh, we go to a poor school." And teachers are like, "Uhhh, "[Edited on September 12, 2012 at 3:57 PM. Reason : ]
9/12/2012 3:33:36 PM
Maybe I shouldn't even participate in education-based threads.It sounds like you people work in the ghetto and/or 1930's.Individual thermostats in classrooms at my school for the fucking win.No, I'm not telling you vultures where I work.
9/12/2012 3:40:44 PM
9/12/2012 3:48:14 PM
^and not to mention that most of the buildings there are old, masonry buildings that do nothing but absorb heat and radiate it back into the building.Summer's indoors in Chicago with no AC can be pretty insufferable. There were plenty days where I would just leave my apartment and go to starbucks to get work done just to avoid the heat.
9/12/2012 3:58:54 PM