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D.C. Public Schools Teachers: More Accepting Performance-Based Bonuses Than Before

Dc Teacher Bonus

First Posted: 09/13/11 04:00 PM ET Updated: 11/13/11 05:12 AM ET

More highly rated teachers in D.C. Public Schools are accepting performance-based bonuses than in the past, American University Radio WAMU reports.

Of the 670 teachers eligible for bonuses, 70 percent accepted -- a 10 percentage point increase over the previous year, in which 60 percent of the 636 eligible teachers took the offer, according to WAMU.

Based on numbers reported by WAMU, the less a teacher was offered for the bonus this year, the less likely the teacher was to accept. The one teacher who was offered the highest $25,000 bonus took the incentive.

DCPS evaluates its teachers and staff on a system it calls IMPACT, which assesses teacher performance according to student achievement, instructional expertise, collaboration and professionalism.

The system was put in place under former DCPS Chancellor Michelle Rhee, and the incentives program allows teachers to earn up to $25,000 in one-time bonuses for high performance, and those earning ratings of "highly effective" for two consecutive years could see base pay raises of up to $26,000 annually, The Washington Post reports. Bonus offer amounts can vary based on factors like a school's socioeconomic layout or course subject.

IMPACT mandates that teachers be observed five times a year, scoring them on a scale of 1 to 4, with a score of 1 being "ineffective," and 4 being "highly effective."

Current DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson relaxed some IMPACT policies after she took her post, and the district further eased the policy this month with the announcement that teachers who earn "highly effective" ratings for the last two years and who scored a 3.5 average on their first two evaluations this school year can opt out of the final three observations, according to The Washington Examiner.

While D.C. teachers who earn the top mark of "highly effective" are taking in the bonuses, 413 other D.C. educators were let go for being deemed ineffective or failing to comply with licensure requirements.

The awarded bonuses and educator firings also come at a tumultuous time for DCPS. The district released in July standardized test results that show overall improvements among its students, but the results and the district's test practices have become the target of an Education Department investigation into alleged cheating among teachers to attain those scores, which also factor into a teacher's performance evaluation.


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More highly rated teachers in D.C. Public Schools are accepting performance-based bonuses than in the past, American University Radio WAMU reports. Of the 670 teachers eligible for bonuses, 70 perc...
More highly rated teachers in D.C. Public Schools are accepting performance-based bonuses than in the past, American University Radio WAMU reports. Of the 670 teachers eligible for bonuses, 70 perc...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
06:35 AM on 09/17/2011
Schools are finally following the American Business Model ....
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
09:35 PM on 09/27/2011
Yea and that has been proven to work so well. What a comfort.
10:17 PM on 09/15/2011
If the teachers that got bonuses are found to have cheated what is the mechanism for recovering their bonuses is my question?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
06:36 AM on 09/17/2011
The same as how investors and taxpayers recover CEO bonuses when the CEOs trash a company ... or an economy ...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeaceLove69
10:19 PM on 09/18/2011
If you base a teacher's job security on the test scores, then they'll do anything to make sure they're high. There's no way around that and you have to eliminate that as a determinant of teacher performance. It's not good for the students and teachers, and learning suffers IMO.
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
09:21 PM on 09/14/2011
Great just great.... looks like that merit pay thing is working. After all they are getting paid for cheating just like the politicians.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
06:37 AM on 09/17/2011
... and Wall Street.
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
12:54 PM on 09/17/2011
Yea and the banks. Ugh where will it end? The rulers just rule with money instead of title now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
12:07 PM on 09/14/2011
Wow, I'm not that far away from DC but, reading this, it seems like another planet.
Here, we have no unions, no bonuses, no job security...but I wouldn't trade my situation for theirs, not for a minute, not even with a bonus that's almost as much as my annual salary...what a mess in DC. :(
11:59 AM on 09/14/2011
The DC government has long been among the most corrupt in the country (think Marion Barry). It is almost as corrupt as Chicago.
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Kevin R Schmidt
08:18 AM on 09/14/2011
The bonus plan is an incentive for teachers to dumb down students. The students are not learning critical thinking skills which is the goal Republican education reform wants to eliminate.
12:00 PM on 09/14/2011
Oh, those Republicans again is it?
chuckl4826
OMG Jan.2013 The end of the "PUD"ERROR!
11:17 PM on 09/13/2011
What do you expect from the worthless union teachers in the DC = District of Corruption?
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jshop
Come together right now over them.
06:15 PM on 09/13/2011
Imagine the power one administrator wields with the ability to bestow that kind of bonus upon a teacher while subjecting other hard-working teachers to disheartening indifference, and condemning others to joblessness and perhaps banishment from their chosen profession! Many of these "expert" administrators making such monumental judgement calls either didn't teach, or didn't teach long enough to learn the work, much less develop the kind of expertise that ought to be required to make such evaluations. This is not the model which will attract "the best and the brightest" to teaching. And may well drive off competent people who reject the disrespect and uncertainty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grogger
Nothing is guarded more fiercely than unfair gain
11:35 AM on 09/15/2011
Maybe that's the plan, to drive away anyone with any respect, ability or integrity?
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
08:07 AM on 09/24/2011
It already is. Soon all the respectible people will quit or retire.
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lcr999
scientist
05:43 PM on 09/13/2011
As usual, a poorly written article. Something must be missing. Why wouldn't anyone take a bonus offered to them? What is the downside?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dakota Yates
08:44 PM on 09/13/2011
Yes, heaven forbid someone accepts a bonus who isn't a CEO!!
10:58 PM on 09/13/2011
They take away all their rights and they become basically at will employees. Absurd-you're great but take the bonuses you must risk being fired. Blood money at its best.
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12:15 AM on 09/14/2011
So teachers who don't qualify for the bonus have no risk of being fired? Is something wrong here?