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Amy B. Dean

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The Top Takeaway From the Teachers' Strike: We Need Collaboration to Fix Public Schools

Posted: 09/19/2012 2:49 pm

"We are striking to improve the conditions in the schools. Right now the children are getting a raw deal."

That statement came from a striking member of the Chicago Teachers' Union... in 1969. It still resonates in September 2012, when the CTU's members have again walked a picket line. Although it has often been obscured in the news headlines and in the rhetoric of city officials, the real message of the strike of the past two weeks is simple: We're for good schools; we're for kids; and, yes, we're for teachers too.

There's no shame in teachers standing up for their self-interest. When one is devoted to working for the common good over the long haul, taking care of oneself is a necessary part of being a good steward. People who go into the teaching profession don't do it to get rich. They do it with the goal of inspiring and educating the next generation.

By framing the strike as being about greedy teachers threatening the public well-being, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and his lieutenants have not only done long-term damage to the cause of repairing our schools; they have engaged in a practice that, sadly, is all too common in our nation's politics. They attempted to blame a complex problem on a single group. It's called scapegoating. And scapegoating should never be a substitute for leadership.

The takeaway from the Chicago strike is that true leadership in education requires partnership -- an approach that supports what is working in our schools and creates a collaborative effort among teachers, school officials, and policymakers to make sure we build on that success.

Education as Engine of Urban Economies

There's a reason why many big city mayors are trying to take a stronger role in steering their cities' school systems. In a globalized economy, there isn't much mayors can do independently to foster development and improve the economic competitiveness of their metropolitan regions. They have some tools available in the realms of housing and transportation. But good schools are a reliable driver of economic success, as prominent education thinkers like University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan have documented. Ambitious mayors recognize this fact. That's why Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa -- who himself came out of a teachers' union -- has joined Emanuel in moving to exert more influence over his city's schools.

Such mayors are right to understand the economic importance of schools. The question is, are regional political leaders like Emanuel willing to work with teachers to educate poor and wealthy kids alike? Or will we wind up, as respected education scholar Diane Ravitch warns, with a permanent two-tiered system, with elite charter schools for the (mostly richer) kids who score high on standardized tests? Under such a system, kids who may be smart but lack the vocabulary and support to succeed on the tests will languish in sweltering, inadequately supplied classrooms.

Iconic Chicago mayor Harold Washington understood that collaboration around education could enhance the economic vitality of the city. That's why he brokered the peace in response to public outcry at the last Chicago teachers' strike in 1987. Washington saw that business leaders and parents needed him to work with teachers to keep the machinery of education running, so working parents wouldn't have to take more time off for the strike, and so kids could resume learning the skills they would need later to be effective members of the workforce.

The way forward is to create abundantly resourced public school systems that will push economic growth in cities and regions. Innovating and improving public schools helps attract middle- and upper-income families to cities and regions to build a healthy tax base. Mayors such as Emanuel should be funding public education and supporting what is already working -- including strategies invented by unionized teachers -- within public schools.

Partnership in Practice

Successful examples of smart educational investment in partnership with teachers' unions do exist. Take Montgomery County, MD, where students at one neighborhood school continually scored low on tests. The administration, working closely with the teachers' union, managed to turn the school completely around in just three years without using draconian pay cuts or firings. "We take the quality of teaching and learning seriously, so we jointly created and implemented a thorough, meaningful and transparent evaluation system that ensures intensive support for all new and underperforming teachers," said Montgomery County Education Association president Doug Prouty.

Mayor Emanuel's great failing in his approach to the strike is that he did not come to the conversation about reform with an attitude of building on what is going right. Even Chicago has had areas of hope and progress in public education. Chicago's public school teachers have proven they can academically outcompete just about anyone. This last year, more than 24,000 children competed for about 5,000 slots in the top 5 selective enrollment high schools. The students and families lining up to apply to selective enrollment high schools accept that public schools can achieve excellence with unionized teachers. The principals at these schools accept it too, providing leadership development and mentoring for teachers and rewards for their good work.

Emanuel could have started the discussion by celebrating these successes and looking for ways to spread them. To be fair, the mayor has done some work to improve public education in the city. He created 10 new International Baccalaureate (IB) academic excellence programs in existing high schools throughout the city. He also lengthened the school day, which was sorely needed as Chicago had one of the shortest school days in the country.

Rather than saying to teachers, "I did this in spite of you," he could have asked, "How can we do more of this together?" For we know from best practices in the business world that without cultivating buy-in from all the key stakeholders, efforts to promote change are destined to be far less effective.

Underneath the Chicago Strike Headlines

The stories about the strike printed in the media have often perpetuated an unhelpful framing of the issues at hand. We were told teachers didn't want a longer school day. However, the true issue was not whether a longer day should be implemented, but rather what the process for putting this into practice could be. With real input from teachers, rather than a heavy-handed move to shove an altered school day down the throats of those who do the educating, this issue might not have reached an impasse.

Likewise, we were told that teachers did not want to be evaluated. But that was not the case. Educators merely wanted to be evaluated based on meaningful criteria that they could actually impact in their work -- not just high-stakes test scores whose value as a measure of students' success is highly questionable. In Cleveland, the teachers' union and the school district worked together to create and implement a totally new teacher evaluation system that will phase in over a four-year period. As Cleveland Schools CEO Eric Gordon noted, using teamwork to resolve such a big, contentious issue is worth the longer timeline: "This is complex work and it takes time to build it thoughtfully and carefully. It really has been a joint commitment in the beginning. We all believe that this is the right [approach]."

Emanuel has said he favors the Waiting-for-Superman strategy of linking teacher pay and job security to students' performance on standardized tests. But that approach has been found by education experts to be no more effective than traditional teaching and evaluation methods.

Simply corporatizing the schools is not going to magically make students learn. The use-tests-to-declare-public-schools-failing-and-siphon-the-money-to-corporate-branded-charters methodology has been discredited as bad pedagogical practice and thinly disguised union-busting.

Teachers have rightly asked, if they are only going to be held accountable for teaching to tests, when is the real educating supposed to happen? Sadly, this pressing question has not been heard above the din of political rhetoric.

Beyond the Strike

By making some of the changes teachers have called for, like installing air conditioning in classrooms and creating a teacher evaluation system jointly with the union, Emanuel could have made the teachers' union into a powerful ally for improving schools. Instead, he yanked the already-stretched thread of teachers' goodwill toward the school system, and it snapped.

Pointing fingers and placing blame is not the way to build partnerships, and it's not the way to move forward on education. Whatever happens with the strike in Chicago, maybe we can look at some of the case studies of successful initiatives in education and see that strong respect for teachers is not at odds with the interests of students. Conversations about how to replicate and build on the things that are working in our schools need to be happening not just during contract negotiations, but on an ongoing basis.

For those conversations to happen, city officials must repair the relationships that were broken in the hardball politicking around the strike. They need to embrace teachers as full-fledged partners in conversation about reform. That's harder than just placing blame. But it is needed if we're serious about fixing our kids' schools.

 

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"We are striking to improve the conditions in the schools. Right now the children are getting a raw deal." That statement came from a striking member of the Chicago Teachers' Union... in 1969. It s...
"We are striking to improve the conditions in the schools. Right now the children are getting a raw deal." That statement came from a striking member of the Chicago Teachers' Union... in 1969. It s...
 
 
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03:42 PM on 09/21/2012
Agreed. Look at what was accomplished butting heads. http://www.chicagonow.com/poli-chi/2012/09/ctu-strike-what-the-contract-means-for-parents-and-the-children/ Let's put the effort and we can achieve more together!
06:48 AM on 09/20/2012
>>>>>>>"He created 10 new International Baccalaureate (IB) academic excellence programs in existing high schools throughout the city"

Sorry, but it's not the Mayor's place to decide whether a school should have an IB program or not. In order to apply for IB authorization, a decision must be rendered by the "governing body" of the school. And while parents and the community SHOULD be involved in that process, they are rarely included as IB is a social justice program, far more than an "academic excellence" program. Please visit Truth About IB for more information.
03:59 AM on 09/20/2012
Teachers are ONLY for their own good. This rhetoric suggesting they care about the child's well-being is utterly laughable.

And before you teachers get all poopypants (again), it is OK to be working for the benefit of yourself and your family.
04:01 PM on 09/19/2012
My takeway: End public schools and replace them entirely with charter schools! Convert existing schools using a bidding process.
06:19 PM on 09/19/2012
If you're looking to degrade the quality of education, that's an excellent policy. Charters provide lower-quality education, but more profits for corporations.
07:42 PM on 09/19/2012
Why do you say that?
10:39 AM on 09/20/2012
Cite please. Most of the Charter schools in California are better than the public schools.

www.calcharters.org
www.educationbug.com
03:52 PM on 09/19/2012
The author is very obviously pro-union. There's no other way to describe how she came to write this article. Had she done her homework, she would know that THE TEACHERS already worked with the school board to create the evaluation system. They approved that back in the spring. They are just using that as an excuse for the current strike.
Not allowing principals to hire teachers is another red herring. What job do you know doesn't allow the boss (who is ultimately responsible for the results) to have a large say in hiring? More bullying tactics by Lewis and the Union.
And, yes, we'd all like air conditioning in schools. But my daughter's elementary school in the Western Suburbs doesn't have a/c and her school ranks among the best in the country.
People don't go into teaching to get rich, that's for sure. But the average starting salary for a CPS teacher is over $50k, the average starting pay for other college-educated people is around $34k. The average current CPS teacher makes around $72+, the average Chicagoan is down below $50k.
The only thing this article does is to continue the fight between unions and intelligent people (sorry, had to get one dig in). Until the author has some legitimate solutions to propose, maybe she should just keep quiet.
06:25 PM on 09/19/2012
"The average current CPS teacher makes around $72+, the average Chicagoan is down below $50k."

...and the average Chicagoan doesn't have a college diploma. And Chicagoans with college diplomas have average incomes higher than the teachers'.

You didn't specify whether the salary you cited for a college graduate was a Chicago figure or a nationwide one; the only way I'd find it credible is if it's the latter. But it's important to note that teachers, nationwide, average around $45K. Only about a third higher than your figure, and we're talking about all teachers as a whole compared to 22-year-olds right out of college.

Trying to argue that teachers, in Chicago or elsewhere, aren't underpaid is an exercise in misrepresentation. You've got to massage the facts to do it, since the facts don't support that.

As for the rest, doing your homework on education will pretty much unavoidably make you pro-union. Of any group involved in education, the unions are the only ones consistently putting forth policy that benefits kids and opposing policy that hurts them. Yeah, they sometimes are acting from self-interest. But the interests of teachers and students align almost exactly, and I'm not as concerned with WHY someone supports good policy as I am with the fact that they do.
01:44 AM on 09/20/2012
Please, the average is 76k. That counts the newbies who aren't paid too much. Now add in the benefits and Pension. What's your guess? 100k? Now add that they Do Not pay Social Security Tax, and yes they won't collect it, but who wouldn't take that deal. So their average comp is equal to about 110k per year....oops they only work Half a year. And at way less effort than what's needed, Look at the results. Let's get real, up till the 1960's our country had the best schools in the world, now we are very near the bottom. This could be the biggest crew up in history. V O U C H E R S. before its too late.
04:02 AM on 09/20/2012
Please articulate the measures unions have proposed to help the children....
03:45 PM on 09/19/2012
43 years after the problem was first discussed. 43 years of continuous Democratic rule. No solutions. Only failures. But the teachers make a lot of money. How is that hope and change working out?
06:28 PM on 09/19/2012
Only failures? Nobody has graduated from CPS with a good education in nearly half a century? I'm dubious. I suspect it's like most cities: the schools and teachers do a good job of offering an education, but learning is something that teachers can't do for you. You've got to show up and do the work.

The teachers make a lot of money? They're paid a bit more than the average worker in Chicago... who's a high school graduate. They're paid considerably less than other college-educated professionals in the area. Not true either.
03:10 PM on 09/19/2012
Well... Just to present a contrary argument. The CTU has been around since at least 1969 trying to improve Chicago Schools. Emanuel has been mayor for a year. He may have been too heavy handed (and he is getting a lesson in Chicago politics), but I would say he has been the impetus for change, and not the teachers or the CTU. His goals were admirable - longer school day (they were REALLY short), and teacher accountability don't sound like bad things.

Now Emanuel just has to find a way to pay for all this.
06:26 PM on 09/19/2012
You can make almost anything sound good if you spin it the right way, but Emanuel's policies are not good for schools or students.