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Randi Weingarten

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Calling the Right Plays to Help Teachers Succeed

Posted: 01/17/12 02:33 PM ET

My beloved New York Giants seem like a different team than they were just a month ago, when they were coming off a humbling string of losses. If the Giants' owners had simply demanded a new lineup, or the coaching staff had told the players to figure it out on their own, I have no doubt the team would not be playing -- and winning -- any playoff games.

I'm not privy to the Giants' game tape analyses, but I can bet that the team -- from top to bottom -- took a hard look at what was and wasn't working, and worked together to figure out and implement solutions. It's what winning teams do, and it's a lesson American public education could learn much from.

In education, teacher evaluations are supposed to gauge what is and isn't working in teachers' practice, and provide feedback to ensure teachers are at the top of their game. Even though administrators have always had this responsibility, teacher evaluations have rarely met that standard. They often are little more than quick snapshots, taken by a principal sitting in the back of the classroom with a checklist once a year. Yet these snapshots -- "drive-by evaluations" as they are known -- frequently serve as the basis for decisions to keep or dismiss teachers. More recently, so-called reformers have pushed to replace that inadequate snapshot with another kind -- once-a-year standardized student test scores in math or English -- even though such tests are not designed to evaluate teachers and the majority of educators teach subjects not currently assessed by standardized tests.

Neither of these limited approaches makes any sense -- for neither one does anything to improve teacher practice or increase student learning. And after all, isn't that the point?

The American Federation of Teachers has proposed a different approach. We have developed a framework to both assess teachers and develop their skills throughout their careers. This framework calls for ongoing feedback and rigorous reviews by trained evaluators as well as appropriate supports. The aim is to help new teachers get a strong start, to help good teachers acquire the skills to continually improve (like great athletes), and to accurately identify teachers who are struggling. And if those teachers don't improve after receiving help, this approach aims to do what's needed to usher them out of the profession fairly.

One of the first school systems to adopt a framework based on this model was New Haven, Conn. The first-year results of New Haven's evaluation system, which focused both on teacher practice and student learning and which provided genuine assistance and support for teachers needing improvement, show a positive effect on teacher quality. While much of the media attention was on the teachers who didn't make the grade, the real story was that this collaboratively negotiated approach focused on continuous improvement for all teachers in the district. I was honored to join Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy last week at a conference launching the state's latest reform efforts at which the New Haven teacher development and evaluation system was held up as a statewide and even a national model.

Unfortunately, in neighboring New York, teacher evaluation is being used (pardon the analogy) as a political football. It's easier to sound tough about weeding out poor performers than to put in the hard work and resources necessary to improve teaching and learning on a sustainable and scalable level. And that's exactly what New York's teachers union is trying to do -- press for an evaluation system that improves classroom performance. As with Gov. Malloy, we welcome New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's involvement in public education but ask him to listen to those closest to our kids -- their parents and educators.

Just as die-hard Giants fans like me didn't walk away from our team when it was down, we know that Americans who understand the importance of fostering a high-quality public education system won't walk away either. You wouldn't field a football team without proper conditioning, coaching and equipment. Yet, in effect, this is what happens every day in classrooms across America. We all have an interest in ensuring that our children's teachers are effective, but we must help them sharpen their game, not just keep score.

 

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10:47 PM on 01/18/2012
Ms. Weingarten, your job is to secure the best salary, pension, and working conditions that you can for your membership. Great, someone has to do it.

But anyone with a modicum of intelligence can see that private schools, parochial schools, and charter schools are all providing a better education with better averages of college attendance than public schools. Since parochial schools and charter schools do it for significantly less money than public schools, what's the problem?

Could it be you, and our (seeming) inability to fire bad teachers?
10:10 AM on 01/19/2012
The problem is that the children who attend private, parochial, and most Charter schools are not the same, economically, as those in the public schools whose scores you believe are lower. In addition your conclusion is incorrect, i.e., that the schools you list, are all not providing a better education. Why don't you look a little further and compare apples to apples. The socioeconomic status of kids is basically the only difference between schools. Don't you ever wonder why kids in the suburbs always perform better than those in our nations big cities. Do a little research before you draw conclusions and then you would clearly see that as one moves from big cities, to Charters, to parochial, to suburbs, to private schools you'd also see a corresponding increase in average SES. There may be outliers but this is the issue in a nutshell. This is the hidden sin in our country, i.e., Blame the school and hide the real barriers to learning.
02:45 PM on 01/19/2012
You are horribly wrong in your accretion. While your conclusion may well be correct for private schools, charter schools and parochial schools serve some of the poorest children in the country and the scores they achieve are truly astounding compared with public schools.

In fact recent studies have shown that while there is seemingly no real difference in student performance of students from socially advantaged backgrounds when they attend charter schools, children from poor, minority, urban settings excel compared to kids going to urban public schools.

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Education/2010/0629/Study-On-average-charter-schools-do-no-better-than-public-schools

As far as parochial schools are concerned, I am intimately familiar with Catholic schools. Catholic schools have consistently done more with less money (sometimes half of what public schools get). In addition, Catholic school students (depending on the city, and particular school) have out preformed public school students not only test and grade wise, but also when it comes to percentage of children who go on to graduate college. These results are not limited to children of parents who pay for the schooling. Catholic schools that cater to poor and minority neighborhoods with tuition reduced or waved completely (and paid for by people like me, with special donation baskets passed around in church), achieve the same sort of results as other Catholic schools in that diocese.

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/1997/06/why-catholic-schools-spell-success-for-americas-inner-city-children
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
blindjester
English and ESL teacher
06:47 PM on 01/18/2012
Randi, you're still talking about the wrong thing.

As long as you're talking about teachers, you're avoiding talking about poverty.

That's the problem.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ReasonIsMyReligion
Don't know much micro-bio-logy
11:12 PM on 01/17/2012
Is there a football analogy for Ms. Weingarten supporting Mayoral Control, under this particular Mayor?
05:46 PM on 01/17/2012
Teacher evaluations are nice and taking a strong stand to make them better is just so sweet. However,supporting their improvement is being defensive and absorbing the blame. Forget the evaluations. Teachers and educators have done nothing wrong. Quit apologizing. Teachers, need a strong advocate. Teachers have not changed, society has. Teachers did not send large numbers of kids to school with a developmental age significantly below their chronological age. They did not set up a system where there is unequal funding provided to those most in need. Teachers did not create a society that refuses to demand toxic free schools. Teachers did not sit down and say, "Oh, lets create the NCLB and when the poorest school district's fail, we'll create Charter schools in the cities we have somewhere to send our kids. Ever wonder why there are few Charter schools in the suburbs?

Teachers need someone to say enough. They need a spokesperson to reflect back the reams of data proving that schools are not broken but our society needs an overhaul- jobs, truth, equality and then the gaps people keep talking about will decrease.

Randy, stick up for teachers and quit taking the bait. No more changes, teachers and schools are not the problem. The problem is a government and society that refuses to look internally to make the necessary changes. Our society needs to quit pointing the finger. No one is to blame except the pundits who continue to back seat drive instead of making useful recommendations.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
blindjester
English and ESL teacher
06:52 PM on 01/18/2012
Wow! Agreed.

Fanned and faved.
09:49 AM on 01/22/2012
You said what every teacher is thinking. Randy does not understand that the whole think is a set up. So they fire a bunch of teachers and replace them with who exactly? She has the power but is too timid to use it. Few really want the job. How about that as an evaluation criteria? How about the evaluation criteria that you have to raise OPC (other peoples' children)? Does that count on the checklist or anywhere. I am so tired of the teacher victim narrative. Forget it. The licensure system is a caste system and should be done away with. Principals are teachers trying to manage and do a lousy job. Success is not guaranteed by hiring prinicpals with 7 years of teaching experience. What planet does that idea come from?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vaeho
04:46 PM on 01/17/2012
just like the major league baseball players union protected steroid users over its non-steriod users members the teachers union protects its incompetent teachers over the competent ones.
10:13 PM on 01/17/2012
Uh, no. Teachers' unions tend to enforce due process, which allows for the firing of incompetent teachers but protects competent ones from incompetent supervisors, where they exist.

If what you were saying was true, we'd expect the schools with unions to be among the worst ones. Instead, the schools, states, and countries with unionized teachers tend to outperform comparable ones without. Reality is in direct opposition to what you describe.
08:14 AM on 01/18/2012
Just how do you know this? Where do you get your information?