Saturday, April 26, 2014

John Thompson: Are Turnarounds and Tea Party Turmoil Driving Teachers Out? - Living in Dialogue - Education Week Teacher

John Thompson: Are Turnarounds and Tea Party Turmoil Driving Teachers Out? - Living in Dialogue - Education Week Teacher:



John Thompson: Are Turnarounds and Tea Party Turmoil Driving Teachers Out?

Guest post by John Thompson.
Which sets of school reforms are inflicting the most damage on teachers and students? Has the right wing Tea Party's most extreme assaults on public education hurt schools the most? Or, has the Duncan administration's ill-conceived corporate reforms done the most harm?
North Carolina was once touted as an exemplar of standards based reforms, and Wake County was praised for its socio-economic integration. Tea Party Governor Pat McCrory and Republicans are phasing out tenure and gutting salaries. As a result, mid-year teacher resignations in Wake schools have increased by an "alarming" 41% this school year. The number of resigning teachers who said they are moving to other North Carolina schools dropped, as there was an increase in teachers leaving for other states.  Early retirements have tripled.
The problem is so extreme that Doug Thilman, Wake's assistant superintendent for human resources, said at a press conference, "Good teachers are having to make hard decisions to leave our classrooms for a better future somewhere else or in another line of work, in another profession - not in our public schools and not in our state." said
The mirror image of Wakes' crisis is found in Chicago "turnaround schools." Chicago's Catalystquotes Michael Hansen, senior researcher for the American Institutes for Research, who explains that the Duncan administration's School Improvement Grant (SIG) are "under-researched." High attrition following a turnaround has the potential to produce "more harm than help." (emphasis by John Thompson: Are Turnarounds and Tea Party Turmoil Driving Teachers Out? - Living in Dialogue - Education Week Teacher: