The Chicago Teachers Union strike has encouraged many educators around the nation, who are fed up with the virulent attacks on them by people who couldn’t manage a classroom for ten minutes. Or five, maybe.
Judging by the comments I am getting, CTU has lifted the spirits of teachers who were feeling as though no one would stand up to the shellacking they were taking.
CTU has stood up.
And we can expect counter-attacks. They have started. I read one news story fired by about 50 comments saying, “Fire them, fire them all.” I wonder if the people who write such letters have ever taught. I know the answer. I read a conservative blogger who predicted that the CTU would fold because the public thinks they are paid too much already.
The strike raises issues for teachers everywhere and for union locals everywhere.
What is the best strategy to ward off the corporate reform attacks?
Confronted with ceaseless attacks on public education, on the teaching profession, and on the right of unions to exist, what should unions do?
Should they collaborate or should they fight?
This post launched a heated discussion.
I am not a union member. I have never belonged to a union. But growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, I learned that the right to belong to a union is one of the hallmarks of a democratic society. Supporting the right of working people to bargain collectively was not at all controversial.
Today it is. Today unions are under fire, even from Democratic leaders like the mayor of Chicago and the mayor of Los Angeles.
What should unions do?
This reader comments:
I am surprised that this post has accepted the “reformers” moving of the goal posts so readily and assumes that it is commonly accepted. The purpose of unions is to advocate for members’ working conditions and pay. The “reformers” have used slick rhetoric to convince gullible people that the purpose of the union should be to “reform” schools. I don’t buy that at all. As has so often been stated, my working conditions are your child’s learning conditions. We can also work for school improvement but that is not our primary mission and if we accept the “reformers” re-imagining of our mission then we are setting ourselves up for accepting blame for failures caused by them.
For the last 16 years I have been involved quite deeply in both the AFT and the NEA (we have a cooperative union in Florida) and I have been a building rep for 14 of my 16 years as a teacher. I’ve visited my state legislature, written letters, called, rallied fellow teachers and worked the phone banks for GOTV. The first half of my career was spent in NYC. The second half in Florida, a right to work state. Unionism is vastly different in the many states that have adopted right to work, with little opposition or pushback from the national unions that it decimates and destroys. Why is that?
I’ve never bought the idea that it is our responsibility to conform ourselves to whatever our opposition chooses for their own comfort level in the hopes of preventing them from being even more extreme. The positions advocated in this post are exactly why we are in the situation we are in: an adoption of the Clinton-era “triangulation” strategies that supposedly reach compromise by taking the position of your opponent and making it your own. Thus we have Dennis Van Roekel and Randi Weingarten agreeing to VAM junk science, echoing the rhetoric of the “reformers” that schools are mess and in need of saving, and the list goes on and on.
I look at our colleagues in Australia and around the world who rally to shut down the entire school system when they are threatened with harmful, ridiculous reforms and then I compare that to American teachers who are an endangered species as public education is brought to the brink of extinction and I ask why aren’t we out in the streets? If you really believe that being nicer, quieter, and more accommodating will win this war then I refer you to the great Frederick Douglas who taught us that power never accedes ground without a fight and those who decry the battle are asking for a storm of change without the thunder and lightning that accompany it.
We are teachers. If our membership and the public are unaware of union history and the important gains procured through the labor movement then we must teach them these things. If we truly believe that truth and knowledge are the keys to good citizenship then we need to use these tools to further our ends. Playing old-school political games that no longer work will do nothing but hasten our end.

Like elsewhere, Chicago billionaires fund their own anti-union advocacy groups like Stand for Children Illinois. Stand pushed through the IL SB7, which weakened collective bargaining, seniority, and gave the mayor the right to lengthen the school day as he wished.
As Jonah Edelman bragged in the Aspen Ideas video, Stand kept its lobbying out of the media, and parents and teachers were left entirely in the dark. Also he said Stand’s job is to create a groundswell of support for the mayor’s policies so it doesn’t hurt him politically. To that end, trolls blog and tweet bitter stuff. But the majority of this is simply advertising and lobbying paid for by the 1%.
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A bad CPS/ CTU contract will engender anger that will fester for years.
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As a former teacher and former member of the CTU, I applaud Karen Lewis and the members of the CTU. Someone needs to set the record straight as to who should be at the table to decide how this country’s public school system moves forward not back in time. I know this to be true because I too felt that way when I was interviewed to be a city-wide coordinator and was chastised because I suggested that teachers should have an input into the in-services designed for them. So I am elated that the CTU is fighting back because without the teachers little can really be done to improve the quality of education for ALL children. Parent support is a must as well.
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Teacher’s Unions are a force for balance. They have lost enough ground on health care and pay that now they are fighting mainly for the decent kind of working conditions and fair evaluation processes that will allow them to teach to the full extent of their professional abilities and personal passions.
Played out to an unchecked extreme, the modern reform movement will create a fully technocratic, dehumanized, computer based curriculum in the public schools, with public money going to more selective institutions that will cater to those of a higher socioeconomic status.
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An example of what is coming:
Just yesterday we got an email from Bridgeport’s Paul Vallas reform team that was looking for a Mandarin Chinese teacher. No knowledge of Chinese necessary. It’s all on the computer. It appears that the stipend will be $250/ year.
The school system didn’t replace a high school Japanese teacher that left early last year, sending the creative, motivated honors kids who took the class– many who reject the gangsta rap culture that exerts undue influence on many in urban schools seem to embrace Japanese culture and aesthetics as part of their social group’s identification— sending them to wander to unstructured study halls.
What a lost opportunity to engage the manga comic reading multi ethnic group of postive kids. A computer program in a course that has been reduced to a “club” cannot replace what they would have had.
But the newspaper readers and BOE meeting attendees will surely be told that the system is providing Mandarin Chinese! It’s so sad. The process will continue to encroach on qualified professional teaching until your child is simply placed in front of a laptop with a “monitor” in the room. For all subjects.
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Orwellian, I know. Sorry. I swear I own no tinfoil hats. But this is the writing on the wall. And who will stand against it but the teachers and their union?
Parents and voters hear “technology” and “money savings” and “accountability through testing” and will believe it, just as they believe “we reformed and saved Plilly/NOLA/Chi-Town.” The refromers have all the promises. But they have not the answers, only the billion dollar backing, the spin, and the manipulation of the data.
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Unions must be there to balance and guide the path of change and progress. Every teacher– especially urban teachers– know intimately of the need for change and reform.
Privatization and computerization is not the answer, and we understand this just as clearly. Our job as a union is to communicate this to those who do not.
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What should unions do? Play nice, and seek compromise? I don’t think so. Diane’s readers know what is going on, and what the agenda of corporate “reformers” actually is, privatization for profit.
Education isn’t alone. There has been a concerted effort by “free market” fundamentalists to privatize all aspects traditionally operated by federal, state, and local government. Much of the military has been handed over to “private” vendors, security contractors, and consultants. Many prisons are now privately run.
We are at a point in history that may become known as “public education’s last stand.” No hyperbole or irony intended. What teacher’s unions and our supporters (parents, and others) do now will determine whether free public education remains a fundamental part of America.
When the stakes are this high, its long past the point of “playing nice.” I applaud the CTU for taking the first real stand. In the end the outcome depends on what the rest of us do.
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The collective bargaining negotiations at the school in my town (not where I work) were just abruptly ended in the fifth of seven meetings by the board, even though they were close to a contract. They now must go into mediation. I fear that the current climate is making boards increasingly unwilling to compromise in an equitable way with teacher unions. I hope th Chicago situation helps swing the pendulum back a bit.
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I think that everyone should be ‘Sick” on a certain day all across the country. ..
Not supporting the Chicago teachers will certainly give the “”deformers” confidence that their agenda will suceed.
Retired teachers should get in on the fight if they can still walk, talk, write, or fly on a plane.
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I agree–unions are not primarily formed to influence reform–but, there are good reasons why the two go together. (In short, self-interest is not always a bad thing–as our opponents note in defense of their corporate sponsors.) The most horrifying aspect of current reform is actually not what it is doing to teachers–but what it is and will do our students and the future of America. b Not one of the reforms proposed by the Rahms/Kleins et al of the world has any connection to helping kids grow up to be well-educated. The evidence is clear. I’m proud of the CTU for making that clear and taking an enormous risk to do so.
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Hitting on the fact that there is NO elected school board is CRITICAL. Talking about the fact that no one in the community/town/city has ANY representation is key.
But again, when you empower bureaucrats and politicians, this is what you get.
The higher you go with that power, the less of a voice you will have.
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Chicago teachers make $75k on average. The average Chicago citizen makes around $40k. 8 out of every 100 students in Chicago public schools get 4 year college degrees. Is it really that preposterous to reform the way teachers are evaluated? They are making almost double the average Chicago citizen but the growth of students is terrible compared to charter schools or even other comparable school systems. If you suck at your job you shouldn’t be making 2x the average man or woman.
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An average of $75,000 is not too much for a professional with a college degree and a master’s degree. You don’t think that doctors and lawyers in Chicago should be paid less because the average citizen makes around $40,000 a year, do you? The average member of the mayor’s board of education probably has an income of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Does that offend you too?
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“suck at your job”?
Are you thinking this out before you post it? This makes no sense. Do the students have any responsibility for their academic performance? What about the parents?
Do the teachers also “suck” in the adjacent Chicago suburbs where the same, unionized teachers “produce” some of the smartest, most accomplished students in America?
You know, Chicago STILL has a very high crime rate, despite all of that money we’ve spent on our police force. Do you think the Chicago cops “suck” at their jobs too?
I mean, why haven’t those lazy, self-centered cops been fired yet? Last I checked there was a LOT of crime in Chicago, and those cops earn TWICE as much, or more, than the average Chicago voter.
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“In Defense of the Teacher’s Union!:My Union is OK with Me!” http://oldschoolteach.blogspot.com/2012/09/in-defense-of-teachers-union-my-union.html
I fully support my brothers and sisters in Chicago. If you read the article by a Chicago teacher, if you listen to interviews of Chicago teachers, it’s not about the money! Our unions fight for us!
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