Legislators in the far-right legislature of the once forward-looking state of North Carolina waste no opportunity to demoralize teachers with their wacky punitive policies. They just don’t like teachers. They seem certain that only 25% of the state’s teachers are worthy, even though 96% were rated effective by the state evaluation system.
So the teacher-bashers in the legislature will make sure to play whack-a-mole with the lives of teachers.
The new plan is to strip tenure from all teachers and let teachers compete for four/year contracts and $5,000 bonuses.
North Carolina is one of the lowest paying states in the nation for teachers. One reason to accept low wages is a promise of reasonable job security. That will be eliminated. As Lindsey Wagner reported in NC Policy Watch, some NC teachers are leaving the state, realizing that the legislature wants to destroy their profession and reduce them to public mendicants.
Leaders of the state’s two largest districts see this as bad policy:
“The General Assembly voted this year to eliminate teacher tenure in 2018. In the meantime, school districts across the state are being required to identify which educators will be offered a $5,000 pay raise as part of a four-year contract if they give up their tenure. Roughly one-quarter will be offered the four-year deal.
Some of the most vocal complaints are coming from the Wake County and Charlotte-Mecklenburg school systems. Like their counterparts across the state, the large systems are searching for a way to carry out the new state requirements.
“I’m hoping the General Assembly will talk with educators and look at the long-term consequences – both intended and unintended – of this legislation before it does irreparable harm that will take years and years and years to fix,” Wake County school board member Kevin Hill said Tuesday at a school board meeting.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Superintendent Heath Morrison said the four-year contract and bonus plan has raised a host of questions, and threatens already-rocky teacher morale.
But backers of the change say it provides meaningful education reform by basing job security and pay on performance. They say the old system of giving tenure and then basing pay on seniority rewarded ineffective teachers.”
Contracts and bonuses will be tied to test scores.
A defender of the legislation used the occasion to ridicule teachers:
“Only in the warped world of education bureaucrats and union leaders could a permanent $5,000 pay raise for top-performing teachers be branded as a bad thing,” Amy Auth, a spokeswoman for state Senate leader Phil Berger, a Rockingham County Republican, said in a written statement.
Historically, North Carolina public school teachers who have passed a four-year probationary period have earned tenure, called career status.”
And there is more to this sad story:
Critics of the system, such as Berger, have pointed to the firing of 17 tenured teachers in the 2011-12 school year to argue that too many bad teachers are still being employed. But supporters of tenure argue that it protects good teachers from being fired unfairly, and that many bad teachers are encouraged to resign.
Starting July 1, 2018, North Carolina public school teachers will receive contracts of between one and four years. Teachers will work under contracts that are renewed based on performance – like nearly every other profession, according to Auth.
Some changes go into effect now, such as offering four-year contracts to some educators.
A big question concerns how to determine which teachers will be offered the four-year contracts. Superintendents will present a list of names to their school boards, which can modify the list.
Administrators from 10 of the state’s biggest school districts, including Wake, Charlotte-Mecklenburg, Durham, Johnston and Gaston, held a video conference Tuesday to talk about the changes.
“You actually have some school districts that are suggesting that they’ll do a lottery because of concerns about legal issues and concerns about morale,” Morrison said.
Auth stressed that the “top 25 percent of teachers” will get the new contract and raises, saying they’re “highly effective teachers.” Teachers must be rated “proficient” under the state evaluation system to be eligible.
But Ann McColl, general counsel for the N.C. Association of Educators, pointed to state statistics showing that 96 percent of classroom teachers were rated as proficient.”

I think that’s $500 bonuses; not $5,000
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No it’s $5,000.
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Joanna, based on what I read in the Charlotte Observer it $500 a year increase for 4 years for a grand total of $5,000 before taxes. And for all this bonus money you only have to sign away your tenure. This is the same group that raised the cap on class enrollment. My favorite rationale by a legislator was that just because the cap was raised doesn’t mean that there will be more students in the classroom. With reasoning like that why should we worry?
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Does this mean they can only take tenure away if teachers agree to it? So they are no longer offering it, but if you already have it the only way to lose it is if you accept the four year contract (and the bonus—which by the way is not guaranteed, so if there’s no money for it oh well).
Yeah, I get tired of the “well, from how I look at it it’s not so bad” type talk from non-educators.
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Michele, I know I am trying to use logic when there is no clear logic in anything that is being done these days … but if a teacher gets $500 a year for 4 years would they not have $2000, and if they received it as the supplement paid in December and June and each supplement was $500, wouldn’t that be $4000. I want to believe that they just do not know how to do math, or that I am confused … BUT my children momentarily attend school at a “magnet” school in NC, it is run exactly like a charter school. My son is autistic, head count is over and surprise surprise, he will need to go to another school because the autism specialist just does not know what to do with a high functioning autistic student. So I have a tendency to believe that the math “mistake” isn’t a mistake at all.
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Joanna, the way I understand it unless the law is reversed all teachers will lose tenure in 2018. I read where someone has referred to this bonus plan as the hunger games for teachers.
Michelle, there was a very long discussion on the Charlotte Observer education blog. If you start at $35,000, the first year it would increase to $35,500, second year…$36,000, third year…$36,500, fourth year…$37,000. So over 4 years you would gain $5,000 before taxes. That is a gamble I would not want to take. I am so glad that I was able to retire this past June but I still worry for everyone having to deal with all these changes. I hope you will be able to find a program that works for your son.
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Not $5000 in four years
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The goal is to eliminate the career teacher who makes “good” $, replacing them with short term teachers who will eventually move on to a different career. The outcome will be teachers with less experience or teachers who refuse to work in title 1 schools because regardless if what anyone says, we know what the research say about ELL students and FRL students. The only way to combat May be for all teachers to come together this June and not sign a 4 year contract if it is offered to you. If no one signs, no one loses tenure. The goal is to strip tenure then be able to terminate for any reason, including how much $ you make. Thank god this is my last year!
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Amber, at an NCAE law meeting I attended, they advised NOT taking the four year contract.
My question would also be is the four year contract enforceable from both ends (like, if you did sign it, can you quit before four years is up?)
Lots of questions still unanswered.
NC teachers have been broad-sided. They trusted leadership (why should they not have)? Leadership did not do right by the state’s schools.
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Why on Earth does the NC legislature think that it makes sense to declare war on teachers? These policies are insane.
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They are rural guys who want to rub elbows with Jeb Bush and go to his meetings all over the place (since he loves to organize meetings). They are right-wing ALEC members. They are in over their heads.
But NC is a state of hard-working folks who eventually will catch on to what is happening. As my husband assures me, these guys need to get in there and flop so they will go away and not be re-elected.
God bless them. But may God find another purpose for their talents.
This is my state they are messing with! My grandfather’s people were here in the 18th century. I moved here when I was six. I went to public school from 1st through 12th grades, attended the NC Governor’s School (where I met my husband), graduated from a small NC liberal arts school, and did my teacher training and graduate work at a NC Univerisity. My mother is a retired NC teacher. My step father and an aunt and an uncle are retired NC principals. My sister is a NC teacher. I am a NC teacher. My mother in law is a retired NC teacher. My father is a retired pastor in eastern NC. My husband is an attorney in NC. My father in law is an attorney in NC. My brother in law is an attorney in NC.
This insanity will not last. NC schools are not going to go down this way.
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oh and let me not forget my step-mother too. She is a retired NC math teacher!
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“Phil Berger, a Rockingham County Republican,”
Rockingham County has 93,000 residents among 11 communities.
I believe Phil Berger is a member of ALEC.
The law does not say “top” 25 percent. Nor does it define who a teacher is (media, PE, art???) NCAE is fighting it with a lawsuit. Counties fear it because of the possibility of lawsuits with the 25%.
Basically, as I see it, we have a bunch of Jeb Bush worshipers puffing up and making proud by putting in laws of “what he said”-type mentality regarding education. McCrory will be best suited to back away from these guys if he wants to get re-elected. The idiocy of these laws will make itself known and we will get things turned around.
Amy Auth finished college in 2003. She attended a public university (UNC-CH), which is subsidized by the middle class. Her degree is in journalism and mass communications. (She is an Episcopalian–so we have that in common). But I would say she is spewing off a party line in terms of teachers. She should’t speak for teachers or put words in their mouths about what is a good thing for us and what is not. The warped world of education bureaucrats. . . she needs to get more specific. What warped world in NC is she talking about? The one that educated her (assuming she attended public school)? The one that has subsidized the university education she obtained? And as for union leaders, we have no unions in NC so what the h____ is she shouting that for?
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I know it has been said before but again it feels appropriate: When I read stories like this I wonder if we are Alice, who has fallen down the rabbit hole and finds herself befuddled in a wacked out world.
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yes.
Time to wake up from the dream!
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“Teachers will work under contracts that are renewed based on performance – like nearly every other profession, according to Auth.”
Is this statement true? I worked for rather large companies and maybe the top guys had contracts, but my peers and I did not.
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I don’t see what authority Auth has in making that statement.
She’s on LinkedIn. You can read her cv. She is just a mouth piece. With a foot in it, as far as I’m concerned.
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Funny thing — none of the money for the cumulative sums that must be paid out to these top 25% teachers over the next few years is even budgeted yet. Go figure!
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I suppose I have a lot to say on this and perhaps I will post it later, or not at all, but I want to add something to this discussion now. I read these blogs and most of the comments on a fairly regular basis as I have been able to find many things as I consider my dissertation topic and research. When educators start with the “left wing”, “right wing”, “tea party”, they are missing the point or failing to look at the whole picture. The attempt to privatize education and demoralize teachers knows no party boundary. Honestly, did the democratic president not appoint Arne Duncan, give us RTT, give money to TFA? Sure Jeb Bush, sure a whole slew of right wing individuals, but go to Chicago and tell the students and teachers that had one of their school buildings closed down that it is the right wing or tea party individuals fault. Go to Indiana and tell the teachers of an “F” rated district that it is the republicans fault. So much time spent by educators about the republicans and democrats … if one is going to fight a war, they have to know their enemy. Follow the money …
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Well stated. Today’s news showed an arrest of 29 students in a Chicago high school-purportedly gang related. Hmmmm wonder why that happened?
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Michelle– I agree both parties have contributed to the problems (Dems signed us up for RttT). But when I mentioned right wing in response to Robert’s question, that is who his question was about. Phil Berger is a member of ALEC. ALEC appeals to the far right.
I am not going to be blasé just to be politically correct about who is more problematic in their leadership. “Follow the money” might be apt, but it is a cliche. And at the end of the day there are real people in our current legislature heaping it on teachers. And in the case Robert asked about, it was about our far right guys. Discretion and parsimonious descriptions have their place, but if a blue monkey is dancing in front of me I am not going to not call him blue just because pink monkeys also like to throw their dung.
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I like the blue and pink monkey analogy … thanks for making me laugh – I needed it today! It’s hard to decide which political affiliation is good or even sufficient, I adhere to “none of the above” but then I think … the children of Egypt once cried for a leader too. “Follow the Money” …Cliche, yes, but also a great training course for criminal investigators and a great website to track money and political campaigns.
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Perhaps we need to hold a lottery instead of an election the next time we are to get new legislators or a governor. We would likely get better results.
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Sorry about that … tell the educators in Indiana that it was the democrats fault (look at how the legislature in IN voted). You will see just as many do, the difference between a democrat and a republican is the letter they put after your name. I’ve yet to hear one politician from either side come out and take a stand for educators, maybe I’ve missed something but I really don’t think so.
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I agree with you. I left the Democratic party over it. They sold us, as far as I’m concerned.
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Someone I care deeply about was offered a very nice position in the medical field near Charlotte. I suggested she factor on the costs of the best PRIVATE school because she has two young daughters and it will take a very long time for the public schools to recover from the “reforms” to which they have been subjected.
As a result, she is staying put in Vermont!!
North Carolina was once the star of the south: now even the folks in SC and Miss. Have reason to feel good about the relative state of their schools! NC is the new Louisiana!
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Perhaps as other professionals who want decent public schools for their children leave or decide no to take jobs in NC, the good ole boys will figure it out.
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Some fun reading here. This merit pay is going to be a mess. The only good news on this explanation was the 4 year contract with the 5K extra over 4 years only have to be offered to 25% of the career status teachers, not necessarily accepted. Accepting it loses one’s career status. I am not sure what teachers should do but please beware of wolves in sheep’s clothing. http://www.ncasa.net/associations/2410/files/TenureQandA_10-15-13.pdf
More at: http://www.ncasa.net.
We had a legislative session videotaped last week where a group of teachers opted out of the merit pay
http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20131016/ARTICLES/131019760/1177?Title=Teachers-school-staff-unified-against-Schools-Act
Video of legislative session- 2 hours but very informative for NC people
http://newuncw.mediasite.mcnc.org/mcnc/Play/9bd358e6583d458bbe09a8523757284b1d
Lots of people upset and mobilizing : http://red4ednc.com/2013/10/19/teachers-must-decide-by-may/
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Janna,
I am one of the teachers who presented the petition at the Forum on the Sate of Education in North Carolina at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. We did respectfully request to opt out of this Impossible and divisive mess. We will present it to our local school board on November 5th. Teachers from other schools throughout the state have been contacting us for copies of this petition.
We present the petition toward the end of the link below. After the petition was presented, there was a standing ovation. If you watch the link, we are wearing our “shades of red” tie-dye shirts to support the red4ednc movement that you have also mentioned.
http://newuncw.mediasite.mcnc.org/mcnc/Play/9bd358e6583d458bbe09a8523757284b1d
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Correction: Forum on the State of Education in North Carolina
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It’s $5000 over 5 years and I don’t know a single self respecting teacher who would take that money. That’s about $70 a month after taxes, what an insult to us! Don’t worry, we’re mobilized and ready to rid ourselves of our ‘moderate’ Republican governor and all those enemies of public education. What a bad bill of goods we’ve been sold.
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Thanks, Galton. I have already passed this on to my medical field and teaching family members; those there now (no native southerners) are seeking to leave.
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Only in the warped world of legislators, hedge fund managers and 1 percenters does it make sense to remove all protection from capricious termination. Only in their world does this math work, and only in their world could the peasants be expected to agree to this sort of nonsense.
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Just to make things clear, this is my last year in NC. With the bureaucratic mess we’ve had to indure I am grateful I’ve been offered a position in another state which will treat me like a professional. I have spent the past 15 years teaching around the WORLD and I have never seen distain for teachers like I have seen in NC. From my principal to our superintendents, they all tow the party lines. I feel sorry for those who want to serve the public and become teachers, NC is destroying that dream.
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Well, I am rooted here. So I take comfort in an old fashioned Rogers and Hammerstein musical. Don’t forget the best line: “the children. The children. I won’t forget the children. No matter where I go I’ll always see those little faces looking up at me.
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I am here to stay as well. I am ever hopeful that the pendulum will swing the other way soon. I just hope the pendulum is not a guillotine for too many of the good teachers as it swings.
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http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2013-10-22/nc-educators-oppose-law-ending-job-protections
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I teach at Murray Middle School in Wilmington, North Carolina. ( Janna refers to our school in this post.) Our school wrote a petition requesting to opt out of the selection process and the attached funds. We presented this petition to a panel at a forum on education at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. 100% of our teachers signed this document! Here is the intro:
We, the faculty of Charles P. Murray Middle School, do respectfully submit this petition for your consideration. We wish to opt out of the selection process that would offer twenty-five percent of eligible teachers a raise in pay. It is also our intent to relieve our administration of the impossible and divisive task of selecting a percentage of our staff. It is our belief that the measures imposed by the North Carolina Legislature will divide teachers and eliminate the collaboration and support that public education MUST retain in order for all students and teachers to grow and advance.
We are trying to get other schools in North Carolina to pick up this idea and use the petition to make their voices heard!
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Two things: 1. A 500 increase each year for four years is 2000 not 5000; and, 2. Education screw-ups are a-political in nature in that Republicans and Democrats are both advocating for the same bad ideas out of ignorance and greed.
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Welcome to the party, dad. I see NC is trying hard to outdo LA for both stupidest politicians and worst place to be a student or teacher. Congrats! 🙂
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I wish that wasn’t the case, but it is. I believe that the state Govt. has surpassed LA in twisted thinking.
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You know, I am firmly convinced that the NC General Assembly is full of morons. They keep saying that the “teachers unions” are trying to keep their members’ tenure. What teachers unions? There are NO teachers’ unions in the state of NC. It is ILLEGAL for teachers to unionize in the state. The “lawmakers” in the General Assembly don’t know the laws? They are a bunch of idiots.
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