Jersey Jazzman continues to write about the ignominious failure of the highly hyped merit pay fairy in Newark. He takes this development as a sign that all other districts should pay attention. In this post, he writes about those who were bewitched by the promise of merit pay:
http://jerseyjazzman.blogspot.com/2019/08/clapping-harder-for-merit-pay-fairy.html
One of those who went gaga for merit pay was Kate Walsh of the reformy National Council for Teacher Quality. She said that the now-dead Newark Plan was “a model to which other districts should aspire.”
Jersey Jazzman says haha. Sure.
Merit pay…was little more than a broken promise to the teachers of Newark right from the start. A survey of Newark teachers in the first year found a large majority did not see the compensation system as “reasonable, fair, and appropriate.” (p. 24) It’s not a surprise, therefore, that this past month both the teachers union in Newark, the NTU, and the district’s administration decided that the program was not worth continuing.
But some reformy folks believe in merit pay the same way some children believe in fairies: they don’t want to acknowledge the evidence that shows, even in the most generous reading, that the benefits of merit pay are very small and likely are not indicative of true increases in student learning. Like Peter Pan, these true believers hope against hope that fairies can be brought back to life simply by clapping harder….
In the first year of the contract, Newark had about 3,200 teachers. How many qualified for the highest bonus, $12,500? Only eleven. Is Walsh really trying to make the case this small disbursal made a significant difference in teacher quality in Newark?

The word on the street is that the students are the ones taking the tests, not the teachers; so since the students are the ones being tested, teacher “quality” isn’t being assessed. Student “quality” is. I tried to listen for the merit pay fairy, but all I heard was real people talking about how dumb it is to believe that teachers can be judged by test scores.
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If you can not see the reflection of a teacher in the student, The class has been a waste of time for both.
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The test cannot see the reflection of the teacher in the student. The test has been a waste of time for both.
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LCT,
How can we see the reflection of the teacher in the student?
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With magic glasses.
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