Archives for category: Merit pay

Teachers at a charter school in Louisiana received eye-popping bonuses.

One got a bonus of $43,000–more than 75% of her annual salary–for raising test scores by 88% in one year.

Five teachers shared bonuses of $167,000,

The money comes from a federal grant.

One teacher saw a gain of nearly 200%, but she teaches kindergarten, so she received only $4,086.

The school got a grade of D from the state. Last year, it was D-.

The scores, the grades, the gains, the bonuses. Are the children better educated? Who knows?

In other districts, gains of this size usually are grounds for an investigation. But this is Louisiana, so forget about it.

No more career teachers in North Carolina. That’s the goal of legislation introduced by Phil Berger, the President Pro Tem of the State Senate in North Carolina.

The experienced, high-performing teachers would get a four-year contract.

Others would get shorter contracts.

No tenure for any teachers.

Lots of performance pay built in.

Bonuses would be tied to new teacher evaluation programs now under development.

Apparently, Senator Berger has no idea that merit pay has never worked anywhere.

Nor does he know that there is no successful teacher evaluation program anywhere, despite the hundreds of millions expended on creating one.

His goal seems to be to make North Carolina teachers teach to the test at every possible moment of the school day.

North Carolina was once a progressive state.

No more.

Teacher salaries in North Carolina now rank 46th in the nation.

School spending has fallen to 48th.

This is sad. Sad for the children. Sad for the teachers.

 

The Tennessee Education Association sent out this bulletin today. State Commissioner Kevin Huffman, whose only classroom experience was two years in Teach for America, has plans to adopt every evidence-free, demoralizing tactic in the corporate reform playbook.

Huffman is a purveyor of zombie policies. Nothing he advocates has any evidence behind it. “Pay for performance” has been tried repeatedly for a century and never succeeded. So he wants more of it. It failed in 2010 in Nashville, where teachers were offered a bonus of $15,000 for higher scores. But Huffman either doesn’t know or doesn’t care. It’s not his money he’s wasting.

He knows that the state’s teacher evaluation system is badly flawed, but he wants to push ahead with it anyway. Apparently, he wants to break the spirit of the state’s teachers.

How to explain people who are so indifferent to the morale of teachers? How is this mean-spirited approach supposed to improve education?

Educators are supposed to nurture children and help them grow and develop. To be effective, they must be not only competent, but kind and patient. Treating educators harshly creates a sour and mean culture. Huffman sets a bad example. If teachers treated students the way he treats teachers, they would be fired. Deservedly.

The TEA bulletin says:

“House Finance and Budget Hearing

“In a budget hearing today regarding the 1.5 percent raise for teachers that Gov. Haslam included in his budget, Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman was quoted as saying, “Our intent is that the 1.5 percent raise will not go to all teachers.” Instead, Huffman plans to have local districts develop their own pay-for-performance plans for distributing the funds. He also indicated he expects locals to base their plans on the evaluation system.

“In addition to the distribution of the 1.5 percent raise, Huffman also discussed plans to recommend major changes to the minimum salary schedule, which is maintained by the State Board of Education. TEA was able to stop Gov. Haslam’s attempt last year to pass legislation that would blow up the teacher salary schedule. This year, it appears Commissioner Huffman believes he can do administratively what Haslam was unable to do legislatively.

“Commissioner Huffman recognizes the evaluation system has fundamental flaws, yet he wants to move forward with tying teachers’ financial stability to this unfair system,” said Gera Summerford, TEA president and Sevier County math teacher. “We already have more questions than answers about the fairness of the evaluation system, and to tie teachers’ salaries to it would be reckless and irresponsible.”

TEA is working every day in the General Assembly to prevent these things from happening. We want to ensure teachers maintain a fair and objective salary schedule.

During the hearing, Huffman was also asked about the statewide charter authorizer and vouchers. He admitted a lack of knowledge about vouchers’ constitutionality after a legislator, Gary Odom of Nashville, read him a passage from the state constitution requiring the General Assembly to “provide for the maintenance, support and eligibility standards of a system of free public schools.”

One of the great myths of the current corporate reform movement is that they want to elevate the teaching profession. They want to change it so that future teachers are drawn from the top third of their college graduating class. They advocate merit pay tied to test scores to create high-paying positions (always a small minority of all teachers). They push to fire teachers whose students get low scores or see small changes in their scores (even though researchers find that such teachers usually are teaching students with disabilities, or ELLs, or gifted students). They insist on eliminating all job protections for teachers, presumably to make it easier to fire those they consider laggards (and at the same time, removing any academic freedom from teachers). They demand longer working days and longer school years. Will their ideas make teaching more or less attractive to those they expect to attract into teaching? It seems impossible to imagine that they can elevate the teaching profession by their methods, their rhetoric, and their indifference to teachers’ voices.

A reader commented in response to an earlier post:

What the Public Needs to Know about Teaching

As a first-time commenter, I need to preface with how grateful I feel for Diane’s tireless advocacy (and blogging) and the spirited debate it inspires.

Now, what I think the public needs to know about teaching. I began my first full-time teaching job this fall. I soon realized that teachers work harder than anyone outside the profession, or without direct ties to someone in the profession, can appreciate. The majority of the teacher’s workday occurs before or after the students arrive in the classroom. For the first two months, I spent nearly every waking hour rearranging my classroom to be at least somewhat kid-friendly. Now, I plan constantly, muddling through and adapting cumbersome and, frankly, developmentally inappropriate canned curriculum. In addition to that, I try to keep parents in the loop, calling and writing notes and newsletters. Most days, I rack up between twelve and thirteen hours. I also work Sunday afternoons, planning for the week to come.

And let me be clear: I am not a great teacher. I am not remotely adequate. This is my first year, my first classroom, and I struggle almost daily. Furthermore, I receive very little support. The people tasked with providing support to teachers and students in the district constantly fall through on promises. I initially became frustrated with them before realizing that they faced the same professional challenges I do: everyone in the district is spread thin and overwhelmed.

To make a bad situation worse, the national dialogue dominated by the so-called “reformers” seems determined to remove the only mechanisms of support available while blaming me for not working hard enough. Let me tell you, me working hard enough is not the problem. Nor are my credentials. I went to a fancy school with name recognition that makes people do a double take after I tell them I teach kindergarten. But here is the truth. The students in my class do not care what school I went to. They need more, and I need more. We both need more support staff, smaller class sizes, developmentally appropriate curriculum, organized outreach to families, learning materials, playtime, recess longer than 10 minutes, snacks subsidized by someone other than the teacher, while I’m at it, let’s add preschool to my wish list…

…not to mention a well-rested teacher. I cannot wait for the day when someone with influence realizes that what is good for teachers is ALSO good for students and vice versa.

Teachers are not martyrs. The profession should not be one of continual sacrifice and exhaustion. I hope conditions improve, for our students’ sake.

I have written on many occasions that merit pay is an idea that never works and never dies. It has been tried for over a century, and failed again and again. Yet it comes back. I didn’t realize it, but merit pay is a zombie idea.

There are many more zombie ideas, like the well-known adage that “the beatings will continue until morale improves.”

Today, the federal government mandates zombie policies in No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top. These programs might be called High Zombie. They rank and rate children, teachers, and schools. They fire people and cause their schools to close. They do not improve education. They suck the life out of it. Maybe they are Vampire policies. Flip a coin.

Arthur Camins, who has written brilliantly on the failure of current policies, here offers his list of zombie ideas in education.

“Zombies appear to be popular today. Paul Krugman talked about Marco Rubio’s zombie economics in today’s NY Times. Among the zombie education ideas (ideas that were dead or should have been) that keep coming back to life) are:
• People are motivated to do their best by rewards, threats and punishments.
• You can fatten the pig by weighing it. Frequent measurement will improve educational outcomes.
• When students aren’t performing well on current (low) standards, setting higher standards will cause improvement.
• People who are poor have lower levels of educational attainment and get lower paying jobs. Therefore, if they all have higher levels of educational attainment they will all get higher paying jobs and won’t be poor.
• People who are successful should be given more autonomy. People who are not as successful need rules and regulations (except charter schools that should have autonomy whether or not they perform well).
• Market place competition always improves quality.
• If one school even in unique controlled circumstances can “beat the odds,” so can all schools at scale.”

Dear Readers,
Please feel free to add your own zombie ideas.
Diane

Teachers often feel powerless in the face of the assaults against their profession. Often they are directed to do things that they know are educational malpractice, and they have no choice but to comply.

The best way to resist is through collective action, like the testing boycott of the Seattle teachers. One person standing alone is admirable but will be fired. What is necessary is for entire faculties to speak as one. Think of the Chicago Teachers Union. Their detractors changed the state law to prevent them from striking, raising the requirement for a strike vote to 75%. Their enemies, organized by Jonah Edelman of the notorious Stand for Children, and paid for by the equity investors of Chicago, thought that 75% would make a strike impossible.

But CTU patiently educated, mobilized, and organized. When the vote came, more than 90% of the members authorized the strike. And the strike was supported by parents, who understood that the teachers were fighting for their children.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. taught us all that mass protests could defeat big money and political power. He taught us not to be afraid. He taught us the power of collective action by the powerless. Together, in concert, when justice is on your side, mass action cannot be defeated.

A new book gathers stories about stories of courage in response to the attacks on teachers and on public education. This article profiles one teacher who organized his colleagues to resist a merit pay plan in New York City. Why resist a plan that would produce more money for teachers? Because it would harm students.

If all of us showed courage whenever possible, if all of us worked together to alert the public to educational malpractice, we could stop it.

Oh, and the merit pay plan that the city designed and implemented, the one described in the link? It failed and was canceled after a three-year trial and more than $50 million wasted.

Governor Jan Brewer has an idea.

It is a bad idea.

Someone please explain it to her.

She wants all schools to start with the same base funding (perhaps lower than what they have now). Then to give bonuses to schools that get an A or B!

As this blogger, David Safier, explains, the schools that get high marks are likely to be the school serving the students from affluent families.

Governor Brewer’s plan will increase inequity in funding and drag down poor kids whose schools need more staff and more resources. It will reinforce the Matthew Effect where those who have get more, and those who have not get less.

Safier proposes a way to make performance bonuses equitable, by factoring in family income.

Personally, I oppose funding schools in relation to their test scores because the tests are far too unreliable to carry that burden. And the more pressure you put on test scores, the less valid are they as measures because of the amount of time that will be squandered on test prep.

Really, someone on the governor’s staff should explain to her that there is quite a lot of research showing that bonuses tied to test scores do not produce higher test scores, although they often produce cheating and narrowing of the curriculum.

A reader from Wisconsin points out that Governor Walker’s reforms are not intended to improve the schools, but to turn schooling into a free-market activity:

Thank you Diane for highlighting yet another unproven attempt to inject free market ideology into Wisconsin public schools.

The recent recall attempt exposed the forces supporting Gov. Walker and how they wish to dismantle public education and fill the void with free market principles. Walker rolled out phase two of his anti-public education plan in his State of the State address with more promises to “transform education” and “expand the number of choices for families in Wisconsin—be it a traditional, a charter, a voucher, a virtual, or a home school environment.”

http://host.madison.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/gov-walker-s-state-of-the-state-speech-transcript/article_1281c782-5f75-11e2-b2e7-001a4bcf887a.html

The Wisconsin Policy Research Institute–which provided the first critique you mentioned– is in the same camp (or a suburb) of the MacIver Institute–which sponsored Operation Angry Badger designed to “document the shortcomings of public schools in Wisconsin.”

http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/leaked-documents-detail-operation-angry-badger-u447pp9-139483133.html

WPRI, MacIver, Citizens for Responsible Government (CRG), and the Tea Party forces supporting Gov. Walker have no intent to improve public education or provide support for our neediest students. A successful public education system with an extensive support network works against the lassez-faire capitalist ideology of these free marketeers.

Bruce Baker has prepared what may be the most devastating critique of Michelle Rhee’s absurd state rankings. The criteria are without merit, as are her policy ideas.

Best of all, Bruce says he is eager to see some well-known reformers move to Louisiana to take advantage of the schools that Rhee gave top billing in her report.

Jeannie Kaplan is an elected member of the Denver school board. Denver is one of the major sites for corporate reform. Several commenters have asked about Denver’s pay-for-performance plan. I invited Kaplan to explain how it works and with what results, which she does here:

The (D)Evolution of Denver’s Pay-for-Performance Model

This is a story about what happens when a successful “pay for performance” (PFP) education model collides with Broad trained, Gates and Walton funded businessmen in an urban city school landscape. The place is Denver, Colorado. The PFP is called Professional Compensation, ProComp for short. The year of the collision is 2008. But first, some history.

Denver Public Schools was one of the first districts to address the merit pay issue. In 1999 through a collaborative effort between the district and the teachers’ union, Denver Classroom Teachers Association (DCTA), a two year pilot was put into place. It was based on meeting objectives teachers set with principals. In 2004 a Joint Task Force on Teacher Compensation was formed, leading to a vote by DCTA and the Board of Education in 2005 to ask the voters to approve a special mill levy for teacher merit pay.

In November 2005 such a vote occurred, and the measure passed 58% to 42% . A $25 million fund, adjusted for inflation, was established to be overseen by 3 representatives from DPS , 3 from DCTA, and 2 from the community. The 2005 version of ProComp was NOT a strictly PFP plan; rather it was a hybrid consisting of four components: 1) student growth based on teacher-principal decided objectives, 2) market incentives based on hard-to-serve schools determined by numbers of students receiving Free and Reduced Lunch, English Language Learners and Special Education students and hard-to-staff assignments, such as middle school math, English as a second language SpEd speech and language specialist and school psychologists. 3) knowledge and skills based on completing and implementing professional development units, and 4) professional evaluation based on five revised standards and a body of student work. This plan was a long time coming and was carefully and very collaboratively developed.

As ProComp began to be implemented, a large surplus developed because incentives were not large enough to woo teachers into hard to serve schools, and there were not enough hard to staff positions to spend all the $25 million. Something needed to happen.

2008 – The DCTA contract was up at the end of August 2008; the surplus was big; DPS had just financed and re-financed its pension for $750 million, losing hundreds of millions of dollars due to the timing and method of incurring this new debt. It was a perfect storm for then superintendent now U.S. Senator Michael Bennet and his then chief operating officer and current superintendent Tom Boasberg to demand changes in the voter-approved compensation package.

What happened next changed the original “pay for performance” hybrid methodology to a business-based bonus system. And with this the teaching profession in Denver has fundamentally changed as well. The business guys came in and negotiated as business people often do with employees: they target employees as bad guys defining them as greedy and lazy, while they, the business men, swoop in as “the saviors.” Mr. Bennet, Mr. Boasberg and their team threatened not to renew the DCTA master agreement , thus shutting down the union, and they threatened to go back to Denver’s citizens for another vote voiding the 2005 mill levy increase, thus depriving teachers of any extra compensation. The union negotiators were subjected to bullying, were forced to negotiate well into the night and early in the morning with little sleep. This resulted in a crack within the bargaining team.

DCTA was able to secure 2 minor salary increases that would be available EVERY YEAR to ALL teachers, but its victory was relatively small. And the salary caps were much lower, resulting in professional teachers relying on the once a year business bonus model. Teachers no longer have the financial security of negotiated salary increases because their once a year bonus – distributed in November – vary from year to year, are non-existing some years. Family budgeting becomes difficult. (I can hear business folks saying, “Well, no one is guaranteed a certain amount of money,” as they cash their huge end of the year bonuses. Look people, public education isn’t and shouldn’t be a business. We are talking about the education of ALL children, and we are talking about the adults serving children.) Public education is not a business

And then, of course, there is the pension issue. While bonuses are pensionable, the base salary of teachers does not increase significantly, resulting in lower overall salaries for teachers. With the current system of bonuses and very small salary increases, the amount of many teachers’ monthly pension will most likely go down. And with enough of these smaller pension eligible salaries and with enough teachers ultimately deciding not to teach for as many years, DPS retirement payouts may also decline. Get the picture?

All new DPS must participate in ProComp, yet charter schools, an ever-growing and important component in the DPS “portfolio of schools,” are NOT subject to this pay model. Each charter establishes its own pay scale. This is important to note because Denver now has 40+ charter schools out of over 150 total schools.

So while Denver Public Schools talks about the importance of its three “R’s” – recruiting, rewarding and retaining excellent teachers, the fourth “R”, results of its actions have added to the overall change in the profession. Recruitment is often focusing on short term teachers from programs such as Teach for America, rewarding teachers has been transformed to one time bonuses, and retaining the best is still open for debate. Have some teachers benefitted from what I will call Act II of ProComp? Absolutely. Those in hard-to-serve schools filling hard-to staff positions have seen the most benefits. But for the vast majority of teachers in Denver Public Schools, the change in ProComp has not provided a stable and permanent salary increase, and the initial wishes of Denver’s voters has been significantly altered.

Act I of this PFP experiment showed great promise. Did it need to be tweaked? Yes, but with the history of experimentation and collaboration behind it winning solutions could most probably have been found. Act II has been constructed on a business model centered on competition and bonuses. Has it been successful? Well, the money is being paid out and that is a good thing for sure. But the teaching profession is changing profoundly in Denver. As Act III opens, Denver Public Schools and its PFP prototype will have some new challenges, for Colorado has passed legislation mandating new teacher evaluations, 50% of which is based on student performance. How will that fit in with the already established PFP? Denver anxiously awaits how this will play out.