This is from Los Angeles where the UTLA (United Teachers of Los Angeles) strike has gone on for five days.
Bargaining is going on this weekend. Note that a big issue in LA is class size and we haven't fought for lower class size as a contractual issue here in NYC for fifty years. They are also battling against charter schools strongly out in LA. Saving public education is a big issue there.
Next we go up the left coast to Oakland where teachers on their own staged an unsanctioned walkout for a day. They are also threatening a full scale strike. The main issue here is pay but again class size is on the table.
From KGO in San Fransisco :
"Classes are too big, we don't have a living wage, so it's hard to pay rent," said Quinn Ranahand as she marched alongside other teachers.
Now on to Denver where teachers are catching the activist fever too. They are voting on whether to authorize a strike.
From the Denver Post story:
“It’s nice
to see the union finally fight the Denver district’s plan, which has been
happening forever in private,” Diaz said. “It’s long overdue. It’s imperative
we value the teachers and what they’re asking.”
In NYC we usually endorse the district's plans unless I am missing something.
I fully acknowledge that teachers in NYC are paid better than the teachers in LA, Denver and Oakland but working conditions are not exactly improving here. We have an early, lengthy contract so forget about any militancy in the big apple as the contract is settled through 2022. Maybe, we don't need any. It is almost inconceivable to even consider any kind of action here over any issue.
If you want an issue we should be fighting over, it is teacher evaluation. However, in New York State, NYSUT and the UFT are looking to push for small gains as the bill on changing the evaluation law is much less than meets the eye.
Here is a review from upstate teacher activist Bianca Tanis:
23 hrs ·
Please be aware that the proposed APPR
legislation is not what the press claims it to be. At best, it’s a step in the
right direction. Schools will still have to use a test to evaluate teachers and
that test will count for 50% of a teacher’s evaluation. The difference is that
it does not have to be the state test (although it can be) and your school
district will get to decide which test to use. The bill still requires the use
of junk science. Student performance will still be reduced to a growth score for
use in the matrix. This is not a victory for students or teachers. No matter
how innovative, authentic, and valid an assessment we can create, using student
performance measures to evaluate the efficacy of a teacher is wrong. The
practice has no basis in research. It is wrong and it will harm students. I
acknowledge that this is probably the best deal on the table right now, but it
is not a good one.
That's enough for now. Perhaps back on hiatus for a while but maybe we'll emerge again.
No time for hiatus with news coming in quickly.
The LA strike looks like it is over. The teachers won lower class sizes.
From The LA Times piece:
The tentative deal includes
what amounts to a 6% raise for teachers — with a 3% raise for the last school
year and a 3% raise for this school year. This was the district offer on the
table before teachers went on strike, but the walkout was always about more
than salary.
The
agreement
also includes a reduction of class sizes over four years to
levels in the previous contract, but removes a contract provision that has
allowed the school district to increase class sizes in times of economic
hardship, Caputo-Pearl said in an interview. It was not immediately clear how
that issue would be dealt with going forward.
Great to have you back!
ReplyDeleteWelcome back James.
ReplyDeleteWhat a pleasant surprise!
ReplyDeleteThe possible change to the NYS evaluation law is pure bullshit. What needs to happen is a complete repeal of the law so we can gut Danielson and return to the much loved S/U rating system. Anything short of that is garbage. The sad thing is not only is NYSUT and the UFT not fighting to get us S/U but there is no more federal push to keep the shitty evaluation law in place.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to have you back! You have been missed.
ReplyDeleteThere are lots of issues worth fighting for. It's sad that our union is not interested in doing any. Half fast efforts to have teachers do things like wear red are a joke. Absolutely pathetic. Without actively promoting why teachers are wearing red, and additionally making the press take note of it, I think actually harms us more than helps. So few teachers participate it gives the impression that the average teacher here in NY doesn't really care and that our union is weak.
ReplyDeletePlead keep blogging we need your voice and the valuable information you provides us with.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to have you back!
ReplyDeleteHappy to see that you are back!
ReplyDeleteThe unfairness that teachers go through and the social promotion that goes on with students within our education system...Why would they change our rating system?...Danielson versus S/U rating...whoever has been in this system knows that it is just getting worse not only for teachers but for students as well.. THIS SYSTEM IS COMPLETELY CORRUPT....Teacher strike or yet alone a protest in NYC HA! ha ha...wishful thinking. ..no one cares unless it directly affects them.. and I don't blame nyc teachers to turn their cheek beacuse they have NO support from the union..many teachers stay quiet because they don't want to lose their jobs or get targeted by principals..It is sad and disgusting how stakeholders within this system of education play POLITICS at the expense of HUMAN LIFE..
ReplyDeleteKudos to the teachers in L.A. and other cities protesting and striking for their rights and the rights of their students..
Sad but true 4:29.
ReplyDelete