Since your googler is broken: https://www.aft.org/periodical/american-educator/winter-2006-2007/nurturing-teacher-knowledge https://www.aft.org/periodical/american-educator/winter-2006-2007/erd-twenty-five-years-union-sponsored Also, teacher unions promote professional development. Our district wants to move towards structured literacy but hasn’t offered teachers much yet for PD. If they had a teacher union pushing for PD that would happen more quickly. Teacher unions also raise the level of discussion of education policy. They give teachers a seat at the table. Right now they have no voice in VA. People don’t respect teachers or the expertise they offer. Certainly not the right mindset if VA wants to improve its schools. |
I'm a union supporter but this PD is a bad use of union efforts. |
Having more teachers with a seat at the table does nothing for education policy. There are people who study education policy out there. These people should be in charge. Teachers don't know anything outside of their classroom/school. |
Exactly the attitude that has given us mediocre schools. |
How so? I'd think that literacy is one of the most important areas. |
That’s a ridiculous sentiment. The people who work in education policy are so far removed from students and classrooms. They’ve been allowed to dictate every policy decision that undermines public schools and efforts to educate children. Parents don’t know anything about it-they just know their own children. Fixed it for you. |
It's the teachers that give us mediocre schools. It's pretty clear from distance learning that our teacher training programs aren't great, and our brightest certainly aren't joining them. |
The fact that you make this statement betrays the fact that you are not familiar with education policy research(ers). |
Teacher PD is a joke, and the unions just fight for higher pay for themselves. If there are positive externalities for children, they are completely incidental. And no, I don't believe that teachers have expertise at higher levels than they have experience or training at. That doesn't make sense in terms of anyone's employment, anywhere. |
I'm just a parent, not an expert on teaching or education policy.
However, having seen my kids through public schools, I would say that to the extent training is needed and helpful, teachers should be paid more and receive the training outside of the regular school year to avoid disruptions to student learning. I question how helpful the PD teachers receive is when they are constantly being pulled from class and away from their students to receive it. It makes no sense. |
Oh, I see. You think I am a parent. I am not. I do have knowledge about teachers and education policy, however. You have an incoherent view of education policy. You seem to be blaming everything bad on policy, and can't see any of the good. If you care in the least about equity, you will realize just how much policy has to do with it. |
They spend an awful lot of time pushing for other things, though. They advocated for keeping school doors closed, for the Biden administration to do a wide variety of politicized things in education, for specific funding items in the state budget. But I don't hear them advocating for things that teachers I actually know say they want. |
I am pro union and I don’t see it as the unions’ job to advocate for educational quality- their job is to advocate for the teachers’ interests.
It’s like expecting a union of Amazon workers to advocate for the customers- sorry that’s not their interest. It is a worker organization. If you want higher quality teachers then teaching should be a higher paid and more respected profession like it is in other advanced countries. If it were a more competitive field you would see higher quality candidates. |
What is incoherent? The pile of evidence that people who work in educational policy have done a terrible job? What good has anyone in educational policy done? Not succeeded in (ever) funding IDEA? Not integrating schools? Forcing schools to administer federally mandated state tests (as the federal government did literally yesterday) during the pandemic? Funneling hundreds of millions of dollars to Pearson and other big testing corporations, instead of toward literally anything that benefits students? Allowing tax dollars to be funneled to charters, starving our public schools? Creating loan forgiveness policies that deny nearly every application? Allowing predatory for profit colleges to take advantage of working class people and immigrants? You’re right. All of these policies have been genius. |
I will continue to dispute this. Teacher pay in this region aligns with the pay to other government employees with similar education. And no, teacher's unions do not limit their advocacy to protecting their workers. Their demands extend beyond workplace issues and they purport to speak for students and families. That's where they have overplayed their hands. |