Where
All the Teachers Are Above Average
New York teachers are great—just look at their
ratings. Too bad so many students can't read.
By Marc F. Bernstein im the Wall Street Journal
New
York recently released evaluations that rank 95% of the state's teachers as
"highly effective" or "effective," 4% as
"developing," and only 1% as "ineffective" for the 2012-13
school year. Never mind that more than half of the state's students in grades
4-8 weren't proficient in reading and math, according to statewide test scores.
Critics
were amazed at how the state could have so many effective teachers and so many
struggling students. But as a former New York state superintendent of schools
for more than 20 years, I wasn't at all surprised. State law and school culture
make it nearly impossible to get an honest evaluation of teachers'
effectiveness.
According
to the New York State Education Department, state law requires that 60% of a
teacher's rating be based on classroom observations and other measures agreed
upon at the local level through collective bargaining with the union. Another
20% is based on student performance on grades 4-8 statewide math and reading
tests or "locally determined student learning objectives." The
remaining 20% is again based on "locally determined" objective
measures as bargained between school management and teachers unions.
New
York State Education Commissioner John King noted that more than 80% of the
teachers were rated exclusively under criteria determined by local districts or
through negotiations. (New York City's teachers weren't included because the
city and its teachers union couldn't agree on contract language that would
permit reporting of teacher-evaluation data.)
School
culture strongly frowns upon administrators rating teachers as less than
satisfactory. Most elementary schools have fewer than three- or four-dozen
teachers; they constitute a family with members supporting one another
regardless of deficiencies. Fellow teachers are well aware when colleagues have
personal issues that might diminish their effectiveness, and they expect
administrators to compensate by being generous in their evaluations.
Administrators
who are critical of teachers often lose the respect and cooperation of the
faculty. Moreover, how can administrators explain to parents that their
children have teachers rated ineffective but who remain in the classroom?
Administrators in New York—other than school superintendents—are also eligible
to receive lifelong tenure. Many of them thus have little incentive to rock the
boat.
Changes
are needed to honestly evaluate teachers. In New York, teachers and
administrators are eligible for tenure after three years, which means decisions
are made at around 2 1/2 years of experience. Unless a serious infraction takes
place, tenure is almost always granted.
A
decade ago, to much fanfare, New York started requiring 35 hours a year of
"professional development" for teachers and administrators. But this
requirement is farcical. Teachers who attend monthly faculty and grade-level
meetings and the two or three superintendent's conference days required by
union contract meet this requirement without additional training. School
administrators can also satisfy their yearly requirement by participating in
normal administrative activities.
Unless
we rethink administrative and teacher tenure, it will be difficult to
accurately measure teacher or school accountability. Here are some suggestions
for a better way forward:
•
No tenure for administrators. Give them five-year contracts detailing
specific, realistic, measurable goals and criteria that will be used to
determine success. At the end of the fourth year, the administrator should
receive a formal evaluation to determine if a new five-year contract will be
offered. Administrators would have the right to appeal a denied contract
renewal to state Education Department officials for a binding determination.
•
Tenure review for teachers. Teachers should be eligible for lifelong
tenure but after a probationary period of five years instead of the current
three. During this five-year period, they would assemble a portfolio for review
by a committee comprised of three teachers, a state Education Department
official and two school administrators. A majority of the six members would be
necessary for recertification, which if approved would last seven years. Every
seven years the process would be repeated.
There
are good reasons for treating administrators and teachers differently. Teachers
need protection from dismissal once their salaries increase with years of
service and also need the freedom to use their professional judgment, which may
sometimes differ from that of their supervisors.
Administrators,
however, are leaders and managers who must be held accountable for school and
student progress. If they cannot do so, another administrator must be given the
opportunity.
Mr. Bernstein, a former New York state superintendent of
schools, is an adjunct faculty member at the Fordham Graduate School of
Education and an educational consultant.
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