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  1. #1

    Default Editorial: Detroit teachers union should embrace changes

    http://www.detnews.com/article/20091027/OPINION01/910270313/1008/opinion01/Edito\
    rial--Detroit-teachers-union-should-embrace-changes


    Last Updated: October 27. 2009 1:00AM

    The Detroit Federation of Teachers' contract is set to expire later this week as
    talks between the union and school district Emergency Financial Manager Robert
    Bobb remain stalled over reforms to improve district finances and student
    achievement. Detroit's teachers ironically could help break the impasse by
    adopting policies that its national union supports.

    After months of negotiations, including a one-month extension, Bobb last week
    characterized the negotiations as "brutal." While he acknowledged that the union
    has proposed "some very creative cost-cutting ideas that we are embracing," he
    indicated the union is resisting academic reforms, including modifying seniority
    in Detroit's lowest-performing schools. This would allow Detroit the flexibility
    to staff schools with its best teachers instead of those who have clocked the
    most time in the district.

    Site-based management is also a sticking point, says Barbara Byrd-Bennett,
    Bobb's academic czar. The idea is to empower principals and teachers to manage
    their schools instead of relying on the district's traditional model of schools
    being guided by a highly centralized and distant bureaucracy. Union leaders such
    as the Detroit Federation of Teachers' Keith Johnson are used to negotiating big
    decisions such as teacher pay and bonuses themselves, rather than allowing their
    members to do so at individual schools.

    None of Bobb's requests are unreasonable or unprecedented nationally. The
    American Federation of Teachers affiliate in New York City supported a radically
    different contract in partnership with unionized charter school operator Green
    Dot Schools, which is out-performing Detroit high schools in practically every
    measure.

    Earlier this month, the AFT Innovation Fund announced it will distribute $1.2
    million to projects at eight affiliates. They include developing new teacher
    evaluations in Rhode Island and New York, and creating a compensation plan that
    considers multiple measures of student learning in Broward County, Fla.

    The American Federation of Teachers, led by President Randi Weingarten,
    considers these reform projects important. The affiliate in Rhode Island noting
    that its evaluation project emphasizes that it "has no interest in protecting
    incompetent teachers."

    If a new contract is not finalized by the end of this week, Bobb says he would
    be willing to extend it by just one week. After that, declaring the school
    district bankrupt is "still an option," he said.

    If the Detroit teacher union remains resistant, Bobb should make good on his
    word to declare bankruptcy. It would wipe out the teacher contract and allow him
    to set up more flexible and effective rules and practices for the district. This
    would benefit students more than rewarding the recalcitrance of the union --
    which three years ago conducted an illegal strike, causing misery for school
    families and a hemorrhage of students from the district.

    The better option for the union would seem to be to adopt the AFT's reforms with
    Bobb and continue to have a say in the district's destiny. The union should do
    what's best for the future of teachers and students, not just its own parochial
    interests.

  2. #2

    Default

    The last line of the Free Press article:

    "The union should do what's best for the future of teachers and students, not just its own parochial interests."

    HaHahaHa haHaHa!

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