As CPS prepares to close a record number of schools, the fate of students and communities is in question.
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What we’ve learned about unions since the strike
With students back in Chicago’s schools, many people are looking for lessons from the teachers’ strike. Some, including the Chicago Tribune editorial page and wealthy venture capitalist Bruce Rauner, have already recommended that the city double-down on its attempts to weaken the Chicago Teachers Union with more school closings and charters.
But as educators deeply invested in the success of Chicago’s schools, we come away with very different lessons. We argue that teacher unions have in the past proven to be an essential voice in improving public education; that the recent strike has preserved that voice for Chicago’s teachers; and that unions must continue to serve as the teachers’ voice into the 21st century.
Throughout a century of disagreements with mayors over patronage, segregation, and unequal resources, organized teachers in Chicago have used their collective power to foster improvement in the public schools. The recent strike reflects this legacy, with the CTU taking a stand against charter schools and high-stakes testing. The spread of charters, on which Mayor Rahm Emanuel staked his position, has had exactly the same mixed results in Chicago as elsewhere: Research consistently shows that overall, charters perform the same as, or worse than, comparable neighborhood schools while also increasing segregation along racial and class lines. Now, CPS plans to close up to 120 public schools and welcome 60 charters anyway.
Another central issue in this dispute was the use of student test scores to evaluate teachers. The rush to use standardized test scores, despite documented significant flaws, has been compared to early 20th Century IQ testing and the minimum-competency exams of the 1970s, both of which are now recognized by historians as having been racially discriminatory and bad for children and learning.
Many backers of these so-called reforms--including Rauner, CPS board member Penny Pritzker and the Gates Foundation--are politically connected and wealthy, and they are also generous donors to both local and national campaigns. Organized teachers provide a vision of public schooling grounded in the daily realities of children, communities, and schools that offsets this unequal distribution of power. Only one of the seven appointed members of the CPS Board of Education has any education experience. Unions support continued education and the sharing of best practices grounded in empirical research. In fact, the only research-based proposal to come out of this recent contract fight came from the CTU, which argued against the narrowing of the curriculum, more charters, and value-added evaluations.
It’s time to start trusting educators again. Teachers unions of the 21st Century can evolve to become as dynamic and diverse as learning. Unions should collaborate with districts to put new tools of education, such as mobile computing, in the hands of all students. Teachers’ collaborative power will also be enhanced by bringing charter and “virtual school” educators into unions. And, as we have seen too many smart people leave this profession out of frustration, unions can carve out new career ladders based on peer-certified mastery: mentor for aspiring and new teachers, master teacher to coach colleagues, online educator, and so on.
All of this takes time, and we have heard over and over again that our most disadvantaged students don’t have it. But we also need to stop treating education as if it is in crisis. The patient is not bleeding out; she has a chronic illness. There is a big difference between doing something—whether to please those demanding that something be done, or out of desperation for a solution—and finding the right thing to do.
It’s time to do the right thing for the children of Chicago and the United States.
Charles Tocci is a clinical assistant professor in the School of Education at Loyola University Chicago. Melissa Barton is a doctoral candidate at the University of Chicago as well as a teacher and union delegate in the Chicago Public Schools.



De-professionalization of teaching
Backers of the business-model of public schools want to break the union so that there is no organized, professional voice raised against their poor ideas like over testing, like evaluating teachers based on junk science, or like replacing teachers with a computer-based curriculum.
How is it that pressuring government officials to override local school boards and re-direct citizens' tax dollars into their pockets -- Pearson, Amplify, Microsoft, Apple, New Schools New Ventures, KIPP, Noble -- is a shining example of the Milton Friedman's view of the merits of competition under laissez-faire capitalism?
It isn't. It is merely the uber-wealthy using their power to stack the deck in their favor. Forget the kids. Forget poverty.
Google today's NYTimes article about the labor practices of a major backer of privatization of public schools -- Walmart. Part-time teachers will come to pass if this business model goes through.
NYT: A Part-Time Lie as Hours Shrink and Shift for American Workers.
yawwwwnnn...
enough said
brilliant!
brilliant!
interesting
Mark Naison posted in OPT OUT OF THE STATE TEST: The National Movement
Mark Naison 3:51am Oct 29
"Everywhere I go, including last weekend's wedding in upstate NY, I meet teachers, many of them who have devoted their life to the profession, who are appalled by the new testing and teacher evaluation protocols descending upon the schools they are in, protocols which remove the autonomy that made them enjoy their jobs. How a nation van improve its schools by demoralizing and marginalizing its wisest and most experienced educators is a mystery to me, but a cynic would say that the school system we are creating is a perfect fit for the new America economy where most jobs will be part time, unstable and require obedience more than creativity."
wonderful article , Melissa.
wonderful article , Melissa. Katie Mc Knight forwarded this link. She, like you , give hope to education.
unions
I hate to beat a dead horse but the little dark secret of this new contract is and sb7 are
1-two unsatisfactory ratings will be considered unsatisdfactory rating
2-in time of layoffs "satisfactory(basic)" and unsatisfactory ratings will put you on the CPS blacklist and you will never work at CPS again
3-The entire review process is made by ONE principal...in other words he/she becomes your "life and death"....their politically motivated review will more or less ruin you for life. Even if they get fired for being incompetent...their evaluation still sticks
4-The "rehire pool" at cps will not accept satisfactory teachers
5-Techincally you could get a Profiient rating for your teaching, but value added scores could pull you down to "Basic"..this of course, as stated above, could actually ruin your career!
These are not "lessons" learned..teachers have been thrown under the bus!! I just don't understand why legislatures and cps have put so much stock in prinipals....let's face it they have been at the very least 50% of the problem....and the teachers the other 50%.....(I won't get started on the students and parents).....
correction
1-two basics will be considered unsatisfactoy if their is no "improvement"..but lets face it..once you are on that landslide you probably arent going to get ouy
northside teacher
Do you think the union needs to get behind changes to sb7?
sb7
Yes and reading trib saying cps is not top paying school district, why did cps get special punishment in that law. How did we get sold more down the river by our quote brother unions and atf.
northside
It's old news now, but worth viewing. Google the aspen ideas festival video of Jonah Edelman and take a look at the whole thing. Or google parents across america and red the transcript.
Edelman of Stand for Children explains how Mayor Emanuel split the unions in Illinois so that the CTU had no allies to turn to while Stand lobbyists ( 11 of the best ) bullied through the legislation, sb7.
Then, I suggest you might want to talk with your rep to see if you can get involved in some practical advocacy. Posting the same stuff over and over doesn't get you very far.
The worst contract in the union history
Your lovely sleeping beauty delivered the worst garbage possible..Previously,she supported the SB 7..not long ago.
For sure,you lost your rights and you do not have a representation.
Many of you are happy now,but wait a little and be patient.
You are just a dues paying number and your role is to feed crooks.
By the way,your union employees still use their inflated salaries for the pension calculation purpose.
I hate to say that the Right to Work legislation could be a best way to put accountability on your leaders who currently do not care about you.
Enough with the hate. You may
Enough with the hate. You may disagree with the CTU leaders' salaries, but they are about half what the previous group was getting.
Be consistent. CORE has put a ton of money from our dues back into organizing instead of where previous leaders did--steak dinners and their own pockets.
Xian
First Amendment,Xian.
By the way,are you the person walking with a laptop around and doing nothing?
Are you the same person who get fired from the Union office?
I may be wrong...apologize in advance.
To compare with the old regime does not make a sense.Just take a look how badly current leadership screwed members. First,by supporting the SB 7 and secondly,by organizing an artificial strike and deliver a worst contract ever.
Actually I teach...
...what the First Amendment does.
Have a great day.
:D
Position Postings
Just a sidenote, but does anybody out there know if CPS can post your position and hold interviews before they have told you if they are not renewing you?
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