posted 09/01/10 11:58 PM | updated 09/01/10 10:37 PM

Seattle reaches contract agreement with teachers union but support slim for superintendent

As Capitol Hill kids head back to school, Seattle Times has the latest on the ongoing process to forge a new agreement between Seattle Public Schools and the union that represents its teachers:

Seattle Public Schools and its teachers union reached a tentative agreement Wednesday on a contract that allows student test scores to be used as a trigger to more closely evaluate teachers when their students score poorly.

Union leaders called it a "historic" agreement, one that recognizes the need for a better system to evaluate the quality of the work teachers do in the classroom, and to provide them help if they are struggling.

But despite the agreement, the union has raised growing concerns about Seattle Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson's ability to lead. The Seattle Education Association (SEA) leadership is not only recommending approval of the contract, but a vote of no confidence on Goodloe-Johnson. Both votes are set for Thursday afternoon. Classes are scheduled to start next Wednesday.

Times says the agreement hinges on passage of the $48 million school levy on the November ballot. We covered the growing dissatisfaction with Goodloe-Johnson and talked to Capitol Hill's District 5 rep Kay Smith-Blum about the situation in July.

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Seattle teachers fighting back against privatization
Goodloe-Johnson is a non-educator committed to destroying public education. That's why Obama's Secretary of Education supports her. Love the Obama administration, fine, that's your choice. But do not lie to your community for him.

Seattle teachers fighting back against privatization

NEW SEATTLE Public Schools superintendent, Dr. Maria Goodloe-Johnson, in her effort to centralize and standardize the Seattle Public School District has hired the New York-based consulting firm McKinsey & Co.--a corporation with a track record of supporting school privatization.

But the teachers developed a different lesson plan for the direction of the public schools--the Seattle Education Association (SEA, the local teachers' union) overwhelmingly ratified a motion strongly advising its members to not participate in interviews with McKinsey.

McKinsey has worked with over half of the Fortune 1000, advising clients around the globe on how to cut costs and run their operations more efficiently. They have also recently been brought into school districts around the country to make suggestions for public schools that echo and elaborate on vile elements of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act.

In a nine-point plan to improve the Minneapolis school district, McKinsey recommended replacing the poorest performing schools with charter schools, creating a principal corps that gives principals power over curriculum, firing "under-performing" teachers and cutting costs such as employee health care.

McKinsey's private-sector record is just as objectionable. As Business Week reported about McKinsey's partnership... read more
Comment by Students and Teachers, Yes; Su
September 02, 2010
Bill Gates: The wrong partner for our schools
The wrong partner for our schools

Lee Sustar looks at the implications of the "partnership" between American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten and Microsoft chairman Bill Gates.

July 22, 2010

AS BOSS of Microsoft, Bill Gates steamrollered competitors, intimidated regulators and used his company's quasi-monopoly status to foist deficient software on business and consumers alike.

Now, America's richest man is using those skills to design a system to evaluate schoolteachers, and American Federation of Teachers (AFT) President Randi Weingarten is his willing--make that enthusiastic--partner.

The question is: Will more militant elements in the AFT--including the newly elected leadership of the Chicago Teachers Union--challenge the union's direction?

At the AFT convention in Seattle earlier this month, Weingarten welcomed Gates as a keynote speaker, despite his long and destructive record in the attack on public education that passes for school reform. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation spent more than $4 billion to push school districts across the U.S. to break up large schools and replace them with small ones, foster the proliferation of charter schools, and push teacher evaluation programs linked to standardized test scores:

As Leonie Haimson of the organization Class Size Matters wrote at the Huffington Post Web site [1]:

In recent years, the Gates initiative has turned districts upside-down, at first establishing as many small schools as possible, creating thousands of new administrator jobs, eating up classroom space, and compelling the neediest kids who were excluded... read more
Comment by There's always more to a story
September 02, 2010