Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
see, there's always a bright side.
i read earlier that one of the teachers' complaints is on test scores being used as a measure of a teachers work. they don't like that. but, how else do they think we can make sure who the good vs the bad teachers are? and there are bad ones out there. there has to be a way to judge teaching ability-i wonder what they would suggest?
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Apparantly testing and wages have been agreed to. The fight is over how much power individual principals will have hiring and firing. The union wants them to have none.
Meanwhile the city's public charter schools are in session and far out performing the rest. Their teachers coincidently are not part of the union.
The real issue is half of Chicago's schools are far from capacity. Emanuel wants to consolidate and shut down failing schools (up to 100 has been a number put out there) and the union is concerned about losing jobs.
They (the union not teachers) could give a f'k about the students.