TAKE ACTION: Share Your Ideas for a fairer, more accurate evaluation

Share your ideas for a fairer, more

accurate evaluation!

We all know that changes must be made to Louisiana’s teacher evaluation system.

But what should those changes look like?

How much will teacher input influence the changes?

You can help determine the future of teacher evaluation in our state!

The Accountability Commission is now considering ways to reform COMPASS. The next meeting will be on Monday, November 17. LFT President Steve Monaghan is a member of the commission.

The chairman of the commission, Brett Duncan, has asked teachers for their suggestions. Please click here to send the Commission a message and share your thoughts about ways that COMPASS needs to change.

Take Action Now: Teachers Aren’t Rotten Apples

Time magazine is about to use its cover to blame teachers for every problem in America’s schools. On Monday, Nov. 3, this cover will be in every supermarket checkout line and newsstand across the country—and it’s already online.

 

 

Time cover

When I saw this today, I felt sick. This Time cover isn’t trying to foster a serious dialogue about solutions our schools need—it’s intentionally creating controversy to sell more copies.

Tell Time‘s editors to apologize for this outrageous attack on America’s teachers.

The millionaires and billionaires sponsoring these attacks on teacher tenure claim they want to get great teachers into the schools that serve high-need kids. It’s a noble goal, but stripping teachers of their protections won’t help.

In fact, this blame-and-shame approach only leads to low morale and high turnover, making it even harder to get great teachers into classrooms. Just today, constitutional scholar Erwin Chemerinsky wrote a fact-based argument 1 that tenure protections help recruit and retain high-quality teachers! In fact, there is a strong correlation between states with strong teacher tenure and high student performance.

And Time‘s cover doesn’t even reflect its own reporting. The Time article itself looks at the wealthy sponsors of these efforts. And while it looks critically at tenure, it also questions the testing industry’s connections to Silicon Valley and the motives of these players.

But rather than use the cover to put the spotlight on the people using their wealth to change education policy, Time‘s editors decided to sensationalize the topic and blame the educators who dedicate their lives to serving students. The cover is particularly disappointing because the articles inside the magazine present a much more balanced view of the issue. But for millions of Americans, all they’ll see is the cover, and a misleading attack on teachers.

There are serious challenges facing our schools—tell Time that blaming teachers won’t solve anything.

When we work together instead of pointing fingers, we know we can help students succeed.

In places like New Haven, Conn., Lawrence, Mass., Los Angeles’ ABC school district and many others, union-district collaboration is leading to real change2.

Instead of pitting students and teachers against each other, these districts are showing how we can build welcoming, engaging schools by working together to give kids the education they deserve. As a result of this collaborative approach, once-struggling schools all over America are turning around.

When we collaborate, we’re able to recruit AND retain high-quality teachers, and reclaim the promise of a high-quality education for every student.

And when we work together, we can also change tenure to make it what it was supposed to be—a fair shake before you are fired, not a job for life, an excuse for administrators not to manage or a cloak for incompetence.

But instead of a real debate, Time is using the cover to sensationalize the issue so it can sell magazines.

Tell Time magazine to apologize for blaming teachers in order to sell magazines.

We need to have a substantive, facts-based conversation about the challenges our schools face and the real solutions that will help educators and kids succeed.

Help us tell Time that blaming teachers isn’t the way to help struggling schools.

In unity,
Randi Weingarten
AFT President

1  “Teacher Tenure: Wrong Target

2Four Solutions to Public School Problems

Union Veterans Can Earn a $1000 Grant for Purchase of a New Home

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Union veterans can earn $1,000 grant for purchase of a new home

Union veterans can earn a $1,000 mortgage grant. We wanted you to be the first to know about a brand-new grant for union member veterans. The Union Plus Mortgage Veterans Grants program will provide qualified union member veterans with a $1,000 grant that never needs to be repaid! This exciting program launches November 1 and the funds are limited, so you’ll want to prepare now to promote it to your members on your website, social media and in newsletters.

The American Dream of homeownership is too often out of reach, especially for those of your members who made sacrifices in protecting our country. Union Plus wants to make the dream of homeownership more affordable for hard working union members who have served in our armed forces, now they have the chance to find condos in Hilton Head Island even.

The Veterans Grants program, a NEW grant feature of the Union Plus Mortgage program, provides qualified union member veterans with a $1,000 grant that never needs to be repaid to help offset the costs of a down payment plus the qualified assistance, such as postal address change etc. (learn details at https://www.us-mailing-change-of-address.com).

Click here to view all of your AFT Union Plus Benefits: http://www.aft.org/about/member-benefits

Reports on Over-Testing address symptoms, not causes

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Reports on overtesting address symptoms, not causes

Two reports on testing were released by major organizations this week. On the positive side, they add to growing concerns about excessive testing in our schools. But both reports—one from the Center for American Progress and the other from the Council of Chief State School Officers and the Council of the Great City Schools—address the symptoms, but not the root cause, of our test fixation.

AFT President Randi Weingarten says: “We need to take on the high-stakes consequences of the tests themselves. It’s unconscionable that everything about our schools, our kids and our teachers is reduced to one math and one English high-stakes standardized test per year. That’s what we need to change. And that’s where we need the administration to step up. Without leadership from this administration, which can encourage states to make changes like sampling and grade-span testing, the hands of states and districts remain tied to these high-stakes standardized tests.”

October is Bullying Prevention Month- Free Lesson Plans with Share My Lesson

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October is Bullying Prevention Month – Free Lesson Plans

October is National Bullying Prevention Month. Educators like you are in a unique position to take action immediately to curtail bullying, and Share My Lesson has free resources to help.

To aid educators, parents and community members in creating safe and welcoming schools, Share My Lesson has created an expansive collection of free resources and classroom materials.

  1.  Download free resources to support you and your school in being safe and welcoming to all students.

  2.  Read our Scholastic article on the 12 most important steps you can take to address this important issue.

  3.  Request a complimentary bullying prevention toolkit for your school.

See a full list of Share My Lesson’s featured bullying prevention partners.

Ebola Telephone Town Hall with AFT

Ebola Telephone Town Hall with AFT

Date: Thursday, Oct. 23

Time: 8:15 p.m. Eastern time

Register today.

Ebola has been on everybody’s mind, and AFT members across the nation are doing everything they can to be ready to care for, and answer questions from, those who come through their doors—in hospitals, patients’ homes, ambulatory care centers, public health clinics and schools.

Since this summer, our union has been working on several fronts to both address and contain Ebola, from working with our colleagues in West Africa to ensuring American government officials understand the steps necessary to safely care for Ebola patients.

Last week, with our nurse and healthcare leaders and activists, the AFT held a press conference to disseminate the three steps we believe are absolutely necessary to address this potential, but eminently containable, crisis. We made the same points privately to the Obama administration and used my New York Times column to similarly educate the public. (link) And U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) presented a letter I wrote on behalf of our union at last week’s House committee hearing about the United States’ response to Ebola. This letter was the only submission from organized labor at that hearing.

This morning, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued updated guidance for hospital healthcare workers on Ebola preparedness in our healthcare system. The agency, for the most part, listened to us.

Armed with these new guidelines, we are working to ensure they are being implemented at every healthcare facility. They are not mandatory. And as we learned from our work on protecting our members from H1N1, the heavy lift will be making sure our employers do the right thing.

As we continue partnering with officials on solutions that will equip our members to deal with Ebola in the workplace, please join me for a special telephone town hall meeting with all AFT state and local affiliate presidents.

Given the widespread concern about Ebola, we are including all our leaders on this call, not just our frontline nurses and healthcare providers.

The telephone town hall will address the new CDC guidelines, which echo the key points from the AFT’s plan, as well as a number of remaining issues that need attention. Just yesterday, I spoke with top officials from the White House, the CDC, the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Health and Human Services about the need to limit potential exposure of health professionals through the use of specially trained volunteer care teams. We also discussed the need to ensure pay for workers who are placed in precautionary isolation following exposure to the virus. The positive response I got from CDC Director Tom Frieden and others was positive; our leaders clearly want to continue working with us on developing solutions. We must be sure to impress upon the agency the urgent need for expanded guidance for nonhospital settings.

BESE: Ebola fears prompt emergency rules

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BESE: Ebola fears prompt emergency rule

Prompted by fears that the Ebola virus could invade Louisiana, the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education approved emergency rules giving superintendents the authority to close schools or send students home if threats appear. While no cases of Ebola have been reported in Louisiana, Assistant Superintendent Erin Bendily told the board that the schools should be prepared for the eventuality. Once a comment period is complete, the new rules will become part of the Louisiana Handbook for School Administrators. The emergency rule was approved without discussion or objection. While not specifically mentioning Ebola, the rule says that local superintendents can dismiss schools when there is “any actual or imminent threat to public health or safety, which may result in loss of life, disease or injury.” The rule also allows superintendents to remove students or staff if there is evidence from a health care professional that the individual has a communicable disease that could spread to the general population.
Students required to miss school because of quarantine would be provided with assignments, homework and instructional services.

Take Action: Tell Our Leaders: More Teaching, Less Testing

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ACTION: Tell our leaders: More teaching. Less testing.

End the obsession with testing! Louisiana spends hundreds of millions of dollars on tests that can unfairly and inaccurately compare and label our children, our teachers and our schools.

The national tests haven’t even all been written, yet BESE and Superintendent White insist they be used to judge teachers and compare students.

An “apples-to-apples” comparison is impossible and it shouldn’t be the goal of education. Our focus should be on deciding what our children need to know and on instruction. The purpose of testing should be to learn if children know what they should to be successful in life.

Even U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan says it’s time to delay using standardized test results to evaluate teachers.

Click here to send a message to Superintendent of Education John White, Gov. Bobby Jindal, the Legislature and the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.