Schools need more money, not merit pay
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Regarding Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s merit pay for teachers’
proposals, if he ties teacher job security and pay to student
performance, teachers will fight over the better students, who will
learn in spite of us.
And, good teachers who have the less able students will be
penalized. After my 30 years as an educator in the public school
system, I challenge the governor to find harder working individuals,
working together to ensure success for all students but getting
challenged daily for “their failure” in meeting students’ educational
needs.
What can be done? Ask the teachers! A major problem that continues
to be overlooked is class size. Do you really think students get the
full measure of a teacher’s attention when he or she has 190 to 200
students, or more, each day? Can you imagine even looking at that
much student work, let alone grading it or showing students how they
could improve? This has been a major issue that teachers have
identified for years, but the governor thinks a carrot-and-stick
approach will solve the problem by pitting teachers against one
another.
Competition between teachers is not the answer. Large class size
has bred testing with multiple-choice answers, mechanically
corrected, as a one-size-fits-all measure of student success. This
overlooks essay writing, process- demonstrations and/or original
thinking via discussions as ways in which a student can and should be
tested.
Yes, these are used in some of the classes but are so demanding
(with little payoff from the critics) that innovative teachers leave
the profession. If the governor wants to keep these teachers, listen
to them when they identify the barriers to high performance. All
students can learn, but all students cannot meet the same educational
standards. Put money into developing vocational programs for those
who are less able or who have strengths and interests in a particular
vocational field. Do you know how few public education programs are
available in vocational trades?
Some who can afford it seem to think private schools are better.
These schools usually have small classes, and the emphasis is on
classroom education. The major difference between private and public
schools is, however, in large measure, directly related to parents’
involvement.
In the public education system, instead of criticizing teachers
for poor student achievement, parents and the public should support
teachers and their students by making classroom education a priority.
Parents can do this by insisting on smaller class size; by being
involved in the educational process and communicating frequently with
the schools and teachers; by attending meetings so that they
understand the educational goals and grasp how they can help; by
giving their children a quiet place in which to study, time to study,
and show an interest in their success, not in a threatening way, but
by being excited about their successes and encouraging them when they
stumble.
Just these few steps would go a long way toward improving student
performance and would stop excellent teachers from leaving the
profession. The ultimate cost would be less, and the educational
decisions would then be back in the hands of the educators where they
belong. Is Schwarzenegger “The People’s Governor?” Educated people
will be the leaders of the future. Does the governor really think
cutting funding is the solution to improving education?
* BETTYE BUTTERWORTH is a resident of Corona del Mar.
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