Should pay be tied to tests?
Wendy Leece
EDITOR’S NOTE: This week, we asked our parent panelists if merit pay
for teachers is a good idea. If it is, how can you accurately measure
teacher performance?
Yes, teachers should be accountable for student failure, and merit
pay is sure to shake up the teachers unions.
Teacher pay would be tied to student performance on tests. A
teacher whose students’ scores were raised significantly would be
rewarded. (See https://www .pacificresearch.org).
Here in Newport-Mesa, we expect our children to receive an
excellent education. Each year children should improve their ability
to speak and write the English language, and understand history,
science and math facts. A little art, music and physical education
are important too. While at school, we expect our children to learn
and practice virtues consistent with our community values. We are
thankful for the many outstanding Newport-Mesa school teachers who
work diligently to impart knowledge, and overall, we are satisfied
with our children’s achievements.
But I know many parents who have experienced frustration when
faced with an ineffective teacher or administrator. Should they take
action, parents risk being labeled troublemakers and the possibility
their children could be adversely affected. Sometimes the parents
prevail and a teacher is removed. But the education bureaucracy and
union process are not conducive to dealing with alleged mediocrity or
unprofessional conduct in a timely manner.
Recent implementation of state teaching standards and the federal
No Child Left Behind requirements force teachers to teach
quantifiable content. Merit pay would raise the bar higher.
In the coming months, we can anticipate an intense battle between
the governor and teachers unions. All sides should see the value of
good test results for our children. Locally, discussions of merit pay
and teacher salaries should be held in public, not behind closed
doors. Merit pay won’t work unless taxpayers hold local school
leaders accountable.
In the meantime, the only sure way for parents to deal with
problems is to confront the teacher or the administration and
persevere until there is a satisfactory resolution. If parents were
involved in what is happening in our classrooms, we wouldn’t need an
intervention such as merit pay.
A better idea would be that the parents who pay the teachers’
salaries hold all teachers accountable to teach excellence in each
and every classroom.
* WENDY LEECE is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa and is a former
Newport-Mesa school board member.
I’m in favor of merit pay for teachers because my kids have had
some widely variable experiences with teachers. They’ve had some
great teachers who have spurred them to higher achievement, and
they’ve had some awful teachers who were ineffective. I’m a firm
believer that every worker should have some component of pay based on
performance.
The usual arguments against performance-based pay for teachers are
that there are too many variables beyond the teacher’s control
(students, mandated policies, school facilities, demographics, etc.)
and that performance is too difficult to accurately measure and
quantify.
There are many variables beyond a teacher’s control, but there are
many variables in other pay-for-performance jobs. I’ve worked in
marketing and sales for a long time and have had my compensation
whipsawed by market changes, dumb management, Sept. 11, mergers, or
just by a client or partner having a bad day. It’s all part of the
package. The keys are to develop a compensation structure that
proportions the variable pay component according to the degrees of
control and risk and then work within that structure to do the best
you can within your span of control.
Education is now a data-rich environment. Standardized test
scores, regular tests and quizzes, grades, and attendance figures and
other hard data are readily available. Softer measures such as peer
reviews and annual performance evaluations are also available. You
could also collect parent and student satisfaction ratings. Overall
school performance should also be a key component. Everybody at a
school site needs to feel that they are part of a team.
The first part of the answer is in balancing and blending these
measures.
That’s doable. The second part is in deciding how much
compensation to put at risk. Most teachers I have spoken with would
be willing to put 10% to 20% of their compensation at risk for a plan
that had a commensurate upside.
No plan would be immediately perfect, so the third part of the
answer is in phasing in merit pay and adjusting it. It’s definitely
worth trying.
* MARK GLEASON is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa.
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