Friday, March 4, 2011

LIFO -- Connecticut considers a change

It is impossible to watch, read, or browse the news without noticing that teacher tenure is the latest hot button issue in the ed reform world. Once again, politics on this particular issue have changed, quite radically in fact, in just the past month. Democratic Governor of Connecticut, Dannel Malloy said in his budget address that he wanted  “to give local school districts the flexibility they need to retain new, talented teachers."

For those who missed the code in that statement, Gov Malloy was attacking one of the standard provisions of most contracts between teacher unions and school districts -- the "Last In, First Out" or LIFO rule. The last to be hired, is the first to be fired.

A google news search gets hits in the thousands. Why has LIFO suddenly become the issue in ed reform? In my opinion, it is the scapegoat that lets everyone off the hook of real reform. Everyone is jumping on the bandwagon, and for what it is worth, LIFO rules are hard to justify.  One of the few that made an attempt to do just that was Maurice Berube in a letter to the editor at the NY Times. And even his defense is pretty weak -- protect teachers from outside pressure? And then he goes on with this:

"Moreover, critics of teachers’ unions do not take into account the fact that teaching is labor-intensive and teachers often burn out."

Um, geez Maurice, you don't think that teacher burnout is taken into account by the critics of LIFO? That is absurd.  Teacher burnout is exactly the point. Some teachers do burn out and they probably should not remain in the classroom. Why are you protecting burned out teachers? How does that help kids?

Moving beyond this tepid defense of LIFO rules, what about teacher pressure? Do LIFO rules insulate teachers from pressure? A union president in NY seems to think so according to this statement in the Times Union.

"In education and other fields, unions have stated that a retreat from seniority protections would leave workers at peril of subjective evaluations, and worse. "We will not allow a bill that exposes our members to harassment, favoritism and intimidation to divert us from our commitment to defend collective bargaining and the right to organize," Iannuzzi said."
 
But not so fast. Has this LIFO rule actually protected teachers from harassment, favoritism, intimidation, or other inappropriate pressures? My informal and unscientific answer is no.
 
Teachers are besieged by outside pressure, by the very harassment the unions claim to protect them from. They have lost control of the content they teach and the methods by which they teach it. The number one complaint I hear from teachers is that they can't teach what they have been trained to teach nor what they know they should be teaching. How are teachers protected from outside pressure if a principal has firm instructions to her staff as to what must happen in a classroom on the days the superintendent is observing?

In other words, when the big guy is in the building, there will be no spelling tests, no kids sitting doing work, no paper and pencil stuff. Kids must be running around the room and using the SMART board. Throw your lesson plan out the window and get the kids up. Make it look like they are active and engaged.

This probably isn't what most people would consider "protecting teachers from outside pressure."

So why not end LIFO rules? The only real reason I can come up with is that exactly the opposite of the current situation will occur. Rather than fire all the newest teachers during layoffs, all the senior teachers will be fired instead. Such a result would be troubling. I've yet to find any teacher that didn't improve after 1 or 2 years on the job. Maybe its an indictment of our teacher training system that so many enter the classroom in their first year and find themselves shellshocked by how difficult the job is. I'm willing to put up with a brand new teacher, because you know they will get better. But no one believes a teacher is at their most effective in that first year or two on the job.

Simply tossing out LIFO rules is not likely to improve teacher quality. It may actually get worse. But at least it will get cheaper.

My biggest concern about the entire LIFO debate is that there is almost no discussion on how to fairly evaluate teachers. How will we retain the most talented teachers, in the absence of LIFO, if we can't even identify who they are? There won't be any more effort to keep the talented effective teachers without LIFO as there was with LIFO. But budgets will be balanced by firing the most senior teachers, the teachers with the least ability to get re-hired somewhere else regardless of their talents and abilities.

LIFO rules need to go, but we've got to have a system in place before LIFO is ended that gives us some degree of confidence that the talented teachers can be identified and retained. The teacher is the most important element in a child's success in school. Until we get serious about teacher evaluations, quick fixes that are popular with politicians and that play well in the press, will divert attention to the more difficult and more important problems of education reform.

6 comments:

  1. it is the scapegoat that lets everyone off the hook of real reform

    In my town (as Lynn knows!) there is now a clear division of political opinion on the schools. We have a 'status quo' party and a reform party.

    I've been gobsmacked to find that people in the status quo party are sharply opposed to tenure -- and are happy to say so publicly.

    I speculate that people sometimes target tenure rather than unions, i.e. that parents (& citizens) who don't support teacher unions express their position as anti-tenure instead of anti-union.

    I don't know that, of course, and I don't mean to suggest that parents aren't sincere in opposing tenure. They obviously are.

    In any case, we see here in my town exactly what Lynn is talking about: universal, public sentiment against tenure.

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  2. A woman in town who began life as a teacher in the 60s remembers when LIFO rules were made law here in New York.

    The issue was that in times of economic distress schools automatically laid off the expensive older teachers -- exact same thing schools now do with younger teachers.

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  3. Flooding the zone!

    Last comment: assuming I know what the New York law involves (I **think** I do) - its provisions were a modification of LIFO, not a wholesale removal of the law.

    Under the proposed bill (which I gather has been killed by Sheldon Silver, which means that it was killed by the union), schools could lay off:

    * teachers with high absenteeism
    * teachers who had not found a position in 6 months' time (these are the 'rubber room' teachers)
    * teachers who had been convicted of a crime within the past 5 years

    I strongly support laying off teachers on the basis of absenteeism. We've got an absenteeism problem here now: teachers using sick days as personal days, taking sick days on Friday - especially Fridays before a vacation week, etc.

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  4. "Moreover, critics of teachers’ unions do not take into account the fact that teaching is labor-intensive and teachers often burn out."

    I just noticed this!

    yeesh

    Lifetime job guarantees for burned-out teachers--

    whoa nelly

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  5. Lay-offs on the basis of absenteeism is a great idea -- I am absolutely for that. Unless, say you actually were sick. A kidney transplant or really sick kid would also produce huge sick leave days.

    It wouldn't be great to lay-off a teacher that had a legitimate reason to be absent. It does get complicated.

    This why I hate having legislatures and unions involved in this level of discussion. Principals and teachers and parents, those closest to the situation, know who is abusing the sick leave policy and who is not. They also are in a better position to judge the value of any given teacher.

    I think the three groups that should have a say in teacher layoffs are principals, other teachers, and parents. Keep the school boards, unions, and state law makers out of it.

    We need a system that permits input from the people that know a teacher best, combined with test scores and other objective measures.

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  6. And thank you, Catherine, for flooding the zone. Your town is the horror story we all hope to avoid and is the cautionary tale to those that think you can't spend too much on education.

    What are you up to these days, $35,000 per student spending in the public schools?

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