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EDUCATION: Sticking up for Teachers’ Unions
By Diane Ravitch
Teachers need protection from bureaucratic meddlers if
they’re going to do right by our children. Diane Ravitch explains.
Ellen R. Delisio interviewed Hoover senior fellow
Diane Ravitch for the website Education World.
Delisio: The benefits
of unions to teachers are clear. What are the benefits of teachers’
unions to the public?
Ravitch: The public
interest is served when teachers are able to do their jobs without fear of
intimidation by uninformed, nonprofessional administrators. Teachers are
the frontline workers of education, the ones who are in daily contact with
children. It is they who must make minute-to-minute, on-the-spot decisions
about the best interests of children. When their knowledge and wisdom are
discounted and disregarded, we cannot expect education to improve.
These days, many superintendents have no experience in
education and many principals went through quickie training programs. These
inexperienced leaders demand higher test scores because their jobs are on
the line. Many of these inexperienced leaders think that testing is
synonymous with instruction and they insist on constant testing. Wise
teachers know better. They know that achievement growth is necessarily
incremental for most children. Wise teachers know that they cannot produce
overnight miracles. If teaching becomes a job (not a profession) where
administrators are free to bully teachers and where teachers are not
permitted to exercise their judgment and experience, then the turnover rate
of classroom teachers will rise and the quality will decline, and that is
certainly not in the interest of children or the public.
Delisio: Why do you
think teachers’ unions have been coming under so much fire recently?
Ravitch: As business
leaders become engaged in school reform, they tend to think that the unions
are the cause of low achievement. In my view, they are extrapolating from
their own private-sector experience, where management considers the union a
barrier to its plans and where the proportion of unionized workers has
steadily declined.
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When teachers’ knowledge and wisdom are discounted and disregarded, we can’t expect education to improve.
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In my view, the business leaders commit a fallacy,
confusing cause and effect. They should compare achievement in the states
that have strong teachers’ unions and in the states that have weak or
nonexistent unions; the higher achievement will be found where
teachers’ unions are strongest. They should also examine those
nations in Asia and Europe with very high achievement; to my knowledge,
these nations have strong teachers’ unions.
The causes of low achievement, in my view, are many,
including a weak curriculum, meaning that no teacher really knows what he
or she is expected to teach; poverty, which is implicated in health
problems, lack of familial resources, and frequent moves; schools that are
so hamstrung by litigation and mandates that they lack the authority to
teach and discipline students; and inattentive parents, who do not insist
that their children study, do their homework, go to school, and meet
expectations of home and school.
We know from many studies that students learn best
where there is a rich, sequential curriculum; where teachers are good
instructors and know their subject; where there are adequate resources; and
where there is strong community support for education. We know that
children do best when adults enforce basic standards of behavior, including
good conduct, sitting up straight, speaking correct English, and dressing
appropriately for school. When these conditions are absent, it is simply
absurd to blame low achievement on the unions.
Delisio: How has the
role of teachers’ unions changed in the era of accountability?
Ravitch: The unions
will, I hope, become champions of sound educational principles (such as the
conditions I listed above, including a rich, sequential curriculum and
appropriate student conduct and dress). They must also become engaged in
making sure that the accountability programs are valid, reliable, and fair,
and that accountability measures do not take the place of instruction. In
some districts, the overwhelming emphasis is on test-preparation, endless
test-prep. Hours on hours of test-prep may lead to higher scores but not to
a good education.
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As business leaders become more engaged in school reform, they tend to think that the unions are the cause of low achievement. In my view, they are extrapolating from their own private-sector experience.
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Delisio: What are the
priorities of teachers’ unions today?
Ravitch: Teachers’
unions have been focused on salaries and working conditions, which is good
but no longer enough. They must see that among the working conditions that
must be improved are their members’ ability to teach, their right to
have a sound curriculum, and their right to act as professionals rather
than automatons who produce this odd combination of higher test scores but
not educated students.
Delisio: Some state
and municipal officials are citing clauses in teachers’ contracts,
such as those pertaining to seniority and assignments, as hindrances to
true education reform. How would you respond to that?
Ravitch: Every union
will have to figure out which managerial requests make sense. The most
important principles must be to make sure that the schools have the
teachers they need for the children they have. If the system is not able to
hire enough teachers in certain areas, such as science and mathematics,
then it seems right to offer bonuses or extra compensation. If some schools
have unusual challenges, then teachers should receive extra compensation
for meeting those challenges. I don’t think unions have a stake in
resisting all managerial requests. Where management and unions have an
overlapping interest is in making sure that children get the teachers they
need.
This interview appeared on the website Education World
on February 21, 2007. Copyright ©2007 EducationWorld.com,
reprinted with permission.
Available from the Hoover Press
is Charter Schools
against the Odds: An Assessment of the Koret Task Force on K–12
Education, edited by Paul T. Hill. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit
www.hooverpress.org.
Diane Ravitch is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a member of the Koret Task Force on K–12 Education.
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