Politics K12

Politics K-12

Your education road map to state and federal politics

Michele McNeil covered education and state government in Indiana for a decade before joining Education Week as a state policy reporter in June 2006. Alyson Klein, who reports on federal education policy, joined the staff in February 2006 after nearly two years at Congress Daily.

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July 2, 2009

Early Look at Duncan's NEA Speech

In his fourth and final speech on the education reform "assurances" that are featured in the economic stimulus package, Education Secretary Arne Duncan walked into the lion's den NEA convention in San Diego today and called for merit pay for teachers.

It's reminiscent of the National Education Association's big summer confab last year, when Barack Obama was just a presidential candidate, getting booed by some delegates for mentioning performance pay.

My colleague Stephen Sawchuk, who is in San Diego, will have much more on this speech (including whether Duncan gets booed) over at the Teacher Beat.

According to prepared remarks, Mr. Duncan took on some of the prized benefits of being a teacher: tenure, the salary schedule, and union protection.

On tenure:

"When an ineffective teacher gets a chance to improve and doesn’t—and when the tenure system keeps that teacher in the classroom anyway—then the system is protecting jobs rather than children. That’s not a good thing. We need to work together to change that."

On teacher evaluations:

"...to remove student achievement entirely from evaluation is illogical and indefensible."

On teacher pay:

"We’re asking Congress for more money to develop compensation programs 'with' you—and 'for' you—not 'to' you—programs that will put money in the pockets of your teachers and support personnel by recognizing and rewarding excellence."

Duncan also emphasized the importance of improving the quality of school and district leadership, calling on those leaders to accept the same new education-reform demands as teachers.

And if you need a refresher on Duncan's previous speeches on the assurances, read about his standards speech here, data here, and low-performing and charter schools here.

June 30, 2009

Doomsday Clock Ticking on Mayoral Control in NYC

From guest blogger Lesli A. Maxwell

So, there's less than 12 hours to go before New York City's mayoral control law expires, and the New York Senate remains in utter chaos, with few signs that sanity will prevail fast enough for members to settle on who is in charge of that chamber and to actually hold a vote on anything. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has been using some pretty over the top rhetoric in recent days, said in a news conference earlier today that if the law that gave him authority over the city's public schools is allowed to lapse, "the lawyers take over New York City."

All kinds of interest groups are making contingency plans for the midnight death of mayoral control, including Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, who has already selected his appointment for the possible return of the city's Board of Education. A group that opposes mayoral control has promised to stage a celebration of the law's demise that includes a formal "eviction" of Chancellor Joel Klein.

Check out GothamSchools for the full ticktock of all the zaniness.

June 17, 2009

AFT's Weingarten Cautious On Duncan's Common Tests

Schools and the StimulusAFT President Randi Weingarten has written about the need for national academic standards and testified about it on Capitol Hill.

But, in a wide-ranging interview with Edweek reporters yesterday, she was less than enthusiastic about Secretary of Education Arne Duncan's proposal to use a portion of the Race to the Top fund to help states develop more uniform, rigorous assessments.

I asked her if she supported the idea, and she said the "short answer is yes" but that the "devil is in the details", a Washington response if there ever was one.

Weingarten isn't known for her brevity, particularly in responding to reporters, so I asked her to elaborate. She said that if there are going to be new standards, teachers should be trained to implement them. Her answer sounded very similar to what The American Prospect's Dana Goldstein wrote in this post. But Weingarten's response centered mainly around the common standards, not the specific testing piece.

I guess the AFT is being careful about how it discusses the proposal until it sees more from the Education Department.

June 15, 2009

AFT's Weingarten Speaks to 'Those' Charter School Cap Opponents

In response to new research that casts doubt on the quality of charter schools, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weigarten had this to say, in an official statement:

"...the inconsistencies in the quality of charter schools should give pause to those who want to lift charter caps, particularly when they are not matched with calls for legislatures to increase accountability."

Hmmmm...I wonder who she could be talking about?

May 12, 2009

Brad Jupp is Arne's New Two-for-One Teacher Guy

Jupp.JPG

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has a new teacher quality adviser ... and he's got a foot in both the merit pay and union camps.

Brad Jupp is formerly a senior policy adviser to Denver-schools-superintendent-turned-U.S.-Senator Michael Bennet. In that role, he worked on school and district performance improvement and accountability, teacher effectiveness, and school choice, among other issues.

But, before that, Jupp was a teacher and a union activist with the Denver Classroom Teachers Association for 19 years. He helped develop the Professional Compensation System for Teachers (ProComp), Denver's signature alternative pay program.

At the department, Jupp will work on teacher quality issues in the economic stimulus program and in the No Child Left Behind Act.

"He will be the voice of the Department to teachers across the country, gathering input from teachers on ED policy," said John McGrath, a spokesman for the Department in an email. "Brad will also help the Department advance its goal of supporting teachers and promoting teachers as professionals."

Reading between the lines, I'm guessing he might dispatched to replicate what he did in Denver, namely getting the unions on board for a pay-for-performance plan. But that might be a lot trickier inside the Beltway than in the Mile High City.

March 12, 2009

Duncan Reaches Out to Teachers' Unions

So writes Stephen Sawchuk, my colleague over at the Teacher Beat blog.

Education secretary Arne Duncan has hired an Illinois union official, Jo Anderson Jr., to be a senior adviser—which has all sorts of interesting implications, Sawchuk explains.


March 3, 2009

Union Leaders on NCLB and the Stim

Schools and the Stimulus
Right after the stimulus bill, which contained a whopping $115 billion in new education money, passed the House, I asked Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, how the super-sized spending plan would impact reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act. You can check out his answer, and some pretty interesting reader comments, here.

Well, last week, I asked the same question of two other folks who are going to play a very important role in the reauthorization debate: Randi Weingarten, the new president of the American Federation of Teachers and Dennis Van Roekel, the new president of the National Education Association.

Neither of them were in their positions back in August 2007 when Miller introduced his ill-fated discussion draft.

Both started off by saying they were grateful to Congress and the administration for stemming what could have been a massive tidal wave of teacher layoffs.

Weingarten, who recently penned a Washington Post editorial calling for national standards, said she sees the stimulus funding, first and foremost, as a "life-line" to schools that have been battered by the economic storm.

"If you are in the trenches like our members are in the trenches, you see what these kinds of cuts could have meant," she said.

It doesn't sound like she would necessarily equate the money in the stimulus with the No Child Left Behind Act.

"Funding issues between [the stimulus] and NCLB [is] really an apples and oranges comparison," she said "This is replacing money that was lost, it's not a net increase" for most school districts. (Check out Michele's take on winners-and-losers in the funding formula here).

Van Roekel had a similar message.

"The 60 billion [in the state stabilization fund] just filled a hole," he said. "It's not new money." He said the increases for Title I and special education "definitely have an impact" but that "we also have to do things inside that system to change" the kinds of supports kids get, including expanding pre-kindergarten programs, which President Barack Obama called for in his budget. And he said, Congress should still rework the accountability system at the center of the law, putting less emphasis on high stakes tests.

"We need to spend the money on research to find a good solid system that measures student learning," he said.

Still, Weingarten said, the money could have a major impact on future funding debates.

"If the money is well spent and if we're able to maintain and improve educational outcomes for kids" which she defines as getting students prepared for the college and the workforce, "We will make a powerful case that money matters. ... If the money is wisely spent then there's a real shot at making the case" for some of the funding to become part of a new baseline.

Weingarten did agree that the NCLB landscape has shifted, but it sounded to me like, in her view, that had as much to do with the change in administration as it does with the stimulus.

"The debate about reauthorizing the ESEA will be different now than it was under the Bush administration," Weingarten said. "Rep. Miller was in an untenable position. He was trying to come up with a compromise that would" pass muster with the Bush administration, rather than trying to find "the best education policy solutions."

When I spoke to Miller, he told me he thought that the nation was more open to incentive pay, one of the issues that drew the loudest criticism back when the discussion draft was released.

Van Roekel reiterated NEA's general position on alternative pay, which is basically that it's okay for teachers to get more money than their colleagues for talking on certain extra tasks, like earning National Board Certification.

Weingarten reminded me that she had been open to "differential pay" for teachers as head of New York's United Federation of Teachers and helped craft a plan that drew praise from Miller.

She didn't say that she was ready to embrace merit pay tied to test scores (if she had, that would have been game-changing breaking news and you wouldn't be reading about it in the very bottom of a blog item).

Instead she said, "I always am very leery of anyone who thinks that any of these things is a silver bullet," She said that she's a supporter of reducing class size but doesn't think that alone will completely change the direction for troubled school systems. "I would put performance pay in that same category it’s not a panacea just like class size is not a panacea."

January 20, 2009

NEA to Participate in Inaugural Parade

From guest blogger Stephen Sawchuk

If you're on the National Mall waiting for the inaugural parade, or planning to catch it on TV from the warmth of your living rooms, keep your eyes peeled for hats, gloves, and scarves bearing the National Education Association's logo: More than 40 NEA members will be part of a pro-labor ensemble in the parade.

Those 40 members are part of the 3.2 million-member union's executive committee. The ensemble, which includes marchers and a float, is the only worker-oriented unit in the parade, NEA officials say. It will include members from the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, two labor coalitions, and will count about 265 officials between marchers and float.

It's an interesting move for the NEA, which has traditionally struggled a bit with its identity as both a professional association and a labor union. Though not a member of the AFL-CIO, in 2006 the two groups struck an agreement to allow NEA members to sit on local AFL-CIO councils. Perhaps this engagement is a sign that new NEA president, Dennis Van Roekel, wants this relationship to flourish.

I checked in briefly with John I. Wilson, the organization's executive director, about NEA's participation in the festivities. "Oh my gosh, they got all my tickets," he joked, when I asked how many NEA-affiliated members came to town. "It's hard to turn down the teacher coming from California with her grandchildren."

Between 700 and 1,000 NEA members in total attended an inauguration reception, according to Wilson, so it's probably safe to assume that at least that many are out on the Mall right now. Over 60 NEA staff members were deployed to provide support for those members, Wilson said.

November 25, 2008

Former AFT President to Labor Department?

So the Associated Press is reporting that former American Federation of Teachers President Edward J. McElroy is a possibility for U.S. secretary of labor. McElroy has a long history with the AFL-CIO and, apparently, his heart is more on the labor union side of things than on the education side.

Over at AFT, he served as a kind of a placeholder president for the current head, Randi Weingarten, who took the helm this year.

Still, having someone with experience at one of the two national teachers' unions as head of the Department of Labor couldn't be bad for the NEA and the AFT. But I'm guessing this is all academic: McElroy is probably a long shot for the labor job.

November 4, 2008

NEA Touts Its Campaign Activities

Most of the returns weren't even in yet, but already the National Education Association, a 3.2 million-member union, had sent around a press release bragging about its election efforts.

The union, which endorsed Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama, distributed more than 21.3 million pieces of mail, made more than 2.1 million phone calls, and sent more than 1.3 million piece of e-mail to members in battleground states throughout the political season.

The union focused its efforts on 15 presidential battleground states, 11 Senate races, 54
congressional races, four gubernatorial races, and 20 state ballot
initiatives, according to the release.

And, as an indication of how low education ranked on voters' priority lists this year, the NEA made it clear that it included information on other issues, such as the economy and health care, in its campaign materials.


October 13, 2008

Should Teachers Be Allowed to Wear Political Buttons on the Job?

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The New York City teachers' union thinks so.

Read more about a lawsuit filed against the New York City school district over a policy forbidding teachers from wearing campaign buttons at school, at edweek.org's Teacher Beat blog.

October 6, 2008

Health Care Is Top Issue in NEA Battleground Blitz

So even the National Education Association doesn't seem to be focusing much on the presidential candidates' records or ideas on schools as the main mechanism for mobilizing its members in swing states.

A recent press release on the union's on-the-ground campaign efforts mostly emphasizes health care over education issues, even though Sen. John McCain, the Republican nominee, has made it clear he would seek to freeze education spending if he is elected to the White House. (The NEA has endorsed Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee).

The union last week launched a get-out-the-vote effort in 10 states: Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. (No Florida?)

The campaign apparently includes a mailer about McCain’s "wrongheaded prescription plan for what ails America’s health care system" and a link to a new Web site, www.mccainhealthcaretax.com, that criticizes the plan. But there wasn't any mention of any education-related materials, at least in the press release.

A statement from NEA President Dennis Van Roekel in the release also emphasizes health care and doesn't say anything about education.

“Sen. McCain’s plan is further evidence that he still doesn’t understand the needs of working Americans,” Van Roekel says in the statement. “In the midst of the worst economic crisis America has seen since the Great Depression, he fails to grasp the urgency with which we need to provide more health-care coverage for the 45 million Americans who don’t have health insurance. To top it all off, his plan would pull the rug out from under employers that try to do right by their employees by paying some or all of their health care premiums.”

The release links health care costs to the economy and ultimately to schools, saying that districts have seen an uptick in the number of homeless kids and those qualifying for free and reduced-price lunches.

Still, it's telling that even the union's campaign efforts appear to stress economic issues over school policy, especially considering that the next president will very likely preside over the reauthorization of the No Child Left Behind Act, which the NEA has vehemently criticized.

Karen White, NEA's political director, said last month that the union's 3.2 million members placed the economy above education when listing the issues they are most concerned about.

"Education is not 'typically' behind the economy, but given gas prices, energy concerns, and economic concerns – it’s not surprising," White wrote in an e-mail.

August 27, 2008

DFER's Skybox View of Hillary's Speech

The Democrats for Education Reform, which embraces school reform ideas that are often opposed by traditional Democratic union stalwarts, have apparently arrived on the convention scene.

Members of the group nabbed a coveted spot in the Democratic National Committee’s skybox at the Pepsi Center here in Denver on Tuesday night, where they watched Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton’s rally-cry-for-unity speech.

The skybox next door belonged to the former President Bill Clinton and family, who were hosting the American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten—who was none too happy with an event DFER organized on Sunday and who undoubtedly took note of their presence in the DNC skybox.

DFER Executive Director Joe Williams and board member John Petry, a partner at a New York City hedge fund and Democratic Party donor, got such an invitation because their group includes some big-time donors like Petry. They embrace such ideas as charter schools and merit pay for teachers.

Later, Williams partied with the centrist Democratic Leadership Council. That event was, ironically, sponsored by the National Education Association, considered by many to be pretty liberal.

--Michele McNeil

August 26, 2008

Video: Teachers Unions' Presidents' Interviews

NEA President Reg Weaver and AFT President Randi Weingarten spoke with Education Week reporters, shortly after they each addressed the Democratic National Convention on Monday.

AFT President, Randi Weingarten spoke with reporter Michele McNeil after her speech at the DNC. Weingarten spoke about what she hoped delegates took away from her speech and what it was like participating in such an historic event.

Randi Weingarten, AFT President:

Reg Weaver sat down with reporter David Hoff, and spoke about National Education Association delegates at the convention, his support for Sen. Barack Obama, and what it was like to speak in front of such a large crowd.

Reg Weaver, NEA President:


Money Talks: Clinton Still the Union Favorite?

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York is headlining tonight's convention festivities with a much-anticipated speech that Democrats hope will unify the party.

The moment will be bittersweet for delegates of the American Federation of Teachers--the second largest teachers' union in the country that jumped out early in support of Clinton. But with Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois the presumptive nominee, the AFT has shifted its allegiance. Its leadership--including President Randi Weingarten, who spoke last night from the podium--is going full throttle in support of Obama. Will the union's rank-and-file members follow? We'll be asking that question tonight.

But at least for now, Clinton is still the favorite when you look at campaign donations. My Education Week colleague Vaishali Honawar, over at the Teacher Beat blog, details how Sen. Obama--despite enjoying the support of both teachers' unions--still hasn't caught up in donations from those unions, at least as of July 28, the end of that reporting cycle.

--Michele McNeil

New Generation of Democrats Embraces School Choice

If you were invited to an event promoting school choice to be held at a country club, who would you guess the audience would be?

a.) white Republicans

or

b.) a bipartisan, multi-racial group

Today, in Denver, the answer was b.

At a breakfast supporting efforts to expand students' ability to enroll in charter and other public schools, Colorado state Senate President Peter C. Groff explained that the demographics of school choice are changing.

African-American policymakers under the age of 50 are no longer opposing school choice simply because they're following the lead of their allies on other issues—mainly teacher unions, said Groff, 45, who is black.

"This is a generation that doesn't look at race first, but policy first," said Groff, 45, a Democrat. "It's not looking at party first, but the best idea first."

Newark Mayor Cory Booker, the event's main speaker, said charter schools in his New Jersey city are successful, but they don't have enough seats to fill demand.

Many Newark families "break the law, literally," said Booker, a Democrat. "They are faking addresses and sneaking [their children] into schools" in neighboring towns. School officials there investigate students and kick out those who live in Newark, charging their families tuition for the time they were enrolled.

"This is not the America I dream of," Booker said.

The shift in attitudes isn't only happening among blacks under 50, Groff said in an interview.

Groff's father is a retired Denver public school teacher. Groff said he and his father debate school choice. "He's coming along slowly," Groff said. "Since he's retired, he's starting to say: 'Now I can see why you want to have some of this flexibility.'"

Today's event in a banquet room of the Denver Country Club was sponsored by the Alliance for Choice in Education, a group that provides scholarships for low-income Denver students to attend private K-12 schools. Groff and Booker didn't endorse using public money to pay private school costs, however.

--David J. Hoff

August 25, 2008

Teacher-Pay Issue Is Hot in DNC Discussions

Teacher pay may be the biggest education issue at the Democratic National Convention.

At today's premier education discussion happening in conjunction with the convention, the wide-ranging debate seemed to keep coming back to how to compensate teachers, addressing such issues as whether to offer extra pay for teachers in schools facing the biggest challenges, for improving their students' test scores, and other innovative proposals. The issue is particularly salient considering the ideas put forth by Sen. Barack Obama on performance-based pay for teachers.

Although the two-hour discussion touched on a variety of topics, such as improving the quality of standards, extending learning time in schools, panelists representing a variety of perspectives agreed that schools need to find new ways to set teachers' pay.

"I can't think of any other profession that doesn't have any rewards for excellence," Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad, who has supported a variety of experiments with teacher pay and other reform measures, said at the event organized by the Rocky Mountain Roundtable, a group of Denver corporations and foundations that has organized discussions on a variety of issues to coincide with the convention.

Even John Wilson, the executive director of the 3.2 million-member National Education Association, said his union is open to experiments with alternatives to the traditional pay scales, which set teachers' salaries based on their experience and their education level.

"That's a significant statement from the executive director of the largest teachers' union in the United States," said Thomas Toch, a co-director of Education Sector, a Washington think tank.

Many of those critics portrayed the teachers' union's opposition to innovative pay plans as one of the biggest roadblocks to improving schools at an event on Sunday.

But Wilson is unlikely to satisfy the union's critics. In an interview after the discussion, he said the union would support plans that "focus on the practice of teaching."

"You need to put the focus on the practice," he said. "If you're a good teacher, you will drive outcomes."

In particular, the NEA endorses extra pay for teachers who are certified by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, he added.

But it wouldn't support plans that are based on teachers' ability to improve students' test scores.

The union opposes pay decisions based on the results of "a single test on a single day, multiple choice, bubble sheets" because they aren't good measures of teachers' success helping students, he said.

-- David J. Hoff

August 24, 2008

Union Tensions at DNC

The education event that followed the NEA luncheon showed the growing tensions within the Democratic Party over school reform, and the role of teachers’ unions.

Though it’s no surprise an event sponsored by the Democrats for Education Reform would have a slight anti-union message; many of the speakers at the event took several shots at unions during the press conference announcing the Education Equality Project in June.

Today, the sentiment was strong and persistent at standing-room-only, three-hour forum called Ed Challenge for Change. In fact, some of the big-city mayors who participated predicted that had such a forum been held four years ago, a mere five souls would have showed.

Here at the Denver Art Museum, Democratic mayors from Newark, N.J., Washington D.C., and Denver joined education reform darlings including New York City’s Joel Klein and Washington D.C.’s Michelle Rhee. The group was referred to as the “misfits” of the Democratic Party by DFER's Joe Williams, a nod to their willingness to speak up against the influence of teachers’ unions, which have formed the backbone of the party.

The educators, along with the Rev. Al Sharpton, kicked off the event with a nearly hour-long press conference to tout the event. There, Rhee (who left early to catch a flight home; D.C. schools open on Monday), took the Democrats to task, saying the party is “supposed to be the party that looks out for poor and minority kids,” when that’s not actually happening.

The anti-union sentiment spilled over into policy forums that followed. The fight against the teachers’ unions and other special interests is a “battle at the heart of the Democratic Party,” said Newark Mayor Cory Booker. “As Democrats, we have been wrong on education. It’s time to get right.”

Even former Colorado Gov. Roy Romer, who has tried to avoid controversy in his position as the ED in ’08 leader, earned some murmurs from the audience when he said that reformers cannot be “wedded to someone else’s union rules and that politicians, practically speaking, need to work with unions even thought they are “wedded to the past.”

--Michele McNeil

NEA Delegates Jump on Liberal Bandwagon

The 200-plus NEA delegates from the Democratic National Convention aren’t going to be reading Campaign K-12.

If they follow the advice of their union’s staff, they’ll be getting their convention news from stalwart liberal blogs DailyKos, talkingpointsmemo, and others.

The blogs will give delegates the news they need “to help direct the conversation toward the association’s goal: Great Public Schools as a Basic Right for Every Student!” says a flier handed out at the lunch.

Sample endorsement: americablog.com is “a great place to get anti-McCain information,” the handout says.

The advice is no surprise, given the tenor of the speeches at the two-hour event.
Robert Kennedy Jr. said that the Bush presidency is “the worst administration we’ve had” on education and environmental issues. (His uncle Ted may disagree when it comes to the No Child Left Behind Act.)

Colorado Speaker of the House Andrew Romanoff praised the NEA’s state chapter as one of the “most aggressive and successful” groups assisting Democrats in their takeover Colorado’s Statehouse and governor’s mansion. State Treasurer Cary Kennedy (no relation to RFK Jr.) said that Democrats would win a ballot initiative to “drive a stake in the heart” of the state’s Taxpayers Bill of Rights--a conservative cost-cutting measure.

NEA’s incoming President Dennis Van Roekel told Michele and me that he’s traveling to St. Paul for the Republican convention next week. He’ll be lunching with the 20 or so NEA members who will be delegates there and giving them information to help them advance the union's agenda. I wonder what blogs he’ll recommend them. Any suggestions?

--David J. Hoff

August 1, 2008

More Reaction on the McCain Speech...

...from American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten. I think it goes without saying that she doesn't like it. I can practically hear the sarcasm when she refers to Mayor Bloomberg and Chancellor Klein as McCain's "new best friends."

Read Alyson's detailed post about what sparked Weingarten's reaction—McCain's endorsement of the Education Equality Project and his criticism of Obama—here.

July 23, 2008

McCain and Obama Advisers on Spec Ed, NCLB, and Funding

Sen. John McCain will be filling in the blanks in his education plan in a "little bit" with proposals on prekindergarten, college access and affordability, and special education, top education adviser Lisa Graham Keegan told the National Conference of State Legislators today in New Orleans.

While my colleague was covering an Obama event, I'm was here in the Big Easy listening to a forum on the education ideas of the presidential candidates, starring Keegan and Linda Darling-Hammond (on behalf of Obama).

There was very little that hasn't been said before, either by the candidates themselves, or their advisers. But I'll hit on the highlights:

* Keegan wouldn't address questions about early education or college, saying McCain was getting ready to talk in more details about his plans for such programs.

* I heard more than I have ever heard before about special education from the two advisers. Keegan, who noted that McCain's wife, Cindy, was a special education teacher, said the Arizona senator was going to address the issues of the federal special education law (IDEA) and its funding in upcoming remarks. She said he's very supportive of it, but also realizes that if schools did a better job of teaching reading, then fewer students would be referred to special education, thus saving those dollars for those students who really need it. She reiterated McCain's support for research into autism-spectrum disorders. Darling-Hammond said Obama wants to quadruple the number of Head Start slots to help address this issue, and fully fund IDEA.

*To the question of what, exactly, Obama means when he dabbles in supporting merit-pay programs—a touchy subject for Democrats—Darling-Hammond was evasive about whether he would use test scores. She was evasive until Keegan stepped in and asked her point-blank if he opposes using any test score whatsoever. Darling-Hammond hemmed and hawed, but ended up saying he would support using test scores as part of multiple measures to gauge teacher performance.

*Legislators got a chance to ask several questions, and were most curious about their stances on additional funding for NCLB and for special education. Obama is all for spending more money on NCLB and special education (Darling-Hammond noted that his $18 billion education price tag is less than the cost of one month in Iraq). But Keegan said money is not the answer—that the federal government has increased its spending nearly 50 percent over pre-NCLB levels, yet students, especially poor and minority, are still failing in alarming numbers.

July 15, 2008

Obama Rep Endorses Pay Based on Student Performance

From contributing blogger David Hoff:

At an event in Washington today, Jane Swift explained where Sen. John McCain stands on rewarding teachers based on the improvement of their students. The Arizona Republican would give extra pay to teachers who "measurably raise" student achievement, the former Massachusetts governor told the audience of business leaders.

No surprise there.

The shocker came when Jason Kamras, the representative of the Obama campaign, essentially agreed with Swift.

In answering a question, Kamras said that "student achievement does need to be part of that equation" in performance-pay plans.

It's a bit of a departure from what Sen. Barack Obama has said during the campaign. On July 5, the Illinois Democrat told the National Education Association he wants to experiment with "new ways to define teacher pay that are developed with teachers and not imposed on teachers." He never mentioned whether he believes test scores should be part of the equation.

But Kamras cited the pay-for-increasing student achievement as an example of how Obama is "willing to challenge the orthodoxy on both the left and the right in the best interest of children."

Obama's teacher-pay plans are "something of a departure for those on the the left," said Kamras, the National Teacher of the Year in 2005 and the director of human capital strategy for the District of Columbia Public Schools.

July 2, 2008

Will Obama Get Tough with the NEA?

NPR this morning did a segment on just how bipartisan John McCain and Barack Obama really are. (Hat tip to Liam, over at Flypaper.)

As an example of just how willing Obama is to break ranks with his party, NPR points to an interview the Illinois Democrat gave to Fox News Sunday, in which he pointed out that he embraces the not-so-Democratic ideas of charter schools and some sort of merit pay for teachers.

But this Obama interview on Fox News was from the end of April. That was more than two months ago, before Hillary Clinton dropped out of the race, which seems like a political eternity ago. Then, the American Federation of Teachers had endorsed Clinton, and the larger National Education Association was still holding back (though the union is poised to formally endorse him on Friday.) Now that Obama is getting all chummy with the NEA, I wonder how much he'll play up his support of charter schools, and merit pay for teachers, when he addresses the teachers' union on Saturday?

The NEA's Plan to Transform Schools by 2020

As the National Education Association's annual convention gets started, the nation's largest teachers' union unveiled its plan to fix schools by 2020. The crux: get rid of the No Child Left Behind Act, diminish the federal role in education while still giving states lots of money.

More specifically, the NEA wants the federal government to focus grant money on recruiting, training, and supporting teachers in hard-to-staff schools, better fund Title I and special education, and require states to develop adequacy and equity plans to address funding disparities among school districts. The six-point plan also calls for revamping accountability systems to take into account socio-economic factors (such as access to health care in high-poverty schools), improving education research by decoupling the Institute of Education Sciences from the Education Department, and supporting the federal role as a clearinghouse for good school-reform ideas.

In return, the NEA commits to supporting a national White House-sponsored education summit, helping to design public-engagement programs to drive school reform in states, helping states develop new accountability systems with less focus on standardized testing, and better partnering with the U.S. Department of Education.

In a press release, the NEA says that Sen. Barack Obama (who will address the convention on July 5) likes the plan, describing it in a letter as "critical starting points for a new educational compact.” I can't post the letter--the NEA won't hand it out because officials say they can't use members' dues to distribute campaign material. But as soon as we get it from the campaign, we'll post it here.

Expect more insight on this from my colleagues and fellow bloggers David Hoff and Vaishali Honawar (who is live-blogging the NEA convention.) UPDATE: Read Vaishali's take here and The Hoff's take here.

June 30, 2008

Why Teacher Quality Is a Good Campaign Issue

Because respondents in a new Associated Press poll list it as the most significant problem facing their child's school.

Forty-seven percent think getting and keeping good teachers is a "very serious" or "somewhat serious" problem. Teachers are a bigger issue than overcrowding, lack of student discipline (which came in second), and school violence. Teacher quality also outranks the condition of school buildings, outdated textbooks, placing emphasis on the wrong subjects, low expectations of students, students not spending enough time in school, and thankfully, availability of athletic fields (26 percent think this is a serious problem!)

A good chunk of Barack Obama's education plan revolves around teachers—recruiting them, paying them better, and giving them mentors. We'll have to wait until the fall to hear what Sen. John McCain's plans are for improving the teaching ranks.

June 11, 2008

Hillary's Out: Now What?

For the American Federation of Teachers, Hillary Clinton's concession on Saturday means that it's time for the union to repair any lost love and throw its full support behind Barack Obama. Although the Obama campaign will certainly appreciate the AFT's organized foot-soldiers, the union will have to work a little harder to wield any influence since it spent the last several months aligned with Clinton—and is a late-comer to the Obama bandwagon.

Unlike the National Education Association, at least the AFT endorsed a candidate when it still mattered.

June 5, 2008

The Man with All of the Answers

As some astute readers have noticed, there's a new face on my blog. Look up!

It's the NEA's Joel Packer, who is proclaiming in the above advertisement to have ALL of the answers.

While I don't have anything to do with Joel's smiling face appearing there, I thought I'd use this opportunity to ask the answer-man some important Campaign K-12 questions, since I only have SOME of the answers:

1. Obama won the Democratic nomination without the NEA's official endorsement. Will the NEA hold much power with Obama or his advisors?
2. Will the NEA spend more than ED in '08 to get Obama elected?
3. Will the NEA exorcise the "V" word (aka "vouchers") from Obama's vocabulary?
4. Has the NEA pinned Obama down on what exactly he means when he talks about merit pay?

June 4, 2008

NEA Endorsement

From contributing blogger Alyson Klein:

The National Education Association is finally planning to endorse Sen. Barack Obama, now that he has enough delegates to claim the Democratic presidential nomination. Way to go out on a limb there, NEA.

(Hat tip to Mike Antonucci, who I've linked to above, and Mike Petrilli at Flypaper).

May 27, 2008

Life Imitating Art ... Kinda

From contributing blogger Alyson Klein:

So apparently it's not just my editor and fan of NBC's "The West Wing" Mark Walsh who noticed that the 2008 presidential election bares an uncanny resemblance to the final two seasons of the multi-award winning drama.

The Washington Post had a piece on the similarities this week. Apparently, it's not a total coincidence, as the TV show's writers had Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois specifically in mind when they created Rep. Matt Santos of Texas, played by Jimmy Smits.

But one major (and lamentable) difference: In the fictional campaign, education was actually a major issue. And teachers' unions' endorsements were pivotal, according to wikipedia and my (admittedly hazy) memory. Santos made his education plan - ending teacher tenure and extending the school day - a cornerstone of his presidential campaign. His Republican opponent, Sen. Arnold Vinick (played by Alan Alda), said he supported ending teacher tenure, but saw an expansion of the federal role in education as an overreach of authority, according to this chart comparing their positions, which appears to have been created by a fan of the show.

At a brokered Democratic convention in the sixth season finale, Santos won the nomination because of the last minute backing of the teachers' unions. They weren't crazy about the plan to end teacher tenure, but threw their support to Santos anyway, at the behest of President Jeb Bartlett.

I'm sure that would have brought the fictional NEA and AFT more than just a seat at the table for any reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, although the show never waded into that. Maybe Reg Weaver and Ed McElroy should dust off their DVDs and take some notes, especially since at the end of the seventh and final season of "The West Wing," Santos won the White House.

Is the NEA Ready to Endorse Obama?

Maybe.

Read union watchdog Mike Antonucci's post here, in which he reveals that the National Education Association's PAC Council approved a "conditional" endorsement of Sen. Barack Obama.

You can't really get more conditional than the NEA's conditions. They're endorsing Obama only if he captures the required number of delegates to win, or if Sen. Hillary Clinton drops out of the race. They don't even appear to be endorsing for the general election, just for the Democratic primary! In other words, they'll endorse Obama only when he's the last Democrat standing. Wow. That's really going out on a limb.

April 3, 2008

Is Obama a Wimp on Education?

Alexander Russo offers an interesting case study in Slate on a 1999 dispute over who hires and fires principals in Chicago—and what Sen. Barack Obama's actions mean for changes in education policy if he wins the presidency.

Essentially, Russo paints a picture of an Obama who stood on the sidelines as then-Chicago Public Schools Superintendent Paul Vallas went to the Illinois Legislature in an effort to wrest more control over his principals from local school councils. The story quotes a Republican state legislator who said Obama wasn't really that bold, or creative, when it came to education.

Russo writes:

The story of Obama's involvement suggests that on similarly contentious fronts involving national education policy, like the No Child Left Behind Act, he might respond the same way—holding back when powerful interest groups collide, only to support the status quo of local control in the end. The candidate's Chicago record on education also raises questions about his much-vaunted ability to bring different sides together to find lasting solutions.

And:


Obama didn't really have to stand up to anyone—not the groups he was affiliated with, not Vallas, not Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. He was just approving the final result. He remained loyal to his roots, but only when it was easy to do so.

So Obama stood back while the real negotiations went on, jumping in only at the end, when it was easy, according to Russo.

This might be a pattern with Obama. Just last week, The Washington Post detailed a 2006 incident in which a bipartisan group of senators had hashed out a deal on immigration policy. While heading to the press conference, these senators encountered Obama, who said, according to the Post story: "Hey guys, can I come along?"

April 2, 2008

Education-free AFT Ad

Apparently even teachers' unions believe voters aren't really thinking about education this election cycle.

The American Federation of Teachers is running a radio ad for its endorsed presidential candidate, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., in the primary battleground of Pennsylvania. The ad doesn't mention education or schools at all, although one of three voters featured in the ad is a teacher. The others are a "retired university professor" and a former Navy careerist. One voter says she's "worried we're falling into a recession" -- more evidence of how the economy has trumped education. Another says that the presumptive Republican nominee, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, won't represent "a change" from the Bush administration, an apparent nod to foriegn policy, terrorism, and the war in Iraq.

No one in the ad says anything about merit pay, American competitiveness, or funding for public education. There's not even a vague reference to "better schools" or "our children's future." Disappointing. But not really surprising.

March 24, 2008

AFL-CIO: Not McCain

The AFL-CIO—a traditional Democratic ally—hasn't decided who to campaign for. Leaders are reportedly torn between Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., and Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

But, they know exactly who they want to campaign against: presumptive Republican nominee Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

As the Democratic primary battle wages on, the union is helping the Democrats make their general case against McCain by distributing information to their members on a range of issues, from the economy to health-care to yes ... education. And its materials are targeted. For instance, members of the American Federation of Teachers (which has endorsed Clinton) will get information on McCain's education views.

And in this more general brochure, "John McCain Revealed", the union takes McCain to task for opposing $1.6 billion in school constructing funding back in 2002. Also, in a section stating that McCain "doesn't like unions," the AFL-CIO cited the senator's criticism of teachers' unions.

The brochure also cited this New York Times article, from February 2002, in which McCain said:

It’s time to break the grip of the education monopoly that serves the union bosses at the expense of our children.


March 3, 2008

Obama's "Outspoken" Opposition to Vouchers

Last month, I wrote about how Ohio teachers sent a letter to Sen. Barack Obama, seeking clarification from the Democratic presidential hopeful on his stance on vouchers.

Well, the Ohio Federation of Teachers got a response, and just in the knick of time, since the pivotal Ohio primary is tomorrow.

What prompted Ohio teachers to write to Obama was a dust-up over his statements to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in the run-up to the Wisconsin primary in which he suggested he might change his mind on vouchers if research backs it up, and if it's what's best for kids. Ohio has a publicly funded voucher program for students in Cleveland's school district that's similar to one in Milwaukee.

In his letter to the Ohio teachers dated Feb. 29, Obama blames a "misleading" article for causing the commotion, but it's hard to blame the paper when you're on video saying that you might reconsider your position on vouchers under certain circumstances.

Obama says he's consistently been an "outspoken" opponent of vouchers. But the Ohio teachers' group told me they're not yet convinced.

February 21, 2008

Ohio Teachers Want Answers from Obama

Inquiring minds in Ohio want to know: Is Obama open to vouchers, or isn't he?

That's the gist of this letter Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader the Ohio Federation of Teachers sent to Sen. Barack Obama's campaign this week after the Illinois Democrat recently told newspaper reporters in Milwaukee that he might reconsider his opposition to vouchers if there's research to back it up, and if vouchers are what's best for kids.

The letter, signed by the OFT and the local unions representing teachers in Cleveland, Toledo, and Cincinnati, points out that Sen. Obama didn't seem nearly as open to vouchers in his responses to an earlier survey by its parent union, the American Federation of Teachers. So the teachers want to know where he really stands. (The union hasn't gotten an answer yet.)

Obama's campaign has tried to calm the flames, sending this statement Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader to Education Week that maintains he is, and always will be, against vouchers.

Obama has already lost the AFT's endorsement to his rival, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Still, it's worth emphasizing that these are Ohio teachers wanting answers. And, the Ohio union says many of the members are in fact, undecided. And many of them will be voting in the pivotal March 4 primary that could further determine the fate of the two candidates.

February 20, 2008

Obama's Damage Control on Vouchers

Barack Obama dared to declare that he might be open to vouchers if there's evidence to back up this controversial education reform effort and, more importantly, if it's what's "best for kids."

Imagine that—a presidential hopeful being in favor of a program if there's research to support it, and if it helps kids!

Well, now the Obama campaign is in damage-control mode because vouchers are one of the most polarizing issues in education reform, and fiercely opposed by the teachers' unions. After all, the National Education Association's endorsement is still up for grabs.

Obama's campaign sent Education Week this statement, offering a different interpretation of Obama's interview last week with the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. According to the campaign, Obama "repeated his longstanding opposition to vouchers." Not quite. What Obama did was give a six-minute, thoughtful response indicating he was a skeptic of vouchers, but that he might change his mind if there was research to back it up.

That's anything but a ringing endorsement of vouchers. But it stands in stark contrast to his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton's not-under-any-circumstances opposition to vouchers, which she claims could be used to fund training grounds for "jihad."

What's more at issue is how Obama's response has been portrayed in the media and blogsphere. Joe Williams of Democrats for Education Reform called this a Holy Sh*t moment. I thought it was an "eyebrow raising" moment, since Obama's in a tough race for the nomination and dared to use the "V" word.

But on the flip side, there are those who think Obama's statements weren't that big of a deal. Union watchdog Mike Antonucci made the good point that Obama was speaking to reporters in a city with a voucher program, in a state where he needed to win. (And Obama did win the Wisconsin primary last night.) Alexander Russo said he's heard Obama's take on vouchers before. And the Core Knowledge Blog is a skeptic as well.

The Obama campaign maintains that the news reports have been "misleading." However, perhaps what the campaign should be doing is emphasizing Obama's statement that he would do "what's best for kids" if the research supports it, regardless of any "preconceptions" he might have. Isn't that what we would like our candidates to say?

February 14, 2008

Obama is "Open" to Vouchers

Yesterday, I asked if Democrat Barack Obama would stand up to teachers' unions and embrace policies that they would oppose.

Well, it seems he's doing just that.

In an eyebrow-raising statement to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, the Illinois senator said he's a skeptic of vouchers, but that he might be open to them if studies show that's "what's best for kids." (UPDATE: Watch the video here.)

The entire passage is worth repeating, since even an "openness" toward vouchers is a major departure for a Democratic presidential candidate:

Obama said he has been a strong supporter of charter schools "as a way to foster competition in the public school system."

He pronounced himself a skeptic of private school vouchers, saying: "My view is you're not going to generate the supply of high-quality schools to meet the demand."

Obama said he was surprised to learn from Gov. Jim Doyle that "there was no assessment process" for the Milwaukee program but indicated he might be open to supporting voucher programs if studies show they work.

"If there was any argument for vouchers, it was 'Let's see if the experiment works,' " Obama said. "And if it does, whatever my preconception, you do what's best for kids."

I'm sure that as you read this, the folks at the pro-voucher Friedman Foundation and the Alliance for School Choice are assembling a binder full of studies to send Obama.

February 12, 2008

Will Obama Stand Up to the Teachers' Unions?

That's essentially the question The Politico asked of Democratic Sen. Barack Obama, in this interview posted last night.

The question came about when the interviewer remarked that Republican frontrunner John McCain has often bucked his own party (on issues such as immigration) and has the battle scars to prove it. So, The Politico reporter asked, will Sen. Obama be willing to stand up to his own party?

Obama says yes, and he offers education to prove his point. In the interview, the Illinois senator professes his support for charter schools and "looking at how we can reward excellence in the classroom" (which sounds a lot like merit pay, an issue the teachers' unions oppose.) He admits that the unions haven't been "thrilled" that he's talked about such issues. He says: "I’m not going to be bound by just a certain way of talking about these things, in order for us to move forward on behalf of our kids."

That's not exactly music to the National Education Association's ears. But then again, what remains to be seen is if Sen. Obama would be willing to put the full weight of his candidacy (or presidency), and the momentum and excitement that may accompany him, behind such thorny issues.

February 6, 2008

NEA to Democrats: Come and Get It

In the wake of the Super Tuesday results, which showed no clear favorite among Democrats, the 3.2-million member National Education Association wants to remind Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama that the union's endorsement is still up for grabs.

With that endorsement comes access to hundreds of thousands of NEA volunteers, who could prove crucial in the political ground game.

In a press release issued this morning, NEA President Reg Weaver said neither Obama nor Clinton has made the case that would earn them the association’s recommendation. “There have been dozens of debates but less than a handful of questions about the future role of the federal government in public education,” says Weaver.

He continued: "If they haven’t made education a central part of their campaigns, how can we feel confident that they will make education a central part of their administration?”

Perhaps the NEA should be doing more to support the efforts of ED in '08, whose goal is precisely that: to make education a central part of presidential campaigns.

The NEA has probably heard enough about the Democrats' education ideas, but is hedging its bets for fear of endorsing a losing candidate. Or maybe the NEA is as divided as the rest of the Democratic Party.

February 4, 2008

ED in '08 vs. the NEA

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ED in '08 is back in the news again, and this time, the Washington Post is assessing the group's effectiveness at making education a top-tier presidential campaign issue in a story today.

The story calls attention to ED in '08's split from the country's largest teachers' union in endorsing some form of performance pay for teachers.

The biggest "ouch" factor is at the end of the story. John I. Wilson, the National Education Association's executive director, says:

"They have a nice slogan. They have nice bumper stickers and pins. They try to get their logo in pictures. But it just hasn't risen to the level of a $60 million campaign."

January 31, 2008

Clinton Dissed by California Teachers' Union

This is not good news for Democrat Hillary Clinton, who is in a Super Tuesday dogfight with Barack Obama.

January 28, 2008

The NEA's $40 Million Political Down Payment

A whopping $40 million.

That's how much the National Education Association is prepared to spend in this crucial 2008 election year. Read more about that in EdWeek's latest political story, by my colleague David Hoff.

That money still isn't devoted to a specific candidate, and as Joe Williams of Democrats for Education Reform wisely notes in the story, the NEA is likely waiting to back a candidate who is sure to win the nomination. The American Federation of Teachers, meanwhile, has put its money on Hillary Clinton.

The $40 million committment from NEA is almost as much as Bill Gates and the Broad Foundation have pledged as part of their ED in '08 campaign to make education a top-tier issue in the presidential campaign.

The two groups—the NEA and the neutral ED in '08—have different strategies, to be sure. But it will interesting to see if all of these millions translate into more serious talk about education from the candidates.

January 15, 2008

Discord Among Nevada Teachers Over Caucus Lawsuit

The Nevada affiliate of the National Education Association is obviously feeling some heat for its decision to file suit to protest new at-large precincts at casinos on the Las Vegas Strip that will make it easier for workers to vote during Saturday's caucus.

The Nevada State Teachers Association is defending itself on its Web site, maintaining that their suit isn't about drowning out the voice of the state's largest union, which represents culinary and other workers in the casinos (and happens to be endorsing Illinois Sen. Barack Obama.) Instead, the lawsuit complains of inequalities—that teachers are not afforded the same opportunities to vote in their workplace, their schools, according to the Web site. While the union hasn't endorsed in the race, many of its top officials support New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

And now, 15 teachers and members of the union have written a letter—distributed by the Obama campaign—complaining about the lawsuit. They maintain that the lawsuit, in effect, could squelch the votes of their students' parents.

January 14, 2008

In Nevada, A Tale of Two Different Teachers' Unions

The teachers' unions are very busy in Nevada, which will host a presidential primary on Jan. 19. But the political strategies of the two powerful, rival unions — the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association — are very different.

To make sure their teachers are heard, one union has filed a lawsuit seeking to drown out another union's voice, while the other teachers' union is using the grassroots method.

The Nevada State Teachers Association, an affiliate of the NEA, is suing the state Democratic Party for making it easier for culinary workers in the Las Vegas casinos to vote. The state's largest union, which represents the casino and culinary workers, has endorsed Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois. Although the Nevada teachers' union hasn't endorsed in the race, some of its top officials are supporting Clinton. On Meet the Press on Sunday, Clinton was asked if she supports the lawsuit, filed on Friday. She said she hadn't even read the lawsuit, which she maintained was not coming from her camp.

Meanwhile, the AFT (which has endorsed Clinton), is taking the winning strategy from New Hampshire to Nevada, where today union leaders will help organize retired teachers and other union workers, according to an AFT press release announcing events. Though Nevada isn't an AFT state, the union is nonetheless going to work on drumming up support among teachers, retirees, women, and other union members who are seen as key to Clinton's success.

Below, listen to Sen. Clinton on Sunday's Meet the Press. Her response to the teachers' union lawsuit is near the end of the 50-minute interview.

Update: Read Mike Atonucci's post about the NEA's "acceptable" candidates.

January 11, 2008

The 'Liberal', NEA-backed Mike Huckabee

When is getting an education endorsement not a good thing?

When you're a Republican, and you get the approval of a state affiliate of the National Education Association.

About a month ago, my colleague and Campaign K-12 contributor Alyson Klein wondered whether Mike Huckabee's endorsement by the New Hampshire affiliate of the NEA would help him win his party's nomination.

Well, someone finally used it as ammunition in a debate.

Last night, at the South Carolina debate televised on Fox News, former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson included that NEA endorsement in a list of other perceived Republican sins (like raising taxes) that Huckabee has supposedly committed. Sen. Thompson said: [Huckabee] has the endorsement of the National Education Association, and the NEA said it was because of his opposition to vouchers.”

Update: Read the transcript for yourself.

To clarify Sen. Thompson's comments, what Huckabee had was the endorsement of the New Hampshire affiliate—the granddaddy-of-them-all national NEA hasn't endorsed anyone in the presidential race yet. It's worth noting, again, that Huckabee was the only Republican candidate to even speak to the NEA convention last summer (video included below.)

Still, this debate would have been an excellent time for Huckabee to clarify his position on vouchers. But he didn't.


January 9, 2008

The 'Quality Counts' Message on Teacher Pay

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Boosting teacher pay is a hot education reform topic on the presidential campaign trail, especially for Democrats. Barack Obama even talked about it last night during his second-place-finish speech in the New Hampshire primary, saying, "We [need to] stop talking about how great teachers are and start rewarding them for their greatness."

It's a popular message with unions, whose members are a key voting bloc. Teacher pay is relatively easy for voters to understand in short sound bites. Plus, many voters find it hard to argue with the need to pay teachers more money for the vital, and difficult, public service job they perform.

But if the end game is, indeed, to recruit and retain new teachers, then EdWeek's new state-by-state "Quality Counts 2008" report suggests the solution is far more complicated than anything that can fit in a 15-second sound bite.

And this means the teacher-pay proposals of the candidates merit more scrutiny. For the most part, this scrutiny is limited to Democrats, who are the only ones seriously talking about teacher pay issues.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson's plan to make the average starting salary for teachers in America $40,000 could be seen as overly simplistic. And that's because, according to Quality Counts, teacher pay varies widely by state and is a bigger issue in some parts of the country than others. Montana and Rhode Island, for example, have median teacher salaries that are above those for comparable jobs. But teachers in North Carolina and Missouri make far less than peers in similar jobs. So the solutions may be different for different states.

Sen. Hillary Clinton, of New York, has been rather vague on teacher pay issues, except to make it perfectly clear she thinks merit pay for teachers is "demeaning." Though she may not like merit pay, it is clear, from what the Quality Counts researchers found, that good teachers now have little hope of making big salary gains, which could hurt efforts to retain the best educators.

And speaking of money, former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards' plan calls for giving teachers $15,000 bonuses for teaching in high-poverty schools. But money may not be enough, as explained in the Quality Counts story, "Working Conditions Trump Pay." Teachers also want good building leadership, support from their colleagues and bosses, and classroom resources.

Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois has one of the most comprehensive plans, which touches on everything from supporting mentoring programs and common planning time to recruiting teacher-candidates for high-needs schools. But even he overlooks a common problem for states: data quality. Quality Counts revealed that only 20 states have, and can verify, their ability to track the number of highly qualified teachers overall, and the number in high-poverty schools.

Without good data collection, it will be hard to gauge the effectiveness of any new teacher programs. But try getting the words "data quality" or "data collection" in a voter-friendly, 15-second sound bite.

December 13, 2007

Mike (Petrilli) on Why Teachers Like Mike (Huckabee)

Not only is Republican Mike Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, endearing himself to a growing mass of voters, but he's gaining the support of a subset of a politically powerful bunch: teachers.

Ex-Bushie, Hoover Institution fellow, and Fordham Foundation VP Michael J. Petrilli explores this phenomenon in a National Review piece.

Petrilli raises many good points, which have been echoed by the folks I've been talking to over the last few days for an upcoming story I'm working on about the presidential candidates who were, or are, governors. Democrats in Arkansas, who are the first to admit they don't see eye-to-eye with a lot of Huckabee's politics, seem to respect him for his education record. Specifically, they point to his support of tax increases early in his term to help resolve an Arkansas Supreme Court ruling declaring the state's school funding system unconstitutional. One state legislator, Sen. Jim Argue, a Democrat, even told me that that moment in Arkansas history in 2002 — when the state had to make big decisions about how to fund schools — reminded him of another pivotal moment in state history: the historic and turbulent integration of Little Rock's schools in 1957.

December 7, 2007

A Close Encounter With Mike Huckabee

This dispatch comes from my colleague, Bess Keller, who covers the teacher beat, including the National Education Association:

Last summer I saw Mike Huckabee take the stage at the National Education Association’s annual meeting and asked myself: What kind of GOP presidential candidate bothers to join the NEA’s Parade of Hopefuls?

The nation’s largest union had invited both Democratic and Republican candidates to address the 7,000-plus delegates in Philadelphia, and, not surprisingly, given the NEA's links with the Democratic Party, all seven major Dems gave speeches. But Huckabee was the only Republican to accept.

Must be, I thought, desperate. Or goofy. And yet his speech was anything but. He managed to sound sincere and secure and to pluck strings almost guaranteed to win favorable responses from the educators, such as his push for more music and art in schools. He gave the impression of a guy who saw children in the round and the human face of schools, which teachers often think policymakers miss in their quest for higher test-scores.

Afterwards, when he met with reporters and was asked about the NEA no-no of pay for performance, he gave it a moderate endorsement. Such experiments were worth trying, he said. He also pointed out that all three of his children had attended public schools in Arkansas.

So I haven’t been completely surprised by Huckabee’s newfound popularity. But I was taken aback the other night, when my lifelong-Democrat, Brooklyn-born-and-raised husband turned over in bed and said he thought he might vote for the Arkansas pastor. He had heard Huckabee’s defense of granting in-state tuition to the children of immigrants. He murmured that it was the best political pronouncement he had heard in a long time and went peacefully back to sleep.

November 28, 2007

'Only Bill Richardson Has a Bold Plan for Our Schools'

That's the opening line of New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson's new television ad that's running in Iowa. I question the "only" and the "bold" part of his claim.

His "bold plan," if elected president: getting rid of the No Child Left Behind Act, expanding prekindergarten, paying teachers more, and expanding math and science academies. Hardly original ideas, since most of those proposals are shared by every other Democratic candidate in the race. Webster's dictionary defines bold as "readiness to take risks, daring, fearless," and although he goes a step further than other candidates by calling for an all-out elimination of NCLB, I'd still be hesitant to call his plan bold since proposing to expand pre-K and boost teacher salaries are safe bets for a Democratic presidential candidate these days.

Still, I kept watching his ad, which further directs viewers to see what he "did" for New Mexico schools by going to www.risingschools.com.

The site details a list of education accomplishments in New Mexico, and mentions that Education Week's Quality Counts gave his state an A for assessments and accountability. I thought this merited some fact-checking.

Richardson is right, we did give New Mexico an A in 2006, and gave the state other high marks for improving teacher quality and allocating resources equitably.

However, Richardson understandably left out an important fact: More recently, in the 2007 Quality Counts, New Mexico ranked dead last among the 50 states and the District of Columbia for providing children with chances for success from cradle to career.

There is a bright side to this dismal ranking for Gov. Richardson. Christopher Swanson, the director of the Editorial Projects in Education Research Center, which produced the report, told me that New Mexico officials didn't shrink away from the story—that they instead used it to bring more attention to the importance of education and funding in their state.

Update: Check out this on-point cartoon, which appeared in the Baton Rouge (La.) Advocate this year shortly after our Quality Counts report debuted. Thanks to the cartoonist, Frank Mulhearn, for his permission to reprint this here.

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November 21, 2007

Speaking of Merit Pay....This Time in Oregon

There's a big fight brewing over merit pay in Oregon, where an anti-union activist is taking on the teachers' unions by campaigning for a 2008 ballot initiative that would link teacher raises to "classroom performance." Read more about that here.

Voters in Oregon nixed a similar proposal when it was on the ballot in 2000. But it's eight years later, and merit pay has become a much bigger education reform topic and has spread to states like Texas and Minnesota. Merit pay is even being talked about on the presidential campaign trail. Read my earlier posts here and here.

The results from previous ballot initiatives show that issues that face strong opposition from teachers often fail. There's little doubt that Oregon teachers will get help, in terms of money and volunteers, from the National Education Association—a formidable political force.

November 20, 2007

Obama's Education Plan and His Dance Around Hot-Button Teacher Issues

In Sen. Barack Obama's new education plan, his ideas for reforming the teaching profession are substantial, expensive, and have the potential to result in fairly dramatic changes in the teaching profession. I discussed this with one of my colleagues on the teacher beat here at Education Week, Bess Keller, who helped me navigate my way through the Illinois Democrat's detailed plan.

Obama wants to get serious about recruiting by offering $25,000 "teaching service" scholarships to talented, high-performing teacher candidates who agree to teach in a high-need area or subject for at least four years. His $18 billion plan calls for expensive teacher residency programs, like one in Chicago, to train teachers for struggling, urban districts. He wants to keep good teachers in the classroom by giving them mentors, and by offering incentives for schools to offer paid common planning time so teacher can plan their lessons together. And, he wants to offer incentives for districts to develop "career ladder initiatives" that give teachers opportunities for advancement (and more money) by becoming mentors, acquiring more training, and boosting student learning.

While Obama's education plan is detailed and ambitious, he dances around two of the most hot-button teacher issues: merit pay based on test scores, and getting rid of failing teachers.

Obama, who promoted merit pay in a July speech to the National Education Association, alludes to merit pay in his plan by giving a nod to districts like Denver, which use student test scores as one means of evaluating teachers for salary raises. But he doesn't come out and directly say whether test scores should be part of the salary equation. Instead, he says teachers should be rewarded for their deep knowledge of subjects, additional training they receive to help high-needs students, and a "variety of contributions" they make to student learning.

Nor does Obama's plan say much about what districts should do with teachers who, despite everything, fail to help their students achieve. In his prepared remarks from the speech he gave today in Manchester, N.H., he said: "And if they’re still underperforming after that, we should find a quick and fair way to put another teacher in that classroom." Though he offers an example of using peer review and assistance plans to help underperforming teachers, it certainly won't be easy for teachers and school districts to find a "quick and fair" way to get rid of underperforming teachers.

Clinton Calls Merit Pay for Teachers 'Demeaning'

One of the few issues in education that divides Democratic front-runners Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama in this presidential campaign is merit pay.

Yesterday, Sen. Clinton criticized the idea during a campaign stop at an Iowa elementary school. While the senator from New York said she supports the less controversial idea of incentives for teachers who work in high-need areas, Clinton, who won the endorsement of the American Federation of Teachers in October, denounced the idea of merit pay as "demeaning and discouraging." (However, she does like the idea of school uniforms for students.)

Teachers' unions usually fiercely oppose the idea of merit pay, although some states, such as Texas and Minnesota, and districts, such as Denver Public Schools, have tried it with mixed success. Both the AFT and the National Education Association are fighting off any merit-pay ideas that may crop up during the No Child Left Behind reauthorization.

It was a politically daring Sen. Obama of Illinois who told the NEA at its July national convention that merit pay was worth pursuing. However, he softened the idea a bit by pledging to work with teachers to craft such a system and to base merit pay not just on an "arbitrary test score."

Obama is talking about merit pay in the larger context of a very tough issue: closing the achievement gap among minority and non-minority students. But the issue of merit pay has a group of formidable foes, so Clinton can continue to harp on this difference between her and one of her chief opponents, and shore up her support among public school teachers and union backers.

Update: Read more about Obama's education plan, and his ideas on teacher compensation, in my newer blog item here.

November 16, 2007

Democratic Candidates on Merit Pay: Teachers' Unions Have Nothing to Worry About

In last night's Democratic debate on CNN, the seven presidential candidates were asked whether they were in favor of the very controversial issue of merit pay for teachers, which is generally fiercely opposed by some of the Democrats' biggest supporters—the teachers' unions.

None of the candidates came out in favor of the kind of merit pay in which individual teachers are paid more based on their results in the classroom. Interestingly, Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, who is the only Democratic candidate to openly support and talk about merit pay for individual teachers on the campaign trail, didn't jump in to tackle the issue during last night's debate. You can read the transcript here.

New York Sen. Hillary Clinton said she favors "school-based" merit pay, which would reward all teachers and staff members in a high-achieving school regardless of their individual abilities. That's very different than rewarding individual teachers for excelling in their jobs. "The school is a team, and I think it's important that we reward that collaboration," she said. When pressed about whether bad teachers in a school that is otherwise excelling should be given merit pay, she said those bad teachers should be "weed(ed) out." Opponents, of course, say that's easier said than done when teachers' contracts and unions make it very difficult for school districts to do just that.

Sen. Christopher Dodd, of Connecticut, the first to answer, said he would be in favor of a pay system for teachers who go into poor, rural, or difficult schools and make a difference—but didn't want a merit-pay system that rewarded teachers who taught in "better neighborhoods."

Sen. Joseph Biden, of Delaware, whose wife is a community college English instructor, said teachers should be judged and rewarded by what they do outside of the classroom — such as get advanced degrees.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson didn't really answer the question, but used his time to bash the No Child Left Behind Act and declare that he would be the next education president.

The general message from Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich is that, if he is elected, the teachers' unions would have a very good friend in the White House, which he said would be a "worker's White House." When asked whether he disagreed with the teachers' unions on any issue, he didn't name a single one.

November 15, 2007

Washington School Tax Referendum: It's Not Over Until All the Votes Are Counted

While most of the education fuss on Election Day last week was over the voucher referendum in Utah, there was another significant, state-level referendum, this one in Washington State where results are still, a week later, neck-and-neck.

Although many believed a referendum that would have made it easier for school districts to get property-tax levies approved by voters had failed, days later, we find out differently. As of Election Night, according to the story, the measure was trailing by a seemingly formidable 38,000 votes—what was thought to be a somewhat comfortable lead. But late votes, including mail-in ballots, have tipped the scales toward victory for referendum supporters—at least for now. You can monitor the results as the rest of the votes are tallied and later certified on the state's website.

This would count as another victory for teachers' unions, including the National Education Association, which got involved in raising money and volunteers to pass the referendum. The referendum is important to teachers because it would relax the standard for approving district property-tax levies by requiring a simple majority of votes, and not a 60 percent "super-majority." These levies, according to media reports, make up about 17 percent of district budgets -- and that's where teacher salaries come from.

Michele McNeil

Michele McNeil
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Alyson Klein

Alyson Klein
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