Chicago Teachers' Union Strike

Updated on September 13, 2012
X.O. asks from Naperville, IL
5 answers

The news reports are incredibly bare bones about what is exactly at issue. I know there is a difference in the importance in test scores on the teachers' evaluations, but what else? I heard there are 49 points of the new contract, and the teachers are only in agreement with 6 of them.

Where can I get more info? Any ideas?

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K.T.

answers from Chicago on

while the teachers were asked to work longer days, those hours are the same as teachers in every other district so it is not like they were asked to work weekends or something. Also, their avg salary is over $70k per year. give me a break!! get back in the classrooms and work this out while you are teaching the future that you are supposedly fighting for in the first place!

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M.R.

answers from Chicago on

I'm not sure exactly what is going on, as I have not followed it. I'm sure my husband has, as he is a teacher (not in Chicago proper, however.)

I know that they are making lots of budget cuts all over, and as teachers are up for contract negotiation, this does present some problems.

The way he explained it to me is that they only renegotiate every few years, so their pay is set for those years (with very minimal increase for "cost of living, etc")

So, if teachers are paid a lot right now, it is based on the economy a few years ago (which was good.) The unionization guarantees they get paid a reasonable wage through good and bad years, so they can keep their jobs. This means they are paid this wage even though teachers without tenure might be laid off, or classroom sizes grow, etc.

I don't think many people realize that teachers don't work an 8 hour workday. My husband goes in at 6am to work a few hours before school starts, has meetings with parents and other teachers about students during his off period/lunch break, and then brings work home every night and on weekends. He has to communicate with everyone constantly, so you will find him checking his phone and email every moment he is not at school. It's not an easy job.

Now, that is not to say that every single teacher does what they are supposed to do, or is paid appropriately, but let's really consider what teachers do (even if you think of them ONLY as "babysitters".... they are STILL grossly underpaid.)

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S.S.

answers from Chicago on

Cook County Board of Education?
Chicago Teacher's Union?
Reference any Chicago Public School and they will probably direct you somewhere (there might be a secretary there somewhere).

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J.K.

answers from Chicago on

This might help. It's been going around facebook today.

Read this if you want the Chicago teacher's perspective of the strike. The media is 100% on the side of the mayor. ::: "WHAT'S HAPPENING IN CHICAGO RIGHT NOW:
A NOTE TO MY FORMER STUDENTS IN LOS ANGELES" by Michael Rusin, History Teacher

I think that it's important that I share a bit about what's happening in Chicago right now. For the past two days, Chicago teachers have gone on strike for a var
iety of issues. Unfortunately, media reporting on the lead-up to the strike itself was terribly ignorant of the major issues--especially considering negotiations have been happening for 9 months-- and was in large part biased against the Chicago Teacher's Union. Read about this issue in the news media with a careful eye: this is a strike about the future of public education in the U.S.

Here are some of the reasons we are striking in no particular order:

1. COMPENSATION

No one wants to hear about teacher compensation. However, Chicago teachers were mandated to work a longer school day and year-- for high schools: about 20 minutes longer than the typical LA school, and about 10 more days a year. This longer day and year came one year after the school board decided not to pay teachers a 4% raise that they were CONTRACTUALLY obligated to pay, and then literally the next month turned around and started offering raises to individual teachers and schools that "volunteered" to work a longer day. Importantly, while teachers are extraordinarily upset about the way the longer day and year played out, the Union and District have almost come to an agreement over teacher compensation. If you've read about it in the news, it has been reported as a 16% raise over the course of 4 years. However, the actual raise they are offering is 2.25% a year for four years. If you do the math that adds up to 9%. Where are they getting the other 7%? No one knows, but the mayor said it to reporters, so now that's what's getting reported. However, I want to emphasize that compensation will be worked out and is not currently the primary issue in dispute.

2. TEACHER EVALUATION

Illinois passed a state law requiring [only the city of] Chicago to implement a new evaluation system. It required that the union and district work together to create it, but that if they could not come to an agreement-- the district could just implement its own final offer. This has led to an evaluation system that has some good aspects: it does a much better job of creating an objective criteria for "good" teaching. But it also has some terrible aspects. For example, the current rubrics would rate teachers on a 1 - 4 scale (with 4 being the highest). Teachers would then be rated 1 - 4 on four different components and those scores would be averaged together to create an overall evaluation score. Teachers that receive the lowest rating two years in a row not only can be fired, but they will lose their teaching license. While teachers agree that schools should have a right to fire "bad" teachers, the current rubrics state that if you score a 2 (considered basic) on all four components, then you are actually rated a 1. As a comparison, imagine that I graded an essay on 4 components and scored each component as a "C", but then made the overall essay grade a "D". Doesn't make sense, right?

Another problem with the system is that the criteria for category 4 (distinguished) teaching describe good teaching, but they are so stringent that they are almost impossible to achieve. For example, in the component on classroom management, if you have a student that disrupts class, and you deal with the disruption to get the student back on track, you are rated as a 3. You can only be rated as a 4 if you never have any students that are disruptive. This assumes that teachers have total control over all students at all times. To me, effectively dealing with disruptive students IS distinguished teaching, especially when working with students that are not intrinsically motivated. There are myriad other issues with the current proposals, but [the primary issue is that] teachers see a future where the state/district will demand that teacher pay be tied to evaluations. If we allow the district to create an evaluation system that is rigged to rate all teachers as mediocre, it will allow them to justify freezing or cutting our salaries, or even firing teachers whenever they like.

In addition, the district wants to tie teacher evaluation to student standardized testing. To do this, in my school, of the 10 additional days in the school year, 7 of them will be used to give students standardized tests. For 11th graders, this test is the practice and real ACT, so it is significant. For students in other grades, they are all practice tests. So, teachers will be evaluated on student test scores that will mean nothing to the majority of students. Also, the district asked teachers to create what they call "Performance Tasks," which are standardized tests to be given in an individual classroom. While teachers helped to develop these tasks, the district method of grading the tasks is designed to rate all teachers as mediocre. The grading system ranks students on a 0 - 3 scale (with 3 being the highest). Teachers will be evaluated based on whether or not students move up in the 0-3 scale. The US history task (which is similar to a DBQ) is graded out of 30 points such that a 28-30 counts as a 3, an 18-27 counts as a 2, a 8-17 counts as a 1, and below that is a 0. In this case, a student could score an 18 the first time he takes the test, and a 26 the next time he takes it (improving from a 60% to an 87%) but for the purposes of evaluating his teacher that student will not be considered "improved."

3. TEACHER RECALL

The school district plans to close 100 "underperforming" schools over the next several years and replace them with new schools and charters. This is nothing new in Chicago. For the past 8 years, CPS has closed over 100 schools, fired all the teachers, and re-opened them as new schools and charters. To the surprise of no one, the vast majority of the new schools and charters that were opened scored THE SAME as the previous schools. Then why close neighborhood schools and force kids to travel to different areas of the city to go to school...? To fire experienced teachers that earn a higher salary, and replace them with inexperienced teachers that make less money. Since this is the goal of these new schools, is it any surprise that they are not outperforming the old schools? The Union wants a system in place so that if the district decides to close schools, the teachers that get fired (through no fault of their own) have the first opportunity to get the new jobs that open.

4. CLASS SIZE

CPS wants to avoid putting language in a contract that limits the amount of students in a class. Instead, they want to have the right to raise class sizes if they need to. The Union wants language in a contract that limits class sizes to 28 kids per class.

5. WORKING CONDITIONS

Lots of schools in Chicago are ill equipped for the 21st century. They lack libraries, computer labs, and even air conditioning. For example, last week it was 94 degrees in my classroom. This was not an anomaly [and yes, teachers buy and bring in fans]! This happens regularly when it is close to summer time. The Union wants the district to fix these problems.

There are other issues that we are fighting for, but I need to stop there. If you read most articles about the strike you will not read in any detail about the reasons why Chicago teachers are unhappy about compensation, evaluation, and recall - so please consider this and SHARE what I wrote. We are on strike because we refuse to accept a system where the mayor can systematically lower scores on teacher evaluations in order to justify the privatization of education."

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