Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $19,384
23%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 23%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: teacherunions

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Cheating by California teachers invalidates schools' test scores

    09/19/2011 7:30:43 PM PDT · by DeaconBenjamin · 8 replies
    Los Angeles Times ^ | September 18, 2011 | By Howard Blume
    Twenty-two California schools had their test scores thrown out this year. Nearly half the campuses lost their Academic Performance Index scores because of cheating by teachers. Several others were penalized because of help teachers gave students that violated rules. Additionally, some school scores were rejected because of what appeared to be accidental actions. In most cases, schools or school districts turned themselves in. Because of budget cuts, the state Education Department no longer conducts random audits at schools or scans test booklets for irregularities. The number of schools with invalidated test scores remains relatively small but is edging upward. In...
  • Green Bay teachers concerned about change in workday hours [Upset at 30 adnl minutes to teach kids ]

    06/21/2011 1:44:44 PM PDT · by NoLibZone · 27 replies
    wtaq.com ^ | June 21 2011 | wtaq.com
    GREEN BAY, WI (WTAQ) - The Green Bay teachers union is upset about a change in the designated work day work hours starting next school year. The district breaks down the teaching workday with teaching time, professional time, additional duties, and lunch. The district wants teachers to be involved in a new collaborative team building initiatives for a total of 90 minutes of professional time everyday. They are adding an additional 30 minutes to the teachers’ day, while taking away an hour of personal professional planning time instead of the current two hours. Green Bay Education Association President Toni Lardinois...
  • Protesters decry Calif budget cuts' effects on students [If we don't get extension,public ed dies]

    05/13/2011 8:16:34 PM PDT · by NoLibZone · 22 replies
    Los Angeles Times ^ | May 13 2011 | By Jason Song, Los Angeles Times
    Hundreds rally in downtown Pershing Square, urging legislators for ballot measures to fund schools. A teachers' union leader is released after his arrest in Sacramento with 25 others. By Jason Song, Los Angeles Times May 14, 2011 Hundreds of teachers, parents and students rallied in Pershing Square on Friday to protest budget cuts and urge legislators for ballot measures to help fund education. The protest was part of a weeklong series of events around the state intended to draw attention to education funding. Over the past three years, state lawmakers have approved nearly $20 billion in cuts to K-12 schools...
  • Teachers’ Union Protects Teacher for Standing Idly By While Student is Beaten

    05/13/2011 11:15:27 AM PDT · by massmike · 34 replies
    redstate.com ^ | 05/13/2011 | n/a
    Some viewers may find the video below, of a student being punched in the face repeatedly by another student, disturbing. What many may find even more disturbing is the fact that the teacher stood by, with his hands in his pockets, as the student was beaten. However, what is truly appalling is the fact that the American Federation of Teachers is protecting the teacher’s actions inaction. According to the Teachers’ Union, the student’s teacher was justified in standing there with his hands in his pockets while a kid got beaten because, in the union’s words: “Teachers have intervened in the...
  • Schooled in Wisconsin! The truth behind the protests. This is OUTSTANDING....A must watch.

    02/25/2011 8:25:43 AM PST · by Beave Meister · 35 replies
    Freedomain Radio ^ | Stefan Molyneux
    Schooled in Wisconson! The truth behind the protests.
  • Can Michelle Rhee Save Your Child's School?

    12/18/2010 8:50:06 AM PST · by george76 · 19 replies
    Yahoo ^ | Dec 13, 2010 | Victoria Leigh Miller
    | Michelle Rhee, the outspoken former chancellor of the Washington D.C. public school system, has a new mission in life: She wants to save the world. OK. She wants to save the United States' public education system, but it's still a massive undertaking. Her new mission -- Students First -- is being called "A movement to transform public education." And just to be sure she had a big audience for the official launch of her new venture, Rhee announced it last week on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." She also was featured on a Newsweek cover story, so the word is...
  • Who is against library volunteers? Teachers unions in Raynham and Bridgewater(MA)

    10/11/2010 10:29:33 AM PDT · by GQuagmire · 10 replies
    Boston Globe ^ | 10/11/10 | Christine Legere
    The teachers’ union in Bridgewater and Raynham has filed a labor grievance that could block volunteers from keeping the school district’s libraries open. And as word of the work action spreads, it is stirring up outrage in the two towns. Librarian positions were cut from the middle schools in both towns this year and their salaries channeled into hiring teachers to address bulging class sizes. Volunteer organizations stepped in to pick up the slack — only to be surprised and disappointed by threats of a labor complaint.
  • Nevada's new educational solution: Fewer school days!

    05/13/2010 1:09:23 PM PDT · by NevadaPolicyResearchInstitute · 16 replies · 357+ views
    Write on Nevada ^ | 13 May 2010 | Victor Joecks
    Educational achievement in Nevada is dismal. Our high school dropout rate is the worst in the nation. "Nevada's 4th and 8th graders placed no higher than 43rd in math or reading on any of the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) exams." This poor performance exists despite nearly tripling inflation-adjusted, per-pupil spending over the last 50 years.So naturally, the Legislative Committee on Education decided yesterday to move forward on a proposal to eliminate up to 10 school days a year. Not. A. Joke. The committee did decide to recommend that the 2011 Legislature change state laws to give...
  • Many American Students Entering College Need Remedial Courses

    05/12/2010 5:33:17 PM PDT · by george76 · 82 replies · 1,155+ views
    ap ^ | May 11, 2010 | Christine Armario
    Some students in remedial courses are older workers trying to jump-start a new career. But a sizable amount are recent graduates who performed well in high school...nearly four out of five remedial students had a high school GPA of 3.0 or higher. The price of providing remedial training is costly. The Alliance for Excellent Education estimates the nation loses $3.7 billion a year because students are not learning basic needed skills, including $1.4 billion to provide remedial education for students who have recently completed high school. "From taxpayers' standpoint, remediation is paying for the same education twice," Students who need...
  • Hollywood stars protest school cuts in online video

    04/07/2010 6:39:37 PM PDT · by DogByte6RER · 14 replies · 673+ views
    Los Angeles Times ^ | April 7, 2010 | My-Thuan Tran
    Hollywood stars protest school cuts in online video By My-Thuan Tran Los Angeles Times Staff Writer The parents at Wonderland Avenue Elementary in Laurel Canyon were irate about the proposed education cuts from the state budget. So instead of going to Sacramento, they went straight to Hollywood. The school's PTA president came up with the idea of creating a video, and one parent suggested they ask Brian Austin Green (of "Beverly Hills, 90210" fame) to star in it. Green, whose son attends the school, agreed, and he got his girlfriend, actress Megan Fox, to costar. The result was a four-minute...
  • Filmmakers offer an inside look at NYC's 'rubber rooms'

    03/21/2010 3:52:49 AM PDT · by NotSoModerate · 9 replies · 782+ views
    New York Post ^ | March 21, 2010 | YOAV GONEN and BRAD HAMILTON
    Lights, cameras -- inaction! Two documentary filmmakers have infiltrated New York City's infamous "rubber rooms" -- the eight disciplinary dens around the city where educators accused of wrongdoing while away months, or even years, at full pay -- to reveal teachers snoozing at their desks, holding jam sessions, playing board games, and breaking into fights. These educators in limbo -- some still raking in six figures a year -- show up from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a "work" day that, in some cases, consists of holding book-club meetings and prayer sessions, repeatedly karate-kicking a file cabinet, or forming...
  • Obama Seeks Sweeping Change in ‘No Child’ Law

    01/31/2010 6:36:30 PM PST · by Cheap_Hessian · 39 replies · 1,080+ views
    The New York Times ^ | January 31, 2010 | Sam Dillon
    The Obama administration is proposing a sweeping overhaul of President Bush’s signature education law, No Child Left Behind, and will call for broad changes in how schools are judged to be succeeding or failing, as well as for the elimination of the law’s 2014 deadline for bringing every American child to academic proficiency. Educators who have been briefed by administration officials said the proposals for changes in the main law governing the federal role in public schools would eliminate or rework many of the provisions that teachers’ unions, associations of principals, school boards and other groups have found most objectionable....
  • Buffalo Teachers Paid Not To Teach

    09/21/2009 8:12:54 AM PDT · by george76 · 27 replies · 1,872+ views
    2 On Your Side ^ | 9/15/2009
    over the last six years, Buffalo taxpayers have paid millions of dollars to teachers not to teach. Twelve different teachers have collected $2.25 million in salary while under suspension and waiting for disciplinary hearings during that time. And that amount doesn't include the costs for substitutes and the hearings themselves. The average wait for those hearings: three years. The school district doesn't release the names of the teachers, or what they've been charged with, but we've learned that right now there's a Physical Education teacher awaiting a hearing who was suspended four years ago this month and has been paid...
  • Christmas is here early for teacher unions

    03/15/2009 5:43:38 AM PDT · by Scanian · 5 replies · 565+ views
    The Washington Times ^ | March 15, 2009 | Editorial
    Christmas has come early for teacher unions (not that they believe in religious holiday traditions). President Obama's education plans give them almost all of their long wish list, and here it is only March. He is increasing teacher salaries. He is eliminating a voucher system for poor D.C. residents so that the District of Columbia's wonderful public school system can be protected from any competition (what D.C. parents would want to send their children to the private school that Barack and Michelle Obama are sending their own children to?). He has increasing the demand for unionized teachers by expanding public...
  • Striking Against Students: Why Pennsylvania leads the nation in teacher walkouts.

    12/22/2008 3:04:38 AM PST · by Amelia · 66 replies · 1,948+ views
    WSJ Opinion Journal ^ | DECEMBER 22, 2008 | Staff
    Teachers unions routinely claim that the interests of students are their top priority. So we would be interested to hear how the Pennsylvania affiliate of the National Education Association explains the proliferation of teacher walkouts in the middle of the school year. According to a recent study by the Allegheny Institute, Pennsylvania is once again the worst state in the country for teacher strikes. No less than 42% of all teacher walkouts nationwide occur in the Keystone State, leaving kids sidelined and parents scrambling to juggle work and family, potentially on as little as 48 hours notice required by state...
  • The 'Certified' Teacher Myth

    12/15/2008 8:22:50 AM PST · by Sopater · 24 replies · 803+ views
    Like all unions, teachers unions have a vested interest in restricting the labor supply to reduce job competition. Traditional state certification rules help to limit the supply of "certified" teachers. But a new study suggests that such requirements also hinder student learning. Harvard researchers Paul Peterson and Daniel Nadler compared states that have genuine alternative certification with those that have it in name only. And they found that between 2003 and 2007 students in states with a real alternative pathway to teaching gained more on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (a federal standardized test) than did students in other...
  • No free pass to next grade at Randolph ( Education versus social promotion )

    06/17/2008 9:07:17 AM PDT · by george76 · 9 replies · 105+ views
    Rocky Mountain News ^ | June 12, 2008 | Nancy Mitchell
    Students earn way by sweat of brow in new program . Bruce Randolph's bold decision last fall to end social promotion, to inform parents that students who fail core academic classes will not be passed on to the next grade. "We're changing the culture," said Principal Kristin Waters. "You can't not pass anymore; you have to do the work." It's an unprecedented stance by a neighborhood school in Denver. DPS, unlike other metro districts, allows parents to decide whether their children are held back a grade until they reach high school. Few choose to hold them back. Not until grade...
  • Pelosi attacks McCain for backing Calif.'s 2005 special election

    03/28/2008 8:39:10 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 38 replies · 656+ views
    KTVN-TV ^ | March 28, 2008
    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sidestepped the superdelegate controversy as she opened the California Democratic Party convention tonight in San Jose, instead taking aim at likely Republican presidential nominee, John McCain. Pelosi noted that McCain campaigned alongside Governor Schwarzenegger during the polarizing special election the governor called in 2005. Schwarzenegger tried to pass ballot measures aimed at weakening the power of public employee unions, changing teacher tenure rules and clamping down on state spending. Californians rejected those reforms and she predicted they'd reject McCain as well. The gathering at the San Jose Convention Center continues through...
  • Court gives teachers union its due (WA)

    06/21/2007 10:57:04 AM PDT · by jazusamo · 10 replies · 656+ views
    The Columbian ^ | June 21, 2007 | Elizabeth Hovde
    Thursday, June 21, 2007 If the Washington Education Association truly put teachers and students first, they'd be cheering a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision along with the rest of us. The court stood up for teachers' free speech rights. Instead, the union is decrying last week's 9-0 ruling, calling the state law that was before the court "seriously flawed," and vowing to pursue more ways to get its way, despite what individual teachers want. There is nothing flawed about getting permission from educators before spending their paychecks on politics with which they might disagree. Only a bully would see things...
  • CSU faculty union OKs statewide strike

    03/22/2007 4:07:25 AM PDT · by Alia · 20 replies · 439+ views
    The Press Democrat ^ | 03-22-07 | BOB NORBERG
    A union representing professors, librarians and coaches at Sonoma State and 22 other California State University campuses has voted overwhelmingly to approve a strike, which could occur over several weeks beginning in April.Because of the size of the CSU system, Travis said, "if we strike, it will be the largest strike in the history of higher education in this country."New CSU tenure-track faculty start at about $50,000 a year, the average salary for tenure-track is $71,000, and the average for faculty with 20 years of experience is $86,000.Instructors, who teach 60 percent of CSU classes, earn an average of $58,000...