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The good, bad, and ugly of how major newspapers covered the 2018 teacher strikes
The Hill ^ | 08/27/18 | Frederick M. Hess and R.J. Martin

Posted on 08/27/2018 7:18:50 AM PDT by yesthatjallen

During spring 2018, tens of thousands of teachers in West Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arizona, Colorado, and North Carolina walked out of their schools. These teachers were angry about pay, school funding, proposed benefit changes, and more. The walkouts attracted extensive media attention across the land; that coverage has helped shape public understanding of the strikes and any political impact. With that in mind, in a new report published by the American Enterprise Institute and Education Next, we’ve examined how five national newspapers (the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and USA Today) covered the strikes.

Specifically, we analyzed how stories about the strikes were framed, who got quoted in those stories, and what information about teacher compensation was provided to readers. We first identified all the stories these newspapers published on the walkouts between February 15 (just before the first walkout in West Virginia) and June 1 (after the last major walkout ended in May), and then examined the resulting 59 articles.

What did we find?

The good. When we analyzed headlines and leads to see how stories were framed, we found an admirable degree of impartiality. Of the 59 headlines, 56 displayed no tilt toward either the strikers or their critics. Similarly, 56 of the 59 leads played it straight. In almost no case did either the headlines or the leads of major newspaper articles overtly favor one side or the other. For those who think that major outlets too often frame coverage of contentious issues in terms of good guys and bad guys, this was a reassuring development.

The bad. When it came to shaping the narrative of the walkouts, of course, it didn’t only matter how stories were framed; it also mattered which voices got to share their concerns and inform the narrative. To explore which voices shaped the coverage, we tallied all quotes attributed by name in the 59 articles, identifying 170 individuals who were quoted a total of 254 times. (The numbers don’t match because some individuals were quoted on multiple occasions.)

We found 31 percent of quotes were from public officials and another 24 percent from union officials. Teachers who were not identified as union leaders contributed 28 percent of the quotes. Meanwhile, notable for their absence were the families affected by the walkouts. Of the 254 quotes published, fewer than 5 percent came from an impacted parent or student. In fact, while families bore the brunt of the strike-related disruptions, just 14 percent of the stories featured even a single parent or student quote.

The quotes also exhibited a seemingly pro-strike tilt. While 60 percent of all quotes supported the strikes and just 14 percent were anti-strike, opinion appears to have been more mixed than this lopsided ratio suggests. For instance, of the few parents and students quoted, over 80 percent were pro-strike. But a national 2018 Education Next poll showed that 53 percent of the general public supported teachers’ right to strike—and one-third rejected it. So in the strike states, public opinion toward the walkouts likely was positive—but perhaps much less so than the coverage seemed to suggest. Similarly, while 86 percent of teacher quotes were pro-strike, that figure also may be high. State-level polling of teachers is hard to come by, but it’s worth noting that even the pro-strike Arizona Educators United claimed that only 78 percent of Arizona teachers were pro-strike.

The ugly. Far and away, the most significant concern with the coverage was that it almost uniformly failed to tell readers what they needed to know to reach informed conclusions about the state of teacher compensation. After all, while 98 percent of articles referenced the value of teacher salaries, salary is not the whole of teacher compensation. Indeed, the generosity of teacher healthcare and pensions is a major issue in discussions of teacher compensation and school spending.

Yet, less than half the articles mentioned healthcare benefits, and barely a third mentioned pensions. Just three percent of stories even obliquely referenced the value of teacher pensions, and not a single one mentioned teacher vacation time or the length of the teacher work year. The point is not that such information points a particular direction on teacher pay, but that it is essential to help readers reach their own judgments about the merits of teacher demands.

Meanwhile, just two percent of articles compared teacher pay to the state’s median household income. Especially in financially stressed states, it was potentially relevant that, in some cases, the average teacher was already earning more than the state’s median household. At the least, readers would benefit from having some sense of how teacher pay compares to the income of the households who would fund any boost in their pay.

After all, while Education Next reported that two-thirds of the public supports higher pay for teachers, that figure falls to 49 percent when respondents are informed how much teachers in their state already earn. Regardless of where one stands on teacher pay increases, this kind of information is clearly relevant to public deliberation.

Newspapers deserve commendation for their impartial framing of the stories. At the same time, the selection of quotes raised some grounds for concern, and a remarkable lack of detail about teacher compensation meant that stories lacked crucial context. In the end, these flaws appear to have injected a subtle but important pro-strike bias into the coverage. But with the possibility of more strikes looming, the press should have plenty of opportunities to do better.

Frederick M. Hess is director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute. R.J. Martin is a research assistant at AEI. They are the authors of the new study “How Did Major Newspapers Cover the 2018 Teacher Strikes?”


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: liberalbias; media; msm; teachers
Anyone who followed this 'national teachers' movement' in the spring of '18 clearly saw the liberal bias in the reporting.

The 'narrative' that teachers were under paid and were being denied pay increases was glaringly obvious.

This story is a classic example of the mainstream medias' obfuscation and omission of relevant facts forcing the public to come to the conclusion the media wants the public to believe.

1 posted on 08/27/2018 7:18:50 AM PDT by yesthatjallen
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To: yesthatjallen
Image result for The good, bad, and ugly gif
2 posted on 08/27/2018 7:27:55 AM PDT by ETL (Obama-Hillary, REAL Russia collusion! Uranium-One Deal, Missile Defense, Iran Deal, Nukes: Click ETL)
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To: yesthatjallen
it was potentially relevant that, in some cases, the average teacher was already earning more than the state’s median household. At the least, readers would benefit from having some sense of how teacher pay compares to the income of the households who would fund any boost in their pay.

AND the number of work weeks AND the guaranteed pension.

3 posted on 08/27/2018 7:31:17 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: 1Old Pro

AND the medical care subsidies


4 posted on 08/27/2018 7:31:47 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: yesthatjallen

Also bear in mind that the US is #1 in cost per student, and #13 in results. Unions need to banned from any activity funded by Tax Payer $!


5 posted on 08/27/2018 7:57:08 AM PDT by stubernx98 (cranky, but reasonable)
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To: 1Old Pro

In WA state, it was just naked theft.

For the last two years, the union took the state to court, and the McCleary decision passed. It said that the state failed in its primary constitutional duty to fully fund education.

Long story short, and after a number of ridiculous contempt rulings later, the legislature found a way to do it (big tax hikes - huge).

Five minutes later, nearly every district in the state went on strike. The raises - in the 20% range and higher in some districts. Unsustainable raises.

It was just in your face. It’s a one party state, so there you go. I’d say WA is the most blue in the country. It is so far down the socialist path that I don’t see sanity returning as long as Amazon and the other idiot tech companies are willing to stay here.


6 posted on 08/27/2018 8:03:20 AM PDT by RinaseaofDs
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To: yesthatjallen
Indeed, the generosity of teacher healthcare and pensions is a major issue in discussions of teacher compensation and school spending.

Generosity? That's a load of crap! Teacher benefits in Texas have been falling like a rock for years. And, so have the salaries relative to the cost of living and workload. But, I will say that teachers brought it on themselves.

7 posted on 08/27/2018 8:28:21 AM PDT by eastexsteve
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To: 1Old Pro

And, they should earn more than the median household. When the median household has the same number of years vested in education for their professions, Then maybe they will have equal pay.


8 posted on 08/27/2018 8:30:50 AM PDT by eastexsteve
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To: stubernx98
Also bear in mind that the US is #1 in cost per student, and #13 in results. Unions need to banned from any activity funded by Tax Payer $!

I agree with you here.

9 posted on 08/27/2018 8:32:14 AM PDT by eastexsteve
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To: RinaseaofDs
In Washington state, the property taxes my wife and I pay on our house have doubled in the last four years. Over 50% of that money goes to schools. In inflation adjusted dollars schools collect nearly three times per student what they did when my wife and I were kids. Yet our State Supreme Court, a far left political body ruled that the schools still were not getting enough.

My wife's family on her mother's side were almost all teachers. Her grandfather was actually the Superintendent for Tacoma Public Schools. At that time somehow the kids were far better educated for a fraction of the cost. Things have gotten completely out of hand. The only solution that I can see is transitioning to a situation where all schools in the state are private and they are compensated by the state. Private schools are far more efficient and they educate children much better. The government is at a point where it ruins everything that it touches.

10 posted on 08/27/2018 8:35:04 AM PDT by fireman15
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