The Worst Teacher in Chicago
In a school with some of the poorest kids in Chicago, one English teacher–I won't use her name–who'd been cemented into the school system for over a decade, wouldn't do a damn thing to lift test scores, yet had an annual salary level of close to $70,000 a year. Under Chicago's new rules holding teachers accountable and allowing charter schools to compete, this seniority-bloated teacher was finally fired by the principal.
In a nearby neighborhood, a charter school, part of the city system, had complete freedom to hire. No teachers' union interference. The charter school was able to bring in an innovative English teacher with advanced degrees and a national reputation in her field - for $29,000 a year less than was paid to the fired teacher.
You've guessed it by now: It's the same teacher.
It's Back to School Time! Time for the editorialists, the Tea Party, the GOP and Barack Obama's Education Secretary Arne Duncan to rip into the people who dare teach in public schools.
And in Chicago, Arne's old stomping grounds, Mayor Rahm Emanuel is stomping on the teachers and pushing them into the street.
Let's stop kidding ourselves. This is what Mitt Romney and Obama and Arne Duncan and Paul Ryan have in mind when they promote charter schools and the right to fire teachers with tenure: slash teachers salaries and bust their unions.
They've almost stopped pretending, too. Both the Right Wing-nuts and the Obama Administration laud the "progress" of New Orleans' schools–a deeply sick joke. The poorest students, who struggle most with standardized tests, were drowned or washed away. One thing both Democrat Emanuel and Republican Romney demand of Chicago teachers is that their pay, their jobs, depend on "standardized tests." Yes, but whose standard?
Here is an actual question from the standardized test that were given third graders here in NYC by the nation's biggest test-for-profit company:
"...Most young tennis stars learn the game from coaches at private clubs. In this sentence a private club is...." Then you have some choices in which the right answer is "Country Club - place where people meet."
Now not many of the "people [who] meet" at country clubs are from the South Side of Chicago--unless their parents are caddies. A teacher on the South Side whose students are puzzled by the question will lose their pay or job. Students on the lakefront Gold Coast all know that mommy plays tennis at the Country Club with Raul on Wednesdays. So their teacher gets a raise and their school has high marks.
And while Mayor Rahm promises kids in "bad" schools new teachers (the same ones at lower pay) at high-score schools, in fact, they are never actually allowed in.
But Rahm, after all, is just imposing Bush education law which should be called, No Child's Behind Left.
You want to know what's wrong with our schools? Benno Schmidt, CEO of the big Edison Schools teach-for-profit business is a creepy, greedy privateer. But he told me straight: that before Hurricane Katrina, his company would never go into New Orleans because Louisiana spent peanuts per child on education. He made it clear: You get what you pay for. Not what you test for.
So the charter carpetbaggers slither in, cherry-pick the easy students, and declare success. The tough cases and special ed kids are left in the public system so they can claim the public system fails.
Here's what the teacher who was terrible at $70,000 but brilliant at $41,000 told me:
"They're not doing this in white neighborhoods. And they want to get rid of the older, experienced teachers with seniority who cost more. Get rid of the teachers and ultimately get rid of the kids. And the charter school gets to pick the kids who get in."
It's simple. When you look at the drop-out rates in New York (41%) and Chicago (44%), the solution offered is to pay teachers less. They punish those who dare to work in poor schools where kids struggle and you can bet that "washing away" half the kids in our schools is, in fact, exactly what they've planned.
It's notable that, when he lived in Chicago, Barack Obama played basketball with city school chief Arne Duncan, but Obama sure as hell didn't send his kids to Arne's crap public schools. Those are for po' folk.
His kids went to the tony "Lab" School in Hyde Park. Obama believes what Duncan believes and what Romney believes: there's no need for universal education and no need to spend money on it. Yes, they like to say that "children are our future." But they mean the children of China are our future, the Chinese kids who will make the stuff we want and the children of India who will program it all for us.
After all, how much education does some obese kid from Texas need to stack boxes from China in a Wal-Mart warehouse?
Education is no longer about information and learning skills. It's now about "triage." A few selected by standardized tests or privileged birth will be anointed and permitted into better and "gifted" schools.
The chosen elite are still very much needed: to invest in India and Vietnam, to design new derivatives to circumvent the laughable new banking laws, and to maintain order among the restless hundred-million drop-outs squeezed out of the colon of our educational system.
Democrats' Bantustans, Republicans' Value-less Vouchers.
The Obama/Duncan/Emanuel plan is to create Bantustans of un-chartered, cheaply-run dumpster schools within a government system. But Romney and the GOP would give every child a "choice" even outside government schools with "vouchers."
Of course, the "vouchers" don't vouch for much. Romney's old alma mater, Cranbrook Academy, runs at $34,025 a year, not counting the polo sticks and horse. The most generous voucher program is Washington DC's, beloved of the GOP, which pays about $7,500, or if the student's "choice" is Cranbrook, about 2 months of school. Hyde Park Day School Chicago is $35,900. To give each kid a real choice, not just a coupon, means a massive increase in spending per pupil. I didn't see that in the Republican platform, did you?
The experienced teacher in Chicago who took the pay cut was offered one consolation. She was told she could make up some of the pay loss by quitting the union and saving on union dues.
So that's the program. An educational Katrina: squeeze the teachers until they strike, demolish their unions, and drown the students.
Chicago's classroom war is class war by another name.
Class dismissed.
CONNECT














11 comments on "The Worst Teacher in Chicago"
January 06, 2013 5:17am
www.allolimo.com
Welcome To Allo Chicago Limo, Provider of luxury Airport Limo Service, Book Online and travel in style and Comfort, Learn about our Service in Chicago or Book your Limo Online Here
If you want to know more about it then please Follow the link Chicago Limousine
September 17, 2012 3:05pm
And extend this clear logic to the REST of the Reich Wing's actions, and you can see that they are selling off EVERYTHING not nailed down in this country.
It's up to us, eventually, whether or not we let them get away with it.
September 13, 2012 9:30am
Charter schools do not get to pick who gets in. That's a myth. I've worked in charter schools, and they choose their kids by lottery. The only differences between charter kids and kids from neighborhood schools are a) the charter kids come from multiple neighborhoods, as opposed to neighborhood schools where they all come form the same neighborhood, and b) the parents took the time to sign the kids up for the lottery. (Charter schools operate on a lottery system. Any kid in the right age range who lives within the city has an equal chance. No, sorry, no cherry-picking going on.) The one way is which kids might be "easier" is that all the kids in the charters have parents who took the few minutes to sign them up for the lottery, so the average "give a damn" factor from the parents might be slightly higher, but, even then, there are a great many parents who just want to enroll their kids in a "magic bullet" charter school and then leave everything to the teachers and won't be involved again until it's time to complain about something. Also, charters can set a hard limit on the number of seats available in each classroom. This is usually around 30-32, which is, unfortunately, about average for the city. Most teacher will tell you 22-24 is best.
September 12, 2012 8:02pm
This a tragic moment in our educational system in the US. I personally was driven out of teaching after 16 years by a series of events in my school system which lead to a significant reduction in force (RIF) of teachers. It was simple math to the Superintendent, I was 63 years old, with a T-5 Certificate and finally reaching the low $60 in salary after starting at $32 in 1993. So it was easy to target me and other veteran teachers and give us an unsatisfactory evaluation for the year which was the unequivocal reason for firing us. It happened in a coordinated effort throughout the county schools when senior teachers and other staff personnel the school principal felt was unneeded were given our unsatisfactory evaluations. It was only after we signed off on the evaluation in the morning that we received an email in the afternoon informing all school personnel of the RIF process. The first step was to fire all teachers who received an unsatisfactory evaluation without exception. Fortunately, for me, I was in the process of retiring and I was able to leave with my retirement benefits in tack. If I had been fired I would not have received any retirement benefits for my 16 years in teaching.
No matter what is going on in Chicago, teachers are not the problem in our educational system. Privatization, profit, and corporate greed are all fueling this war on our vulnerable children. Teachers are these mean spirited peoples' road kill.
Its a mess and its not getting any better with either the Dems or Republicans.
PC
September 12, 2012 6:26pm
I'm an educator with over 15 years experience who just received a copy of my school district's newly revamped New York State-mandated evaluation plan for teachers. It reads like a legal document which makes sense since it was probably written by lawyers who know nothing about educating children and certainly not adolescents. The document is so blatantly convoluted that any parent willing to read it, won't have a clue as to what it actually says (unless they're attorneys, too) which is exactly the point. No questions can be asked if you don't even know *what* to ask. They're hoping the parents will trust State Ed, even as the teachers do not (any more). Greg Palast has it exactly right. Thank you.
September 12, 2012 6:21pm
The pain being felt isn't confined to teachers; as someone who works as a licensed health care professional ( we are found in small, doctor-owned clinics) I can truthfully tell you that the majority of us,75%, ( state statistics verify this) were cut to part-time positions precisely so vacation time, 401K's, sick leave, *even health care benefits* ( oh the irony in that) are not even an option.
I'm in my 50's, a single parent with a mortgage, a professional health care worker with a four year degree and I cannot find a full time position because they do not exist. Although my employer has raised the fees for the procedure *I* actually perform by 30 dollars in the last 7 years, he has given me a 2 dollar raise in that same time frame. It is the same for everyone else in our clinic. We can't leave because there is nowhere to go-
Americans no longer care about other Americans. There is no solidarity, no unity, little compassion, but there is an abundance of blame. The public has been groomed for over 35 years to turn on each other and we are now experiencing the damage.
September 12, 2012 5:33pm
The rich man gets his ice in the summer the poor man get his ice in the winter. It is obvious that the people that have made it in this country want to keep it that way it is obscene to them to pay taxes to lift up a miniority who may someday compete with someone of their caliber. So now you have an exploitable class of people to take advantage of all over this country as it is happening everywhere.
If I have to hear one more time of my ancestors came over here in covered wagons again I am going to vomit. They did not mention that they got free land
never paid rent and started their own town with their own laws to benifit themselves. Just start a website and give money to it when it reaches a million dollars give it to a southern mexican and a northern mexican and a crip and a blood let them start their own business in a good neighborhood. Just keep doing that until we have equality in education that works for all of us.
September 12, 2012 1:55pm
here a top rated private school tution is $11100 the public school are not accredited your choice
September 12, 2012 6:01pm
Where, exactly is *here*? I'd love to know.
September 12, 2012 11:47am
Wow. You nailed it, Greg. Thanks!!
September 12, 2012 11:36am
This article is right on in most respects. Most charter schools & all voucher programs are nothing more than attempts to privatize education. And the words "for profit" when used in the context of education is deadly. Gain has become the goal of education, and I don't mean a gain in test scores, which are very poor indicators of real learning.
How do I know? I've lived it. I taught for over 30 years &, although the test scores in my school inched up over the tenure of No Child Left Behind, my students were not much different in learning outcomes than those I taught near the start of my career. If those students I taught in my latter years of teaching learned more than those in the earlier years, it was because of the experience I gained, not because of edicts handed down from the educational bureaucracy. Yes, I was one of those "old" teachers some members of the school board couldn't wait to be rid of because I cost too much. However, when I & my friend who retired the same year left. seventy-five years of combined experience walked out the school door The district may have saved some money, but I think it lost more than it gained.