Showing posts with label DSEA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DSEA. Show all posts

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Is DCPA union-busting?

The DCPA rumor mill grinding away...

The last collective bargaining session at DCPA was June 15.  Upon failing to come to an agreement during the summer with PERB over grievance procedures, DCPA moved into self-imposed communication exile... mmmm... we've seen this behavior elsewhere...

With collective bargaining in shut-down mode and no response from the school leadership, DCPA's union filed for mediation, now scheduled for September 24th.  The response from the school also re-opened issues that the teachers previously thought had reached mutual settlement during negotiations.

Word on the street is that at least two teachers (of four) on the negotiating team have been terminated in the last two weeks.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Cry for help from inside another Delaware Charter School

The following was emailed to me this evening. DCPA is Delaware's first unioned charter school.  If these allegations are accurate, this is a situation worth the attention...

Dear Delaware blogger,
 
I teach at Delaware College Preparatory Academy. We organized last year, voting in the winter to be represented by the Delaware State Education Association (DSEA). We believe that teachers deserve fair treatment and respect, that our students deserve excellent services, that our school should function smoothly, and that our administration should provide support to good teaching.

As required by law, our union has negotiated with the school in good faith. Our primary concern was and still is having a positive school environment for our students and a fair workplace with due process for our teachers. Therefore, our contract outlines many items that are standard best practices in schools, but are often overlooked or blatantly violated at DCPA.


I have believed several times that we had conceptual agreement on the major areas of the contract. Unfortunately, this has not resulted in a contract. Throughout the process the school has repeatedly delayed negotiations, blatantly ignored communications, and ignored requests for meetings and information. The school has even ignored communications from the state’s Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). Because of this, DSEA has filed for mediation on our behalf and will also be reaching out to policy makers and stakeholders on this matter.


Please note that this is not about money. In fact, we are not asking for any salary or benefit increases in this contract.

Our school is in trouble. This contract can help by making DCPA a safer environment for our kids, by enforcing a student code of conduct, and by empowering teachers to do their jobs without fear of retribution.

I am writing because we need your support to get DCPA on track. Please help us and help our school! Contact our Board President and Executive Director to urge our school to negotiate in good faith. Here is their contact information:


Howard Johnson, Executive Director

Howard.Johnson@dcpa.k12.de.us
302.762.7424 x151

Yardise Jones, Board Presidentyardise.jones@yahoo.com


Stay informed. This is the first in a series of communications that will speak to major needs our school faces that we are attempting to address through collective bargaining.



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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

State Announces Partnership Zone Schools

Stubbs, Glasgow among the first four of the 10 promised in Delaware's RTTT application...

http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20100831/NEWS03/100831022/State-targets-four-struggling-schools
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Sunday, February 28, 2010

The State of Education in Delaware -- My Perspective

It's been eight months since I assumed the role of board member to finish the term of another before me.  Four years once seemed liked eons. Now three years seems to be not nearly enough time (though the jury is still out on whether I will run again) to empower the changes to education that both Christina and Delaware need.

Education in Delaware is facing uprecedented challenges to which Christina will not be immune.  National and Global economic failings have left their mark on Delaware.  Though stimulus funds staved off the impact for this current year, the future is a much different monster.  It's time for some honest and frank discussion of what lies in the future.

The State of Delaware is facing a near $50 million education funding deficit, the impact of which boils down to a funding cut of  appoximately $500 per student, your student and mine.  It will come across all districts, all programs, and all schools.  For Christina the much debated 25% rolling decrease in state transportation funding will add an average of $40 to every school tax bill, if a referendum can be successfully run.  The jury is out on whether the match tax portion of the tuition bill will stand -- meaning that districts may not be able to levy that portion of the tuition bill next year as indicated by the Department of Education's budget presentation in Dover.  At the time of this writing, Christina has not entered into discussions with its board as to any intentions of going to referendum.  And most homeowners will tell you, this is not the time to ask the public for more tax money.  Where does that leave us?  Where does that leave Christina?  And where does that leave our children?

I'm staring at the FY 2011 Operating Budget Briefing dispersed to legislators by the Department of Education.  Within the organization structure (who holds what position) the vital role of Associate Secretary of Teaching and Learning is vacant while the positions of Assoc. Sec. of College and Workforce Readiness and Assoc. Sec./Chief Financial Officer are filled.  I see before me an unbalanced scale, weighted heavily against the Department's mission of Teaching and Learning, a Branch without an advocate and a Budget that reflects that lost voice.

I am alarmed by page 10 of the briefing which reflects the Federal Stimulus Funding for Education Stabilization.  In Fiscal year 10, the Technology Block Grant, the Student Success Block Grant, the Academic Excellence, Limited English Proficiency and Division II Allocations were removed from the General Fund and replaced by Stimulus Funds.  Essentially, Delaware abdicated funding these categories, drawing the needed monies from one-time stimulus funds.  Those allocations have not been returned to the General Fund.  What does it mean:

  • In 2008, the State funded the associated positions.
  • In 2009/10, One-time Stimulus Funds were used to fund these programs for a total of $33,891,000.
  • In the 2010/11 Budget, the proposed funding for these programs decreases to $13,121,100. 
  • That's MORE THAN $20 MILLION Cut from Education Spending.
  • There is no plan to draw additional monies from the State's General Fund to support these programs and teachers.
  • If DOE does not fund these needed positions and programs that directly affect our children, and if local districts are unable to find replacement funding, these positions will GO AWAY.
While it's true that the proposed budget we see before us today may look very different come June/July when our legislators ratify it, it's important that we begin the conversation now.  And that conversation must be centered around the desire of stakeholders to inform the legislature that cutting education funding is not an acceptable solution to Delaware's budget dilemma and that we as constituents expect our legislators to generate new sources of revenue for the state, and particularly education.

While the topic will certainly be debated by the Statewide PTA, the Delaware State Education Association, and the Delaware Schools Chiefs Association, locally-elected school boards must engage not just with their constituents but as constituents of those in Dover.  Delaware's School Boards cannot fail to lead today.  We cannot be idle and are obligated by our oath to lead the seach for solutions.

Education is in need of solutions and we must come together to find them!
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Thursday, September 3, 2009

Philly Superintendent Looks to Overhaul Teacher Contracts

Later this year, CSD will enter into contract negotiations with its own teachers.

Will Christina take the "radical" approach? Or will it be business as usual? I don't know the answer to that question and with our own new Superintendent at the helm, the only response I can offer is time will tell.

From Education Week - A look into the plans of Philadephia's one year young Superintendent, Arlene C. Ackerman.

Leader in Philly Seeks Change in Teacher Rules

Arlene C. Ackerman, who took the helm of Philadelphia’s public schools a little more than a year ago, is pushing for changes that would upend how teachers are paid and assigned to schools.

The veteran urban superintendent is battling tradition in the 167,000-student system, but insists that increasing the effectiveness of the city’s nearly 10,700 teachers is a central goal of her leadership. Her administration is currently negotiating a new, multiyear contract with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers.

“The kinds of things I am talking about are radical,” Ms. Ackerman said. “I want teachers who will come to Philadelphia and work in our neediest schools, and who see themselves as experts at educating children in the most challenging communities.”

While the changes would be major for Philadelphia, most have been put in place in other large districts, including New York and Chicago. Ms. Ackerman’s decision to tackle the touchy issue underscores the prominence of teacher effectiveness on the national school reform agenda.

President Barack Obama and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan have made teacher policy a centerpiece of the Race to the Top competition, the $4.35 billion grant program that is part of the federal stimulus package pledged for public schools.

More than 20 advocacy groups in Philadelphia also have rallied around teacher quality and are calling for many of the same policy changes Ms. Ackerman is seeking. Their campaign is called “Effective Teaching for All Children: What It Will Take.” And a recent settlement of Philadelphia’s 40-year-old desegregation case requires the district to take steps to ensure the neediest schools are staffed with more experienced teachers.

In fact, the settlement agreement gives Ms. Ackerman the authority to impose many of the changes she is seeking in 85 of the city’s neediest schools, but she said she prefers to collaborate with the union. The School Reform Commission, which has governed the district since a state takeover in 2002, also has the authority to impose such provisions, but has never opted to do so.

“We have the hammer, but I’d much rather work with them than ram this down their throats,” Ms. Ackerman said of members of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers.

The superintendent has substantial political capital and legal backing to push the PFT to agree to measures the union has previously rejected, said one education scholar who has done research on the city’s teaching corps.

“There’s a convergence of many important factors here that give the superintendent tremendous backup,” said Betsey Useem, a researcher for the Philadelphia-based Research for Action. “She also benefits from just a torrent of national research now on the whole issue of teacher quality and student learning gains. This is really in the water supply now of education reform.”

New Evaluation System?
The school district is seeking to assign teachers with track records of raising achievement to the city’s hardest-to-staff schools and to offer incentives—both monetary and nonmonetary—to keep them there for at least five years. Also on the agenda are scrapping all seniority-based transfer rights and giving principals and school hiring teams the authority to hire every teacher for their campuses, and raising teachers’ base salaries and using a tiered system to pay those with certain areas of expertise and proven results even more.

One major obstacle, Ms. Useem pointed out, is the unresolved Pennsylvania state budget, which so far has kept the district and union from being able to hash out any final agreements on salaries and benefits.

A one-year contract between the district and the PFT was set to expire Aug. 31, but district and union leaders, who have been meeting twice a week for much of the summer, agreed to extend it to Oct. 31 in the hope that the state budget will be final by then.

Jerry T. Jordan, the president of the 16,000-member PFT, declined to comment on the superintendent’s goal of improving teacher quality. He emphasized that the union is focused on its long-standing priorities: safe and orderly classrooms, reduced class sizes, and more resources and supplies in classrooms.

“Having good working conditions for teachers will make the biggest impact on our students,” Mr. Jordan said.

To make her case for an overhaul of the contract, Ms. Ackerman points to several things.

One is the district’s evaluation system for teachers, which rates them as either satisfactory or unsatisfactory based on a single observation each year by a principal for a tenured teacher, and two observations for those with less than three years’ experience.

“Before this last year, we only had 13 teachers who were rated as unsatisfactory, and only five lost their jobs because they failed to perform,” Ms. Ackerman said. “That says a lot.”

The superintendent said she wants to set a series of specific standards for principals to use to evaluate teachers. She also plans to create a professional-development program to train teachers to meet and maintain those standards.

Using student-achievement data as part of evaluations is “something that is important and should be part of the evaluation,” Ms. Ackerman said, but is not something she is pushing for in this contract.

Mr. Jordan said nothing in previous contracts has precluded principals from writing more-nuanced evaluations of teachers and suggesting ways for them to improve. But he said the union is “open to talking about changes to the current system.”

‘Strategic Compensation’
While Ms. Ackerman declined to share details in a recent interview, she is also advocating what she calls “strategic compensation” that would pay teachers who have specialized training and credentials in high-need areas more money. If those same teachers agree to work in a high-need school, they should receive even more, she said.

To tackle the difficult problem of attracting the strongest teachers to the weakest schools and keeping them there, Ms. Ackerman also wants to offer nonmonetary incentives. One approach she wants to try—at the suggestion of several teachers she has met with—is placing cohorts of five or six teachers in the toughest schools so they “don’t have to go alone” and may find it more palatable to stay.

Another top priority for Ms. Ackerman—and a major sticking point for the union—is eliminating the role of seniority when teachers transfer schools and empowering principals and school-based hiring committees to select all teachers. In Philadelphia, principals now are able to fill only half their teaching vacancies with hires that they choose; the other half are reserved for seniority transfers.

The city’s advocacy groups fought hard for such a provision in the 2004 contract, and were disappointed when the district and the union struck the deal to keep some teaching vacancies subject to seniority.

“We know that full site selection in and of itself is not a panacea,” said Brian Armstead, the director of civic engagement for the Philadelphia Education Fund, one of the groups behind the effective-teaching campaign. “But the teachers’ union response to doing this has been an automatic rejection.

“What we are saying is that it has to be done in a way where teachers feel empowered,” he said, “and where the committees aren’t stacked with people who always agree with the principal.”

Establishing site-based hiring that includes decisionmakers other than the principal is a “really sound proposal,” said Sandi Jacobs, the vice president for policy at the National Council on Teacher Quality, a Washington-based research and advocacy organization for improvement of the teaching profession.

"We think that mutual-consent hiring practices are one of the most important things districts can do," Ms. Jacobs said. "It means that a teacher doesn't end up in a position that he or she doesn't want, and principals don't end up with teachers he or she doesn't want."

Coverage of leadership is supported in part by a grant from the Wallace Foundation.
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Monday, May 4, 2009

UD to Continue Free Summer Classes for Educators

From the News Journal

http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009905030328

Thank yous go out to the University of Delaware who will continue to offer free classes during summer sessions for our educators.

They could've come up with a gimmick to attract attendence (such as the Buy One - Get One program to be instituted at Del State this summer) but they took the high road, knowing full well that they alone may shoulder all the costs in contrast to the state's history of picking up a portion of the tab.

UD has shown their commitment to Delaware's educators, not just in turning out teachers prepared to enter our public school system, but in carrying the burden of ensuring those teachers receive the best education possible.

Hey, UD can you help us with our gifted and talented programming, too? I'm hearing from constituents that we need to make some major headway in this area.

Thanks Again
Elizabeth
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Thursday, April 30, 2009

Christina Education Association Recommendation

I am pleased to announce that I have been selected as the Recommended Candidate for Nominating District E by the Christina Education Association and the Delaware State Education Association. It is an honor to have been chosen by our educators as their candidate of choice for the upcoming School Board election.

Thank You CEA and DSEA.

Elizabeth
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