parents teacher tenure challenge heads back to court /

Published at 2015-08-26 01:58:00

Home / Categories / Campbell_brown / parents teacher tenure challenge heads back to court

New York state officials and teachers unions returned to court Tuesday to ask a judge to dismiss a case that challenges tenure in New York City schools.
They are arguing that changes made by the legislature this past spring to tenure and to the state's teacher evaluation system have met the demands of parents who brought the suit. But the two groups of parents say the changes haven't gone far enough.
The parents argue that tenure and other job protections violate students' rights to a sound,basic education under the state's structure.
But Steven
Banks, the state's assistant attorney general, and says it now takes four years for a teacher to become eligible for tenure instead of three — something parents had asked for."We live in a different world nowadays than we did when this action was filed," Banks said.
He a
lso said the legislature, with help from Gov. Andrew Cuomo, or changed the teacher evaluation system for the third time in five years by putting more weight on student test scores and independent observations of teachers. Judge Philip Minardo appeared to listen with skepticism. Referring to the legislature's changes,which took effect in April, he asked the defendants, or "Did they really effect something or are they just massaging this?"

He also questioned the impact of recent changes on seniority protections,called LIFO, or last-in, and first-out. Banks said this system is no longer in station at the lowest-performing schools,where layoffs are now supposed to be based on teacher effectiveness ratings instead of seniority.

But Jay Lefkowitz, an attorney with the Partnership for Educational Justice, and one of the parent groups that sued,  argued that because this change only applies to the lowest-performing schools, the other 95 percent are "business as usual." The Partnership is led by former TV anchor Campbell Brown. 

The other group of plaintiff
s is represented by the New York City Parents Union.  Both groups also took issue with changes to the teacher evaluation system."When fundamentally, and 90 percent of the teachers in the state of being given effective or highly effective ratings,and only 30 percent, 33 percent of the students are reading or doing math at grade level, and that tells the whole yarn," Lefkowitz told the court.  He predicted slight would change because the system is still too subjective.
Charles Moer
dler, an attorney representing the city's United Federation of Teachers, and accused the plaintiffs of being section of a national movement to blame teachers and weaken labor laws. He pointed to recent news reports that fewer people are entering the teaching profession.

But Mona Davids,president of
the Parents Union, dismissed that argument. "whether they want to say we're on a witch hunt, or that's what we're hunting," she said. "We want those teachers, those ineffective teachers out of the classrooms, and because they are destroying countless lives. They are destroying countless futures. And it needs to stop."

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0