Higher Pay to Teach
in Neediest Schools
Proposed

by Gil Klein, Media General News Service,
gklein@mediageneral.com

http://wkrg.com/news/article/higher_pay_to_
teach_in_neediest_schools_proposed/5209
/

Sep 17 2007

WASHINGTON -

Soldiers get combat pay, diplomats
get hardship post pay.

Now, experienced teachers and
principals would earn extra pay if
they work in the neediest schools,
if a House proposal is adopted.

The House Education and Workforce
Committee proposes to give qualifying
teachers up to $12,000 and principals
$15,000 if they agree to work at least four
years in schools that draw most of their
students from high-poverty neighborhoods.

George Miller, D-Calif., chairman of the
House Education and Workforce
Committee, said the proposal will "bring top
talent into classrooms that need it most."

The idea is part of a proposal the
committee is considering to renew the
five-year-old No Child Left Behind Act,
which faces a tough legislative fight.
The largest teachers union opposes
incentives.

"Teachers aren't hired by the federal
government," Reg Weaver, president of
the National Education Association, told the
committee. Any federal program that ties
teacher pay to student test scores "is
offensive and disrespectful to educators,"
he said.

School districts have trouble
recruiting and keeping experienced
teachers at schools with many
children from impoverished
families. Most districts offer the
same pay to teachers whether they
work in suburban or inner city
schools. Better teachers tend to
seek jobs in the suburbs, leaving
less qualified teachers in needier
schools.

"For too long, we've tried to achieve equity
and close gaps on the backs of saints,"
said Amy Wilkins of the Education Trust, a
Washington think tank.
A few districts are experimenting with
teachers incentives. Last year the Bush
administration supported them with $99
million in grants and asked Congress for
$199 million for next year.

"We want to reward those teachers and
principals who are able to improve student
achievement and put them in classrooms
where they can help our highest needs
students," said Amanda Farris, a deputy
assistant education secretary.

One grant -- for $1.8 million --went to
Guilford County, N.C., where
Superintendent Terry Grier had trouble
attracting experienced teachers and
principals to the district's 29 high-poverty
schools.

"We went an entire year without a single,
certified math teacher at one middle
school," he said. "We had an elementary
school with all new teachers in grades
three, four and five. We had schools that
had four different principals in four years."

At job fairs, prospective teachers
lined up to talk to representatives
from affluent schools, he said, but
no one visited tables for schools in
poor areas.

"We had several teachers who said `you
can't pay me enough and I will quit and go
to another school district if you force me to
go there,'" he said.


But many experienced teachers told him
they'd go to those schools -- if conditions
were right. They wanted strong principals,
more planning time, smaller classes, more
training, and more money -- for salaries
and to reward them for results.

To get experienced principals into
what he calls "Mission Possible"
schools, Grier offers an extra
$5,000 for elementary schools,
$7,500 for middle schools and
$10,000 for high schools. Principals
earn an additional $5,000 if their
schools meet No Child Left Behind
progress goals.

Teachers in these schools not only
have more planning time, but class
size is limited to 15 students from
kindergarten to third grade, Grier
said. No middle or high school has
a math class with more than 20
students.

Pay incentives range from $2,500 for
elementary teachers to $10,000 for
algebra teachers in Guilford County.
Bonuses for student achievement range
from $2,500 to $4,000 a year.
And, a
teacher can earn another $4,000 by
passing a two-week special
summer math course.

"You can make an additional $18,000, plus
we give you a free laptop computer, if you
teach math in one of our six Mission
Possible high schools," Grier said.
Teachers applying for the jobs have to
prove they have a record of producing
student achievement, he said. No novice
teachers are admitted. Each teacher is
interviewed on videotape so their
responses to questions can be reviewed.
"We've attracted teachers from private
schools, we've gotten teachers to come
back from retirement and we've gotten
teachers to change schools," Grier said.
Last May, the district had 174 applicants to
teach math, compared to seven the year
before, he said. When school started this
year, all of the Mission Possible schools
were staffed with the experienced teachers.
Grier said he won't know until next year
whether this has paid off in higher student
test scores.
Terry Grier
Superintendent, San Diego
Unified School District

January 18, 2008
http://www.nbcsandiego.
com/news/15088744/detail.html

SAN DIEGO -- City school trustees are
expected to announce the hiring of a
new superintendent on Saturday.


The school board scheduled a special
meeting for noon Friday, raising
expectations that a new superintendent
would be named, but that didn’t
happen. The word on the Saturday
announcement came late on Friday
after a day of intrigue.


After adjourning the meeting Friday, the
board went behind closed doors, saying
that there would be another open
session on Saturday. The weekend
meeting evoked a Saturday meeting in
mid-2005 when the board announced
the hiring of Carl Cohn, who stepped
down on New Year's Eve.

Speculation about who would get the
nod centers on a well-regarded
administrator from North Carolina, NBC
7/39 reported on Friday. North
Carolina's Superintendent of the Year
Terry Grier heads the Guilford County
school system, which is based in
Greensboro.

SDUSD's blue-collar union told
NBC 7/39 that Grier outsourced
school-support jobs, then had to
backpedal. Meanwhile, a
spokesman for San Diego's
teachers' union told the station
that Grier's experience in a
"right to work: state won't help
much at the bargaining table in
San Diego."

"He's coming in at probably the
worst time in school history that
I could think of, with the budget
crisis we're having now," San
Diego Education Association
spokesman Marc Capitelli said.
"So he's going to have his hands
full from the get-go."

The district will make it official Saturday
at 1 p.m.
Copyright 2008 by NBCSandiego.com.
NBC News in San
Diego reports:
"...A spokesman for San
Diego's teachers' union told the
[NBC TV] station that Grier's
experience in a 'right to work'
state won't help much at the
bargaining table in San Diego."


"He's coming in at probably the
worst time in school history
that I could think of, with the
budget crisis we're having
now," San Diego Education
Association spokesman Marc
Capitelli said. "So he's going to
have his hands full from the
get-go."
Too much math?

..."a teacher can earn
another $4,000 by
passing a two-week
special summer math
course.
.."
Why doesn't California
Teachers Association  
like Terry Grier?
Or is this the
problem?
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TEACHERS
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