布朗本科&哥伦比亚大学师范学院毕业--纽约州新老师仍面临裁员

来源: 一木十航 2011-06-09 00:11:34 [] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读: 次 (5206 bytes)

NPR news story :

http://www.npr.org/2011/06/08/137063580/new-teachers-most-vulnerable-in-nyc-layoffs

New Teachers Most Vulnerable In NYC Layoffs

June 8, 2011 from WNYC

New York City could lay off thousands of public school teachers amid budget cuts this month, and the first to go, thanks to union seniority protections, would be new teachers.

Third-grade teacher Juhyung Harold Lee is among those 4,100 teachers at risk of losing their jobs. Lee is wrapping up his third year teaching. The union contract requires the least experienced teachers to be let go first, and so elementary teachers with less than four years' experience are most at risk. For Lee, it doesn't look good.

"I wish that there was more certainty, especially as we move towards the end of the year, because you really want to be thinking about next year," Lee says. "And it seems kind of preposterous that we're just expected to wait."

Lee isn't the only one waiting at PS 124 in Chinatown. The school expects to lose four of its 55 full-time teachers if the layoffs go through. Principal Alice Hom says parents and teachers are anxious.

"I hope they don't think I'm lying, but I really don't have any information that I can share with them at this time. I've spoken to other principals who are in the same boat — some of them who have, like, 13 staff members who are supposed to be laid off," Hom says.

Because the layoffs are based solely on last in, first out, some schools with a lot of new teachers would be especially hard hit.

Rating Teachers

Lee, the son of Korean immigrants, says he wanted to become a teacher because education enabled his parents to become successful. He graduated from Brown University and Teachers College at Columbia University. Lee still considers himself a novice, but he says he's learned a lot from veteran teachers. He recalls teaching at his first school in Queens.

"I was just trying to survive, and I was really fortunate that there were a lot of teachers at my old school that were incredibly supportive — willing to share ideas, materials, willing to brainstorm with me," Lee says.

That's why despite his own predicament, he wouldn't want to throw out seniority protections completely without a better way of evaluating teachers. The state just created a new evaluation system, but the city and the teachers union are at odds over the details.

"In general, policymakers and administrative leadership, they're too quick to try to identify [what] are the characteristics of a good teacher. And too often it's tied to things that we know aren't the signs of good teachers, like good test scores, for example," Lee says.

Hom agrees that rating teachers is more of an art than a science. That's why she opposes the law that requires new teachers to be the first ones to go during layoffs, regardless of merit. The union says this protects senior teachers from being eliminated because they make more money. But Hom says a good teacher is worth the cost — and principals should get to make that decision.

"There are always other people you might want to have leave your building for one reason or other and you have no control over that. You have to deal with your staff as best you can," she says.

If the layoffs go through, Hom could replace some of her new teachers with more experienced teachers from other schools. But she says that would be chaotic and she likes the energy and enthusiasm of her new teachers.

"I don't think teachers who are new in the system should be necessarily the first to leave, because they have some added value," Hom says.

She says Lee is one such teacher, calling him smart and dedicated.

'I'm Not Going To Wait'

Lee envisioned himself teaching for at least five years before moving into education administration. But he lost his first job in Queens because of budget cuts. Now that he's at risk of losing his second job in Chinatown, he says he's planning to go to law school unless a deal is struck very soon to avert the layoffs. He applied last year to give himself more options and was accepted at the University of California, Berkeley.

"At this point it's looking more and more like that's the route I'm going to take because I'm not going to wait until July or August to see if I have a job," Lee says.

His principal says she'll be sorry to lose him. Right now Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the City Council are still negotiating over the budget. Some longtime observers believe the mayor is bluffing, because he's made similar threats in the past. But the mayor insists the money just isn't there.

所有跟帖: 

公校教师裁员全根据年资,和学历没有关系。这也是公立教育的一个悲剧吧 -阿Q的日子- 给 阿Q的日子 发送悄悄话 阿Q的日子 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 06/09/2011 postreply 05:29:21

我的一个朋友,政府砍预算时被裁了,领导是这么说的 -千里一盏灯- 给 千里一盏灯 发送悄悄话 千里一盏灯 的博客首页 (189 bytes) () 06/09/2011 postreply 06:41:18

领导怕花生米 -derKerl- 给 derKerl 发送悄悄话 derKerl 的博客首页 (17 bytes) () 06/09/2011 postreply 07:31:43

他在两所学校的花费至少30万,是不是值得? -一木十航- 给 一木十航 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 06/09/2011 postreply 08:48:15

想当老师:上社区转州立,再在职读几门课就行。这位属于浪费投资,还心理不平衡。悲剧。老师是EQ第一。 -7Sle- 给 7Sle 发送悄悄话 7Sle 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 06/09/2011 postreply 11:31:15

请您先登陆,再发跟帖!

发现Adblock插件

如要继续浏览
请支持本站 请务必在本站关闭/移除任何Adblock

关闭Adblock后 请点击

请参考如何关闭Adblock/Adblock plus

安装Adblock plus用户请点击浏览器图标
选择“Disable on www.wenxuecity.com”

安装Adblock用户请点击图标
选择“don't run on pages on this domain”