Education

2 Posts tagged with the dcps tag
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Teacher Effectiveness continues to be at the heart of efforts to address the nation's achievement gaps. In DC, the Congress is gearing up to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (also known as NCLB). You can read the administration's blueprint for the law here. Also, CAP's Robin Chait has released a memo discussing ways the appropriations process could impact the teacher effectiveness landscape even if ESEA doesn't get reauthorized this year.

 

One of the most watched local collective bargaining processes is approaching its conclusion. DC Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee and Washington Teachers Union President George Parker have released a tentative contract agreement. The new contract retains teacher tenure and includes a performance pay program funded by private foundations. You can read more about the new contract here.

 

Tennessee and Delaware, first round winners of Race to the Top funding, promise to be important places to watch with regard to teacher effectiveness. Both have pledged to make significant changes to state teacher evaluation systems. You can read analysis about the other applicants and the process for the second round from The New Teacher Project.

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Be sure to check out Jay Mathews's latest about a teacher's experience with Michelle Rhee and Jason Kamras's long-awaited teacher evaluation system. I won't recap the nitty gritty about what the observer, a "Master Educator," had to say, but I found this comment from the teacher about how his evaluator repeated critical comments about Rhee fascinating "I guess confidentiality is out. How can they help me if I can’t express frustration and anger?"

 

Does an instructional leader, master educator, observer, etc. have any role to play as a sounding board or confident? If it's true, I think repeating those comments was tacky. Teaching can be isolating and frustrating, and occassional lapses into venting are best absorbed and forgotten.

 

In addition, the teacher felt his observer's experience teaching AP Government didn't qualify him/her to assess the teaching of AP US History. That strikes me as a pretty good match and more than close enough to satisfy our recommendation that instructional leaders know a subject, but I'm curious about what our policy team or new commenters have to say about that.

 

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