[QUOTE="Netherscourge"]
Well, one benefit of a union is that teachers are less likely to pass a kid who needs more help onto another teacher at a higher grade level to let them "deal with it".
In a union atmopsphere, there's less of a job loss threat with failing kids - not because THEY are bad kids or bad teachers, but because the kids need more help.
I know it sounds strange, but in many cases failing a kid is GOOD for them - it allows them to catch up. If you introduce a reward-style system, where success is based on kids passing and being promoted every year, then a teacher may pass the kid with a "C" just to maintain their own personal "success" quota and then the next year, the teacher who gets that kid is gonna have real issues with them. That teacher will wind up getting fired because how can you teach Geometry to a kid who can't handle basic Algebra, which he supposedly "passed" the year before?
I understand the Anti-Union debate. But the other side of the arguement is just as feasible.
Instead of teachers united with each other, it'll become a indiviudal competition with each other for higher pay and in the end, the kids will suffer.
Competition amongst teachers is not a good thing IMO. I think in the end, it's better that they are united so that they can focus on the kids and not have to worry about keeping their own jobs or maintaining some quota or whatever standard the state will expect from them.
In any other career, competition is good. But when it comes to teachers and educating our kids, I would be more careful about it.
And yes, I agree there are individuals both pro-Union and anti-Union who will just milk the system for whatever they can get. But they do not reflect the majority of teachers.
Wasdie
There is a difference between a failing kid and a bad teacher and it's really obvious. Just because a larger group of kids is failing doesn't mean it's the teachers fault. Usually there are outside circumstances that the administration can easily see. This isn't about passing or failing kids, this is about giving the highest quality of education possible. If that means some kids must be failed that is what is going to happen. You won't see teachers artificially inflating their passed numbers because as soon as those kids to a higher level it will be blatantly obvious that the kids are not ready for it becuase of a slacking teacher.
Teachers won't be competeing like you think. It won't be a cut-throat business situation. In fact in the working world, that kind of mentaility is fading away fast because it's so counterproductive. The most successful employees are ones who do an amazing quality job, are easy to work with, and have excellent communication and teambuilding skills. Same will apply for the teachers. You'll see teachers who help other teachers to better the quality of education get more rewards than a teacher who undercuts another to get a promotion. You wouldn't measure a teachers success on how many students they can pass or how much work they can do themselves, you would measure their positive influence on every part of the school.
You're argument completely ignores modern business practices, modern communication skills, and modern work ethics. This isn't the 1800s and this isn't some movie. The real world is far different than what the media portrays in TV, movies, and even on the news.
It's not ignoring it though - because teaching is NOT a business.
It's a service. And typical business models will not work in a system where you are trying to educate individual students.
If you put teachers in a position where they have to juggle the needs of a student versus their own job security, you're going to wind up with an even lousier education system than what we already have.
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