Thursday, June 12, 2008

Toledo’s Peer Review Policy

I’d be interested in seeing the results of this. 

The teachers’ union in Toledo, Ohio, has spearheaded a controversial policy to purge the school district of incompetent teachers. It’s called “peer review” and no school system in the country has been doing it longer than Toledo.

Teachers’ unions are often blamed for protecting educators who are burned out or should never have been allowed to teach in the first place.

Every year for the past 27 years, a panel of Toledo administrators and teachers has met behind closed doors to discuss teachers who’ve been deemed “incompetent.”

Under peer review, a team of master teachers called “consultants” meticulously monitors and evaluates teachers in several areas: how they prepare, plan and present lessons, how well they know the material they teach, how they engage and discipline students — even a teacher’s punctuality and dress are scrutinized.

A recommendation to terminate a teacher for doing poorly in these areas can be overturned, but it almost never is. A teacher can appeal, but that’s rare too.

Toledo’s peer review policy has withstood three lawsuits; union members today overwhelmingly support it.

And for good reason, says David Strom, general counsel at the American Federation of Teachers, the nation’s second-largest teachers’ union.

“A union’s job is not to defend every teacher no matter what that teacher has done,” Strom said, “particularly if that teacher is not competent or capable.”

If nothing else, the attitude is refreshing.

(1) Comments
Posted by Owen at 1706 hrs
Politics + Politics - General