Feb 29th 2012, 21:12:29
If you want teachers to be better, here's what I'd recommend (and sadly, this is a plan that would probably enrage both Republicans and Democrats in Congress even though it's pretty much common sense).
1) Pay teachers more. A LOT more. Not new teachers, the scale can still be a sliding scale as it is now, but good veteran teachers should have the same earning potential of other positions that require the same level of education (since most teachers are pretty much expected to get Master's Degrees eventually). The scale should allow teachers to push up to $100,000 a year. This number should be even higher in more "high-risk" schools, like inner-city schools. It's easy to look like a good teacher when you're teaching in a wealthy suburban school, but can you reach the kids in an inner-city school that is more likely to fall through the cracks? Think of how many talented people decide to go into fields based on how lucrative they are. I don't want to take away from engineering, medical or law fields, but obviously a good engineer, lawyer or doctor can bring in 6 digits quite easily by the midpoint of their career. This isn't the case for teachers.
2) Reform the tenure system. Tenure can exist to some level, where it's impossible to fire a tenured teacher for economic reasons, but make it easier to get rid of teachers who simply aren't performing and are simply doing the bare minimum to keep their jobs. These bad teachers in MOST school districts are a huge minority. However, there are also a lot that I would consider mediocre teachers, and being a teacher myself, I can't blame someone who's taught 20 years, has a Master's and is making $45,000 a year when they aren't putting in those extra hours to try to keep up on the most recent ideas in pedagogy when they know it won't actually benefit them financially (Again, as a teacher, the idealistic "I'm doing it for the kids" attitude wears off to some degree when you're no longer in your mid 20s, have a wife and children and can barely find time to keep up with everything).
Of course, the two have to go hand-in-hand. Either one by itself wouldn't fix the problem, but I fully agree with Terror that substitute teaching, especially, typically has very low standards because it's a pretty awful job if you're not familiar with the kids and it's not terribly lucrative either. Raise the standards, but raise the pay as well.
And if this plan sounds familiar at all, it was suggested in Minnesota in the early 2000s by then governor Tim Pawlenty--too bad he didn't do so well in early polling, I'd have liked to hear his thoughts on many of our national problems. I don't think it ever happened, but I thought it was a fantastic idea.