Remind me. What is it that happens when you transparently call in sick with a fake illness for most jobs?
At John A. Ferguson Senior High School in West Kendall Monday morning, the teacher parking lots weren’t as full as usual.
“There’s nobody at school,” said 17-year-old Stephanie Barrios. “Everyone’s being relocated to the cafeteria and gym.”
She said a two-page handout listed the number of absent teachers on Monday — about 180 out of 600, Stephanie estimated.
The bill passed the Senate and House, and is now in Gov. Charlie Crist’s hands, but teachers’ union opposition is predictably loud and active. Here’s what the bill would do:
The current system rewards teachers based on years of experience, advanced degrees and extra certification.
Some students are also protesting the bill, skipping out on the classes their teachers aren’t bothering to teach to demand those teachers get guaranteed employment at ever-increasing wages. Glad the kids are learning the right lessons about employment.
Our friend Katherine Mangu-Ward, over at Reason, has a great piece on the ubiquitous education problem with American public education— “Teachers simply don’t believe that it should be possible for them to be fired—not by a principal, not by a superintendent, not by anyone.”— and its possible antidote, Superintendent Michelle Rhee in Washington, D.C. Rhee has been locked in an epic battle with teachers’ unions for years, trying to reform one of the worst-performing school districts in the nation. Her ideas shouldn’t be controversial, but they are:
Says Rhee: “I thought, this is brilliant. Everybody talks about how teachers don’t get paid enough; I’m going to pay teachers six-figure salaries! I’m going to pay the best teachers twice as much as they are currently making. Who could not be in favor of that? But people went ballistic.” Getting incentive pay required giving up near-absolute job security. “That,” she says, “is when the crap hit the fan.”
Is D.C. the last chance for school reform (while Congress isn’t killing the city’s successful, pilot voucher program to serve unions, that is)? Rhee has been more stalwart than most in resisting Miami-style opposition from unions, which means her success is an important gauge for the possibility of reform everywhere. Read the whole thing.

