Lawsuits and disputes involving the controversial issue of teacher tenure continue to spread from California to New York.
According to NPR.org, a group of parents and advocates in New York filed a lawsuit challenging tenure laws. This is the second lawsuit of its kind in the state. Both suits come after last month's ruling in Vergara v. California, where a Los Angeles judge found state laws unconstitutional, noting that tenure rules "saddle poor and minority students with 'grossly ineffective' teachers, a violation of the right to equality of education spelled out in California's constitution."
The criticism of tenure, said the article, comes in three "buckets." First, critics say teachers receive tenure too quickly. Second, critics argue that "last-in, first-out" seniority rules mean younger teachers are dismissed before older teachers. Third, many believe that firing low-performing teachers is too difficult and involves "too much red tape."
Read the full story.
Article by Kassondra Granata, EducationWorld Contributor
|
Sign up for our free weekly newsletter and receive
top education news, lesson ideas, teaching tips and more!
No thanks, I don't need to stay current on what works in education!
COPYRIGHT 1996-2016 BY EDUCATION WORLD, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
COPYRIGHT 1996 - 2024 BY EDUCATION WORLD, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.