fox cities news, appleton, wi
foxpolitics.netwhats really going on in the fox cities
fox cities newsfox cities news, appleton, wi


Blogroll
Selected News Sources:
Business Jrnl of Milw
Christian Science Monitor
Daily Caller
Drudge Report
La Crosse Tribune
Milw Journal Sentinel
National Journal
New York Times
Public Policy Forum
Real Clear Politics
Stateline
The Hill
TPM
Washington Examiner
Washington Post
Washington Times
WI State Journal
Selected Blogs - from the Right:
American Mind
Blaska's Blog
Boots & Sabers
Charlie Sykes
Dad29
Freedom Eden
Heritage Foundation
Jerry Bader Blog
Life Voice
Marketplace of Ideas
Marquette Warrior
Natl Review Online
No Runny Eggs
Patrick McIlheran
Real Debate Wisconson
RedState
Rhymes with Clown
Shark and Shepherd
The Lote Tree
Vox Populi
Wall Street Jrnl, Opinions
WI State Jrnl, Opinion
Wigderson Library & Pub
Wisconsin Family Voice
WPRI
Selected Blogs - from the Left:
Big Money Blog
Blogging Blue
Brenda Konkel
Caffeinated Politics
Capital Times
FightingBob
Folkbum's rambles
Griper Blade
Huffington Post
Lost Albatross
MAL Contends
Mid coast views
Moneyed Politicians
One Wisconsin Now
Open Left
Playground Politics
Political Environment
Rock Netroots
Talk to Tony
Uppity Wisconsin
Waxing America
fox cities news, appleton, wi fox cities news, appleton, wi
Today's Blog: Time for the Guv to morph into Chris Christie
My husband and I and a couple hundred friends watched in Green Bay as ...(more)

Blogs
  • Time for the Guv to morph into Chris Christie (6/28/2011)
  • Time for Gov. Walker to talk more about the cake (3/4/2011)
  • Today, reality hits home (3/1/2011)
  • FoxPolitics News going on hiatus (1/28/2011)
  • Brown County Executive candidate forum Feb. 8 (1/28/2011)
  • Education done right (1/27/2011)
  • To Obama, the ‘We’ is Government (1/27/2011)
  • (more)



    10/4/2007
    Guest Article: A Valuable Primer for Education Reporters (and anyone else searching out the whole story)

    Many thanks to Jim Waters, who authored the article below. Waters is the director of policy and communications at the Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions in Bowling Green, Kentucky.

    From Contracts to Classrooms: Covering Teachers Unions is written by seasoned reporters who urge their less-experienced colleagues who are just beginning to stomp around the education beat to connect what's occurring at the collective-bargaining table with what's happening--or not happening--in the classroom. [Find the 36-page book downloadable, here.]

    Joe Williams, who covered Milwaukee's private school voucher program for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel from 1997 to 2000, wrote 11 of the 16 chapters. He masterfully shows unions' effects on teachers--going from "collective begging" to "collective bargaining"--and students, who are suffering.

    Williams fairly portrays unions' sparse attempts to become more reform-minded, but he also never lets readers forget that unions primarily exist not for students' benefit, but to protect teachers.

    As the late and colorful American Federation of Teachers President Albert Shanker once said, "When students start paying union dues, I'll start representing students."

    Verbal Clash
    In his chapter, "How Contract Coverage Fails to See the Big Picture," Richard Lee Colvin, one of the book's six authors, analyzes coverage of teachers unions in major newspapers. He found "terms such as 'academic standards,' 'test scores,' 'teacher quality,' 'literacy' or other words that might convey the idea of education quality are largely missing from collective bargaining stories."

    My favorite chapter is "The Education of a Reporter on the Teacher Contract Beat," by Dale Mezzacappa, whose 35-year reporting career included being goaded "only once" into a shouting match, which I can appreciate, having spent more than 17 years reporting on obnoxious people doing similarly obnoxious things.

    The culprit in this case was a Philadelphia teachers union attorney upset that Mezzacappa's story about a contract settlement following contentious talks between union and district did not explicitly state the union "won."

    During the talks, the union "furiously fought" attempts by the superintendent to reward or sanction schools based on students' progress. That sinner Mezzacappa let both sides spin and claim victory, as usually occurs.

    "He got nothing," the lawyer bellowed about the superintendent.

    But Mezzacappa just couldn't help herself. After watching thousands of teachers on the previous night's news broadcast cheering "wildly at the news that ... they'd still get automatic raises even if none of their kids met achievement goals," she retorted, "If teachers don't improve kids' learning, what are they there for? What should they be judged on? What are they getting paid to do?"

    Selfish Goals
    What, indeed?

    "Contracts vary some, but all get back to the same thing," Mezzacappa writes. "[I]t's about hours worked, not results achieved; it's about treating everyone the same, not rewarding excellence; it's about fighting against management, not about working together as colleagues to improve education."

    Still, this book is not just a large gob of union-bashing. Included is a chapter by David Sherman, who for 14 years was vice president of New York City's United Federation of Teachers. This wolf in sheep's clothing manages to keep the wool mostly on as he offers 10 suggestions new reporters will find helpful in covering teachers unions.

    While the suggestions are mostly genuinely helpful, I see part of an uncovered fang when Sherman tries to convince readers that unions are the ones facing resistance from districts regarding education reforms. He claims, "districts are conservative in negotiations because of control issues, and they are reluctant to share decision-making with teachers and parents," but he offers no examples.

    Ruthless Persistence
    The book includes examples of an increasingly dogged determination by education reporters to get beyond the usual blubber.

    Scott Reeder, an Illinois reporter, filed 1,500 Freedom of Information Act requests with 876 school districts after a union leader challenged him to find statistics to counter the union's claim that "their underperforming teachers were routinely fired."

    What Reeder found was that 93 percent of Illinois school districts have not given any tenured teacher an "unsatisfactory" job evaluation in the past decade, and that 50 percent of tenured teachers receiving substandard marks are still teaching.

    What other explosive information is available--and how much could public education feel the proper pressure to improve--if all education reporters read this book and then fused Mezzacappa's passion with Reeder's persistence?
    Reproduced by permission of the article's author, Jim Waters (jwaters@bipps.org). Originally published in Heartland’s School Reform News, October, 2007.


    COMMENTS

    Reading the report gives me one more reason to pray for the success of school reformers such as Dylan Klebold. As a founding member of the Columbine Young Republicans, he had the guts to do what so many conservatives only dream about.

    He gave his life to advance quality education in Colorado. [Last sentence edited out.]

    fox cities news, appleton, wi
    Val Anonnson (Fri Oct 05 06:10:01 2007)




    fox cities news, appleton, wi

    sign up to receive fox politics news
    see todays issue


    Blog Archives
    2011
    June
    March
    January
    2010
    December
    November
    October
    September
    August
    July
    June
    May
    April
    March
    February
    January
    2009
    December
    November
    October
    September
    August
    July
    June
    May
    April
    March
    February
    January
    2008
    December
    November
    October
    September
    August
    July
    June
    May
    April
    March
    February
    January
    2007
    December
    November
    October
    September
    August
    July
    June
    May
    April
    March
    February
    January
    2006
    December
    November
    October
    September
    2000
    May

    Site Map | Privacy Policy   •   FoxPolitics ©2006 All Rights Reserved.   •   Site Updated 5/18/2013