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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ColtonGang who wrote (51381)10/24/2000 11:06:16 AM
From: U Up U Down  Respond to of 769667
 
New Study Makes Case For Fundamental Shift in Teacher Pay Systems move for State-Funded Teacher Health Benefits Unwarranted

For Immediate Release
July 11, 2000
Contact:
Jeff Judson, President
(210) 614-0080
(210) 860-8773 (cell)


San Antonio – The Texas Public Policy Foundation today released a study that
promotes fundamental reform in public school teacher compensation and repudiates
State funding of public school teacher health benefits.

Teacher Compensation: Emerging Trends for Texas calls for a fundamental
rethinking in how public school teachers are paid in Texas. The study points out that
the average teacher salary in Texas is now $38,550, earned over only 185 days of
work. Extrapolated to a more typical 235 day work year, the average teacher salary
in Texas is equivalent to $48,969 ($208.38 per day X 235 work days per year). While
teacher unions bemoan the fact that many teachers “moonlight” at other jobs, the
short work year allows them to moonlight, unlike almost all other professions. The
average teacher salary in Texas during the 1990s jumped from $28,300 in 1991 to
$38,550 in 2000, a 36.2% salary increase during this period. The study also
demonstrates that starting teacher pay is not as important as is the salary “climb,”
which indicates the rate at which teachers increase their pay over time. Increasing
teacher pay or benefits will not solve or significantly improve the current teacher
shortage. Past research shows that teachers leave public schools because of poor
working conditions, not low pay. This is evidenced by the comparatively low turnover
rate of private school teachers who earn less than their public school counterparts
on average.

Unfortunately, teachers unions are on record opposing merit pay. At last week’s
National Education Association (with which the Texas State Teachers Association is
affiliated) convention, NEA delegates passed a resolution reading “The Association
opposes providing additional compensation to attract and/or retain education
employees in hard-to-recruit positions.... The Association also believes that
performance pay schedules, such as merit pay or any other system of
compensation based on an evaluation of an education employee’s
performance, are inappropriate.”

Jeff Judson, President of the Texas Public Policy Foundation said, “Teacher union
opposition to merit pay is indefensible. It is time to end the teacher shortage and
improve the quality of teachers by paying them the way most everyone else in the
workforce is paid - according to merit. Classroom results should be a component of
teacher evaluations and pay.”

A recent proposal by teachers unions would have the state pick up the tab for
teacher health benefits -- a benefit that would increase the state budget by $1.5-2.5
billion. Following on the heels of the unprecedented across-the-board teacher pay
raise last session, such a move would amount to another across-the-board pay
raise.

However, as the TPPF study points out, teacher compensation should be reformed
to end across-the-board pay adjustments and to eliminate the current state teacher
pay scale, which is based merely upon seniority and education levels with no regard
for student performance. Reforms should allow school districts to match
compensation with teacher performance and to supply/demand considerations for
teachers in specific fields. If there is an excess of art teachers and not enough
science teachers, then districts should be allowed to pay science teachers more
and pay the best science teachers the most. Current law allows school districts to
pay teachers more than the state pay scale but not less, thereby restricting their
ability to use their limited funds to maximum benefit.

The full study can be viewed and downloaded at www.tppf.org.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation is a 501(c)(3)(h) non-profit, non-partisan
research institute dedicated to the principles of limited government, free enterprise,
private property rights and individual responsibility.
tppf.org



To: ColtonGang who wrote (51381)10/24/2000 11:19:14 AM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Was Bush the previous superintendent of schools? Did he appoint the previous superintendent of schools? Was this issue publicized before the current superintendent started looking into things? How is it relevant?