This Made My Day

Anyone who reads my rantings here regularly knows that it is typically filled with talk of ed deform, labor, and opt-outs.  Every now and then I will stumble across something that reminds me why we fight like we do for our students.  Why we went into teaching in the first place.

This evening I wandered over to Ed Notes Online and read Norm Scott’s account of his meet up with a group of students he taught 37 years ago.  You could sense the pride and the joy he had in his former students through every word of the blog post.  Any teacher who reads it will know exactly what he was feeling.  There are few greater feelings in life than knowing your past students remember you and appreciate you.  In many ways you look at them as children of your very own as you take pride in the accomplishments they have made and the lives that they have left your classroom to build.

Teaching is the rare career that allows you to spend as much time with a group of kids over the course of the year as you do your family.  In doing so bonds are formed that can last a lifetime.  It’s what makes teaching the very best job in the world.  This, of course, is why teachers will never view their students as test scores or as a metric.  They are living, breathing people who we laugh with, cry with, and live our lives with.  It is why we are protective of them and why we will never give up the fight for the public education system that they deserve.

If any of my former students were to read this, my hope would be that they know that it is always exciting, rewarding, and a real thrill to hear from them.  It will literally always make my day, just as reading Norm’s story today did.

Here is Norm’s account…

I can’t think of a more fun day than I had on Sunday, getting together with a bunch of former students from my 5th and 6th grade class which graduated in 1979. This is one of the 2 classes I looped with and having most of them for 2 years made things so easy in the 2nd year.

We shared so many memories on Sunday and hearing how their lives turned out 37 years later is an amazing treat for a teacher. Given the poverty of the neighborhood and the dangers they faced and the stories of so many kids lost to the streets, it was heartwarming to see them with jobs and careers and families. And also rising above the poverty so many of them grew up with.

There were a whole bunch who couldn’t make this and we are planning on doing it again in the spring or summer. Lavinia (center), whose face is exactly the same as it was in 1979, said she would host.

There is so much I want to say about these students, our 2 year journey together and what I learned about them on Sunday. I just need to think some of this through in more depth. I hadn’t seen most of them since they graduated, other than the times they stopped by to see me when they graduated from junior high school or stopped by on open school night. I had some of their family members as well.

One thing that did occur to me ties into testing. I believe that 6th grade 1978-79 school year with these kids may have been one of the best I experienced. This past Sunday night I realized one of the reasons why. Around that time there was a coup d’etat in my school and the principal and assistant principal (who was a big support for me) were deposed by an assistant principal tied to the local political machine who became the principal. I was on her enemy list from the day she came into the school 4 years before and she divided the school into camps. But most important was that she was test-driven along the lines of the current ed deformers and viewed my teaching style as anathema to her total test prep all the time, leading to pressures on teachers that often creates tension with the kids. After that year even though I resisted that pressure as much as I could, I had to adjust for self-preservation and never again felt I had the freedom as a teacher that I had with these kids.

So these “kids” probably saw me in the last best light I had as a classroom teacher, though I did have a few years left through 1985 before I went on sabbatical and leave for 2 years before coming and the principal getting her way in pushing me out of the classroom and into a cluster.

Martina and Herbie.

 

Star and Martina, friends since they were 5. Star is a manager for Costco in Mass. Martina works in insurance.

 

 

 

Mary and Lavinia – I had Mary’s 3 brothers in my classes – we have seen each other over the years. Her hubby and brothers work for the MTA. Mary does childcare. Lavinia works at NYU Medical and we’re going to do sushi real soon for lunch.

 

Herbie was EMS and Luis works in medical field

 

 

Milly (on left) works at LIU library

 

This would not have happened if not for Facebook – grudging thanks to Mark Zuckerberg, who might have learned to be a better coder if he had me as his computer teacher (my 2nd life as a teacher starting in 1987).

Reminder… Students Not Scores Forum Tonight!

Just a reminder that I am speaking at the Students Not Scores forum at the old Coram Fire Department tonight.  Joining me is Patchogue-Medford Superintendent Mike Hynes, Long Island Opt-Out founder Jeanette Deutermann, and Hauppauge Teachers Association’s Tracy Zamek.  Seats are still available.  Come out and join us!

Details below…

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A Conference You Won’t Want to Miss

I want to quickly share with our readers and wholeheartedly endorse the upcoming 2016 Labor Notes Conference.  The conference, being held in Chicago from April 1-3, brings together grassroots unionists from around the country to discuss common issues and strategize ways to build grassroots unionism.

I personally know several of the teachers who will be there and consider them among the most passionate and dedicated teacher unionists I have ever known.  It is my great hope that several of the Stronger Together Caucus leaders will be in attendance to network with other like minded caucuses from around the country.  You can click the above link to get more information and to register for the conference.

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Repeal the Ed Transformation Act!

Fellow teachers,

I wrote a letter for the Action Network letter campaign “Rank & File Educators – REPEAL THE ED. TRANSFORMATION ACT! “.

We are rank and file educators in New York State.  We want the Education Transformation Act Repealed.  It is bad for children, bad for our schools, and bad for New York!

Can you join me and write a letter? Click here: https://actionnetwork.org/letters/rank-file-educators-repeal-the-ed-transformation-act?source=email&

Public Sector Unions Poised to Escape Friedrichs Case Following Scalia’s Death

It was literally moments after the news of Justice Antonin Scalia’s unexpected death that people started to react to what the consequences would be.  Included among them would be the outcome of the Friedrichs vs. California case that threatened to be a tremendous blow to public sector unions.  Scalia was expected to be among the majority who would rule against unions in a 5-4 vote.  The decision, in essence, would make the payment of union dues optional, while unions were still obligated to collectively bargain for those workers who were refusing to pay dues.  Now, with Scalia’s death and the expectation that the GOP majority in the U.S. Senate will block any candidate who President Obama nominates as a replacement, the case will almost certainly have a 4-4 vote.  In that case the decision of the lower court, which benefited the unions, will be upheld.

Via thing Progress

Public sector unions are saved, at least for now. After oral arguments in Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, it appeared likely that an ambitious effort to defund public sector unions would gain five votes on the Supreme Court. Now this effort only has four votes. Moreover, because the plaintiffs in this case lost in the court below, a decision affirming the lower court in an evenly divided vote is effectively a victory for organized workers.

Ironically, the plaintiff in the case, California teacher Rebecca Friedrichs, had asked for the lower district court and court of appeals to rule against her quickly, without trial or oral argument, in order to move the case along to the Supreme Court more expeditiously.

I’m sure we will get into more detail in the coming weeks about the case’s deeper implications for our members and teachers across the country.

Favorite Tweets From the CTU Rally

Today the Chicago Teachers Union rallied for a fair contract and for the schools Chicago deserves.  Here are some of my favorite tweets from the rally…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Who is Best Equipped for Friedrichs Ruling?

Lois Weiner, an education professor at New Jersey City University and a noted teacher union activist recently wrote a really fantastic piece on the impact Friedrichs will have on teacher unions.  Check it out below.

Via New Politics…

Much has been written about the harm the Supreme Court will wreak on US labor if it overturns the right of public sector unions to charge nonmembers a fee equal to the cost of the union’s expenses in representing them. Pundits on the left and the right have predicted a cataclysm. Will it “decimate” labor? Is it likely a “killing field for unions.” Ironically, Supreme Court Justice Scalia (as David Moberg noted) is one of the few people who has identified how unions are actually weakened by representing “free riders,” workers who haven’t been persuaded that they should join the union.  It’s significant that Friedrichs targets the California Teachers Association because the case continues the intense teacher and teacher-union bashing that has characterized political rhetoric and policy about education reform in California, across the US and globally, from Democrats and Republicans. The Right has demonized teachers unions because they can be formidable opponents. Teachers and their unions are the best organized, most stable opponents of policies privatizing public education.  As was evident from the 2012 strike of the Chicago Teachers Union, teachers unions that adopt a “social justice” orientation and are committed to building the union at the workplace (school site) can challenge the political status quo in ways other unions have not been able to do for many years.

However, despite – and because of – the ferocity of the attacks on teachers’ wages, benefits and professional autonomy, teacher unionism is being reborn. Activist teachers are growing reform caucuses committed to transforming their unions in almost every major US city. From Philadelphia to Seattle, Boston to San Francisco, Massachusetts to Los Angeles, a new generation of teacher union activists is taking on — and down — the old guard.

The reformers’ contestation is a serious challenge to the current union leaders, who must balance their self-conception as power brokers, nipping at the edges of the reforms pushed for public education (more privatization; standardized testing used to control what is taught and how; loss of due process protections for teachers), with members’ increasing militancy. Increasing numbers of teachers don’t want a “seat at the table” because they see their jobs threatened, schools closed, kids hurt by seemingly “practical” deals the union negotiates. The increasingly successful challenges to teacher union leaders who have controlled their locals for decades explains why the American Federation of Teachers (AFT)bulletin to members about Friedrichs eschews the grim predictions of most pundits. While noting the harm Friedrichs can do, the union argues it will weather a loss of agency fee — by organizing.

Members infuriated with the choice of AFT and the NEA (National Education Association) leaders to protect their access to the Obama administration instead of launching an offensive to turn back policies teachers feel hurt the profession and kids, especially linking teacher salaries to students’ standardized test scores, are not going to placated by the unions’ new interest in organizing. Many teachers feel betrayed, deserted, by the organizations they looked to for support of the profession and public education.

Friedrichs will do the most harm to the unions that are most bureaucratic, that have relied on the legal right to collect fees rather than do political education — organizing — of members. A ruling against the unions in Friedrichs won’t retard the organizing we see in Detroit, by teachers who staged a “sick out”that closed the system — without their union’s help. A loss in Friedrichs won’t halt the momentum of Organize2020, the social justice reformers in the North Carolina teachers union, who don’t have collective bargaining, let alone agency fee. Their organizing occurs side by side with civil rights activists. The fight to raise the wages of low paid workers is as much a concern for these teacher union reformers as is teachers’ salaries.

Teachers unions that organize by building member “ownership” of the union will be hurt by loss of agency fee, but they won’t be crushed.  It’s not Friedrichs that’s the biggest threat to teachers unions but rather the continuing belief that union officers and staff can do things for the members the members can’t win by mobilizing.  To restore union strength unions don’t have to rely on “fair share” from people who don’t want to join the union. We have to create unions teachers want to join, unions that will fight hard on economic concerns while showing parents and students how unions can use organizational strength and political power to defend good schools for all kids.

Lois Weiner, a member of the New Politics editorial board, is Professor of education at New Jersey City University and the Director of the Urban Education and Teacher Unionism Policy Project. You can follow her on TwitterFacebook, and here at New Politics.

Weiner does a really good job of highlighting the types of unions that may ultimately be crippled by a Friedrichs ruling that goes against the unions.  It won’t be the unions who already place a heavy emphasis on organizing rank and file around the issues that matter most to our members, our students, and our communities.  The unions that will suffer the most are the bureaucratic, top down model unions such as the UFT and NYSUT.

When you have a union whose only real organizing efforts have been to ask members for more VOTE-COPE money and to fire off a few faxes or emails you are likely to find a membership who is disconnected and disengaged.  It is harder, in these circumstances, to find value in your union.  This is particularly the case when those frequent requests for more money come amidst a string of huge legislative losses.

Building a successful and democratic union starts with building it at the workplace.  Within the grade levels or departments that we work in.  In our individual schools and school districts.  Through finding the problems that impact our work and working together to find solutions.  Through developing and implementing those problem solving strategies together.

The type of unionism that will survive will be the type that encourages debate and differing opinions.  The kind whose leadership welcomes questions and challenges from it’s membership and the type of union that welcomes contested elections.

None of these things are what we find in NYSUT as evidenced by my exchange with Karen Magee last week.  Instead we are told to trust that the officers are fighting for us when the leaders are questioned.  We get elections that are either pre-determined by backroom deals or are rigged by loyalty oaths.  We have “Call Out Cuomo” campaigns to raise money that was ultimately used for pro-Cuomo commercials.

I am not exactly sure what will happen if the decision doesn’t go our way in the Friedrichs case.  However I feel far more confident that the PJSTA will survive it than I do that NYSUT will.

Feel free to leave your thoughts on Friedrichs in the comments.