Last week, I witnessed amazing teachers springing into action to protect and calm frightened students stuck at school during a severe storm and tornado warning. As the threat dragged on, teachers stayed positive and relieved children's fears through the worst of the storm despite the fact that many were separated from their own loved ones. Eventually the storm passed and all made it safely home. This is what teachers and school staff do, we care, protect, and act in the best interests of the child.
Today, the governor announced a new plan to reward teachers. On the surface it may sound good but let's do the math before we draw conclusions. If average teacher pay is $40,000, a 2% raise would mean an additional $800 per year or about $64 per month after taxes. As most of us know, this doesn't even cover the increased cost of gas or groceries in our current economy. Teachers have not received a raise in 5 years while costs of living have drastically increased. As a result, many teachers are leaving the classroom to find jobs that can support their own families. Adding to the problem, fewer young people are choosing to become teachers in the first place (http://www.wbtv.com/story/25430788/unc-charlotte-sees-steep-decline-in-students-wanting-to-major-in-education). Who will care for and educate our children if all the teachers are gone?
Let's really thank our teachers....show our appreciation by restoring pay to the level they should have been paid if salary had not been frozen.
The link below will help you locate your elected representatives in the General Assembly.
Use your vote and your voice to let the General Assembly know that you support teachers!
http://www.ncleg.net/representation/WhoRepresentsMe.aspx
Notes from the Teacher
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Speaking up for you
As your representative to the State Teacher Advisory Council, it is my pleasure to speak up for my fellow hard-working teachers. Below is a copy of the letter that members of the General Assembly will be receiving from myself and other teacher leaders. For you!
Dear Senator/ Representative,
We are some of the award-winning
teachers and educators in our state, and we represent diverse regions and
education specialties in North Carolina, including elementary, middle, and high
school education. Our content areas and
backgrounds include teaching core content areas, visual arts, performing arts,
foreign languages, ROTC, and exceptional children. We include teachers in traditional
classrooms, inclusion classrooms, alternative schools, charter schools, and
online schools.
In the past several months, there has
been much dialogue concerning ways to improve the salaries of North Carolina’s
teachers to a more nationally competitive wage.
We know firsthand the importance of recruiting and retaining quality
teachers, and we worry that the quality of education for our students will
decline if we do not change our current compensation model.
We also acknowledge the difficult decisions
that you must make concerning finances in North Carolina on a daily basis, and
we would like to submit the following guiding principles for teacher
compensation for your consideration.
Thank you for all you do for North
Carolina. We will answer any questions
you may have and look forward to continuing the dialogue about what is best for
education in our state.
Sincerely,
Karyn
Collie Dickerson, M.Phil, NBCT
Grimsley High School Teacher of the
Year 2012-2013
Guilford County Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Piedmont Triad/Central Region 5 Teacher
of the Year 2012-2013
North Carolina Teacher of the Year
2013-2014
Cindi
Rigsbee, M.Ed., NBCT
Gravelly Hill Middle Teacher of the
Year 2007-2008
Orange County Teacher of the Year
2007-2008
Piedmont Triad/Central Region 5 Teacher
of the Year 2007-2008
North Carolina Teacher of the Year
2008-2009
National Teacher of the Year Finalist
2009
Allison
Ormond. Ph.D, NBCT
Rockingham County Middle School Teacher
of the Year 2002-2003
Rockingham County Teacher of the Year
2002-2003
Piedmont Triad/Central Region 5 Teacher
of the Year 2002-2003
North Carolina Teacher of the Year
2003-2004
Pam
Mills
First Flight Middle School Teacher of
the Year 2012-2013
Dare County Teacher of the Year 2012-2013
Northeast Region 1 Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Thomas
B. McGeachy, M.S.
Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army (Retired)
Weldon High School Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Weldon City Schools Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
North Central Region 3 Teacher of the
Year 2012-2013
Shannon
Thomas Godfrey, M.A.T., NBCT
Harnett Central High School Teacher of
the Year 2012-2013
Harnett County Schools Teacher of the
Year 2012-2013
Sandhills/South Central Region 4
Teacher of the Year 2012-2013
Julian
Wilson
York Chester Middle School Teacher of
the Year 2012-2013
Gaston County Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Southwest Region 6 Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Pinnacle Technology Leader
Jan
Adams, NBCT
Founding A+ Fellow
Adjunct Faculty Member, UNCSA
NC Charter School Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Leslie
Fetzer, M.A.
National Virtual Public School Teacher
of the Year 2012
|
Darcy
Grimes, M.A.
Mabel Elementary Teacher of the Year
2011-2012
Watauga County Teacher of the Year
2011-2012
Northwest Region 7 Teacher of the Year
2011-2012
North Carolina Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Diana
Beasley, M.A.
Hickory High Teacher of the Year
2005-2006
Hickory Public Schools Teacher of the Year 2005-2006 Northwest Region 7 Teacher of the Year 2005-2006 North Carolina Teacher of the Year 2006-2007
Lauren
Bilbro-Berry, Ed.D.
JC Tyloe Elementary Teacher of the Year
1999-2000
Beaufort County Schools Teacher of the
Year 1999-2000
Northeast Region 1 Teacher of the Year
1999-2000
North Carolina Teacher of the Year
2000-2001
Carrie
Morris, M.A.
Swansboro Elementary Teacher of the
Year 2004-2005
Swansboro Elementary Teacher of the
Year 2012-2013
Onslow County Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Southeast Region 2 Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Malinda
Pennington, M.Ed., NBCT
Lead Teacher Wilson Autism Academy
Exceptional Teacher of Excellence 2011
Toisnot Middle School Teacher of the
Year 2011-2012
Wilson County Teacher of the Year
2011-2012
North Central Region 3 Teacher of the
Year 2011-2012
Karrie
Detwiler-Matias
North Carolina Rookie Art Teacher of
the Year 2010-2011
J. W. Turlington Alternative School
Teacher of the Year 2011-2012
Hoke County Teacher of the Year
2011-2012
Sandhills/South Central Region 4
Teacher of the Year 2011-2012
Jill
Francis, M.A., NBCT
Chase High School Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Rutherford County Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Western Region 8 Teacher of the Year
2012-2013
Thomas
Soth, M.Ed., NBCT
North Carolina Foreign Language Teacher
of the Year 2012-2013
Southern Conference Foreign Language
Teacher of the Year 2012-2013
American Council of the Teaching of
Foreign Languages National Teacher of the Year
Finalist 2013
|
Guiding
Principles for Teacher Compensation Models
- We believe that teachers need to have more consistency with what to expect in regards to their salary, especially the knowledge that there are opportunities for salary growth. The past several years of stagnated salaries have made future planning and providing for families difficult for teachers.
- We believe that advanced degrees from accredited universities should be incentivized.
- We believe that the base pay for teachers in North Carolina needs to be raised. The average starting salary of $30,800 is too low to be nationally competitive and to recruit the strongest teachers into our classrooms. However, we also believe that increasing the steps for current teachers is equally, if not more important, at this time. If we do not compensate those who have been teaching, then they will continue to leave the profession in North Carolina.
- We believe that if we are going to shift to performance pay, then performance pay should be based on achieving a combination of goals within a set of standards. This performance pay should be available to all teachers who meet the criteria. Performance pay should not be awarded to a percentage of teachers. This would help avoid competition between teachers and promote leadership, collaboration, and community involvement.
- Performance pay incentives should be based on a combination of the following areas, which are teacher-selected and allow for career pathways and continuous improvement. Teachers would not need to meet all of these requirements, but a combination of a few of these requirements could lead to an individual performance pay incentive. Some of the criteria for high performance include, but are not limited to the following: National Board Certified Teacher, Teacher Leader/Academic Dean, Department Chair, Mentor Teacher, Community Involvement Outreach (plans book fairs, parent dinners, science fairs, etc.), Presenter at Education Conferences, Serving on District Level Committees, etc.
- We believe that more significant step increases every three years (upon meeting evaluation requirements) would be preferable to a yearly increase. However, we do not believe that teachers should have to forgo a cost of living increase within this step model. This model is helpful because it will incentivize teachers at the times when many leave the profession: Year 3, Year 6, Year 15, etc.
- We believe that the pay steps should be collapsed to allow for more significant increases during the first fifteen years, thus allowing teachers to reach a more competitive salary earlier in their careers. The pay steps should still occur every three years after Year 15, but the increases would not be as significant. Our hope is that by reaching a competitive wage earlier in a career, more teachers will stay in the profession until retirement because it offers a career pathway (thus eliminating the need for many to look for other positions: Central Office jobs, administrative positions, etc.). This would help save money on teacher recruitment and new teacher training.
- We believe that positions for teacher leadership should be created, and teachers who volunteer for these positions and are selected should be compensated as part of the performance pay model. These “teacher leaders” are similar to academic deans or master teachers. They would teach a reduced class load and conduct teacher evaluations for teachers within their content areas. Not only would their roles entail completing evaluations, but more importantly, would include coaching the teachers in their workload to help them improve as educators.
- We believe that student growth bonuses/incentives should be rewarded to the entire school and not individual teachers. Studies show that individual teacher bonuses based on student growth do not significantly change the practices of that teacher in the classroom. However, when we look at a school-wide incentive, then elements of literacy, writing, whole-child development, academic coaching, etc. are encouraged throughout the entire school. This would help eliminate competition among teachers and encourage both departmental collaboration and cross-curricular collaboration. Additionally, if we are not tying teacher bonuses to individual teacher effectiveness, then we could potentially reduce the number of state-mandated tests and incentivize educators who teach in non-tested areas.
Monday, February 10, 2014
Clarification from the governor
Our former NC TOY, Darcy Grimes, requested clarification from Governor McCrory regarding the pay plan announcement today. Here is his response to her:
"Thanks for your questions, and my apologies for any confusion. To clarify - in the first phase, all teachers currently on step 0-6 will receive a pay increase to a salary of $33000. In the second phase, all teachers on steps 0-9 will be bumped up to $35000. No teacher will take a pay cut. On average, about 42,000 teachers will receive the raise, not just teachers in their first year."
He also announced that any teacher who has started a master's program (regardless of if they are still taking classes and how many classes they have started) once they graduate they WILL now receive masters pay.
As mentioned in my earlier post, this is just baby steps, keep talking!
"Thanks for your questions, and my apologies for any confusion. To clarify - in the first phase, all teachers currently on step 0-6 will receive a pay increase to a salary of $33000. In the second phase, all teachers on steps 0-9 will be bumped up to $35000. No teacher will take a pay cut. On average, about 42,000 teachers will receive the raise, not just teachers in their first year."
He also announced that any teacher who has started a master's program (regardless of if they are still taking classes and how many classes they have started) once they graduate they WILL now receive masters pay.
As mentioned in my earlier post, this is just baby steps, keep talking!
Keep talking!
Today Governor McCrory announced a plan to raise salaries for beginning teachers. While this is a vital first step, we need to take care of ALL teachers. We need to keep talking!
What is your response to the governor's announcement? Share your thoughts with our legislators
Buck.Newton@ncleg.net
Susan.Martin@ncleg.net
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
What is your response to the governor's announcement? Share your thoughts with our legislators
Buck.Newton@ncleg.net
Susan.Martin@ncleg.net
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Speaking for us
A recent article in the News and Observer is the first that I've read which summarized our concerns for public education in one neat column. Within the article is also a link to a NC Emerging Issues forum. The forum topic of how to recruit and reward great teachers is going live on Mon. 2/10 through Tues 2/11. As part of this forum, Governor McCrory and former Governor Jim Hunt will have a public discussion regarding concerns for public education. Should be interesting!
Check out the article and the link. I've included both below.
Teachers' jobs are getting harder
Teachers and the Great Economic Debate
Check out the article and the link. I've included both below.
Teachers' jobs are getting harder
Teachers and the Great Economic Debate
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Wear Red Wednesday!
Action is heating up in Raleigh! Many teachers are signing petitions in support of better treatment and in protest of tenure-ending contracts. People are starting to listen! The latest public polls show that 77% of NC adults now support better pay for teachers. With the General Assembly reconvening later this spring, we have to keep up the noise! At our recent state teacher advisory council, I was reminded that less than 20% of NC adults ages 25 and up have children in the public schools (approximately 9.5 million adults, 1.5 million students...easy math). Everyone needs to know the reality and importance of what we do! Share your story with neighbors, church members, and friends.
Start by wearing Red for Public Ed!
I've inserted the links if you would like to go further and add your voice to the protest efforts.
Aim Higher NC
Decline to Sign campaign
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
Start by wearing Red for Public Ed!
I've inserted the links if you would like to go further and add your voice to the protest efforts.
Aim Higher NC
Decline to Sign campaign
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Happy New Year!
2014, a new year and a new day for education!
Last month, UNC-Wilmington released the results of a survey which indicated that 62% of participating teachers were planning to either leave teaching or leave the state. However, the media was confused that 50% of the same group reported that the increased demands and stresses had not lowered the quality of their classroom instruction. Of course it hasn't! We are professional educators! We give our students the best education possible every day despite reduced resources and increased requirements.
On Christmas Day, our Lt. Governor, Dan Forest, announced that increasing teacher pay was a top priority in 2014. This means we need to continue raising our voices loud and proud! If we grow silent, thinking that the issue is finally being addressed, our leaders may think that we are already satisfied.
Remember to Wear Red for Public Ed! Have conversations with the community around you, let them know the realities of teaching today and the importance of investing in our children.
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
Last month, UNC-Wilmington released the results of a survey which indicated that 62% of participating teachers were planning to either leave teaching or leave the state. However, the media was confused that 50% of the same group reported that the increased demands and stresses had not lowered the quality of their classroom instruction. Of course it hasn't! We are professional educators! We give our students the best education possible every day despite reduced resources and increased requirements.
On Christmas Day, our Lt. Governor, Dan Forest, announced that increasing teacher pay was a top priority in 2014. This means we need to continue raising our voices loud and proud! If we grow silent, thinking that the issue is finally being addressed, our leaders may think that we are already satisfied.
Remember to Wear Red for Public Ed! Have conversations with the community around you, let them know the realities of teaching today and the importance of investing in our children.
Raises!
Resources!
Respect!
LET'S DECLARE 2014 THE YEAR OF EDUCATION IN NC!
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