Why are we ignoring the best news about Arizona teachers?

Arizona students are improving on national tests even when they shouldn’t be. Why? I’m fairly sure teachers have something to do with it. Joanna Allhands, May 4, 2018 As the #RedforEd walkout rages, a few readers have told me that teachers don’t deserve extra funding until they improve performance among their students. But that overlooks some…

Díaz: Great news, Arizona! A Texas district wants to lure our teachers

  Elvia Diaz: Teachers everywhere should unapologetically seek competitive salaries to save themselves and the profession. Elvia Díaz May 30, 2018  No one can blame opportunists for luring low-paid Arizona teachers to their ranks. In fact, we must welcome them shamelessly advertising in Arizona for better-paying teaching jobs elsewhere in the wake of the recent massive walkout….

Dallas teachers to strike on Tuesday as board passes budget, but no contract

Dallas School District Superintendent Thomas Duffy, left, offers remarks as board president Sherri Newell and solicitor Vito DeLuca look on during the school board meeting on Monday night at Dallas High School. – Bill Tarutis |  June 18, 2018  By Eileen Godin DALLAS TWP. — No new vote, no new contract, no school today. A contentious…

Teacher pay and school outcomes don’t have to compete for state dollars

 June 17, 2018  School budgets and teacher contracts should focus on making sure every child in Washington gets a good education that prepares them for college and career. By  Seattle Times editorial board The Seattle Times The school year might be ending, but many districts and teachers unions across Washington are negotiating their first contracts…

Unwieldy Health Costs Often Stand Between Teachers And Fatter Paychecks

West Virginia teachers, students and supporters hold signs on a Morgantown street as they continue their strike on March 2, 2018. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images) By: Emmarie Huetteman June 18, 2018 As teacher strikes flared this spring in more than half a dozen states, from West Virginia to Arizona, protesters bemoaned stagnant salaries, overcrowded classrooms and…

Here’s a low-cost strategy that could help address teacher shortages

BY DAN GOLDHABER AND CYRUS GROUT, OPINION CONTRIBUTORS —  06/18/18  THE VIEWS EXPRESSED BY CONTRIBUTORS ARE THEIR OWN AND NOT THE VIEW OF THE HILL Concerns about teacher shortages are a prominent feature of today’s educational landscape. While there aren’t shortages across the board, states are clearly hurting when it comes to hiring in some subject…

Public education funding in California is anything but progressive

BY TY ALPER AND JUDY APPEL JUNE 7, 2018 We Californians can be pretty smug about holding true to our progressive values in the face of attacks from the president. We tout, among other things, our sanctuary cities, our commitment to environmental regulation and the taxation and regulation of legal cannabis – and candidates for statewide office are…

Department of Education donations are plummeting under de Blasio

By Bruce Golding June 18, 2018 Donations to the Department of Education’s official charity are down more than 50 percent on Mayor de Blasio’s watch — and recently generated the smallest grant to city schools in more than a decade, The Post has learned. The steady drop in annual contributions to the Fund for Public Schools…