Fatcow Icon
Proposal to end tenure revived
by Gary D. Robertson
Associated Press
Sen. Phil Berger
Sen. Phil Berger
slideshow

Gary D. Robertson

Associated Press

RALEIGH — The leader of the North Carolina Senate revived a proposal Tuesday to end job-protecting tenure for veteran school teachers and to move forward a pay proposal that seeks to reward the best-performing classroom instructors.

Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, tried in 2012 to eliminate the career status that teachers can receive after four years in the same district, which makes it very difficult to remove poorly performing teachers. The House wouldn’t go along with the legislation on such short notice and also declined at the time to give merit raises for teachers.

Other provisions in his 2012 “Excellent Schools Act” became law, including those designed to improve reading by students in early grades and a new A-to-F grading scale for schools. Now with his second crack at a new “Excellent Schools Act,” Berger said he believes items left on the table in 2012 can get approved this year, particularly on teacher tenure.

“This is a different General Assembly and the problem still exists,” Berger said at a news conference to discuss the bill. “We’ve known for years that the one thing that does the most for improving student performance is to have a high-quality teacher in the classroom.”

Under the proposal filed Tuesday, certain job protections for veteran public school teachers would end in the fall 2014 school year. First, local school boards by the end of 2013 can offer four-year contracts to teachers with at least three years’ experience. For the next school year, veteran teachers would be offered salaries from one to four years. Teachers with less than three years’ experience in one district would still be limited to one-year deals. Local boards also could decline to renew contracts.

The proposal, Berger said, would increase accountability among teachers and provide an incentive to perform well.

“Our current system in many respects rewards mediocrity (and) punishes excellence by granting unlimited job security to all who teach a few years,” he said. Berger also envisions performance pay will reward the best teachers based on what the bill calls a “robust” evaluation process that has yet to be finalized.

A 2012 law asked school districts who created their own merit-pay plans to offer suggestions to legislators before April 15.

Democrats jumped on Berger’s new legislation, saying it would devastate a teaching field that has received one small raise in the past four years. North Carolina’s public school teacher salaries now rank 46th in the country, according to a State Board of Education report. Five years ago, North Carolina was in the middle of the state rankings. There is no money in the bill for higher pay.

“Communities across this state are already struggling to recruit and retain quality teachers and now Republicans in Raleigh are making that task even tougher,” Senate Minority Leader Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, said in a statement. “Good teachers need to be respected as professionals, not threatened and intimidated, if we really want to improve our classrooms.”

Rodney Ellis, president of the North Carolina Association of Educators, the state’s largest teacher lobbying group, said the bill takes away due process for career teachers who would shift to one-year contracts.

Berger’s bill — also introduced by Sens. Jerry Tillman of Randolph County and Dan Soucek of Watauga County — also would tinker with the new A-to-F grading system for parents to evaluate their child’s school based on whether schools exceeded, met or failed to meet growth goals on student performance tests.

The legislation also would:

— Attempt to strengthen literacy teaching components for teacher licensure requirements and professional development.

— Reduce the number of days when students can take end-of-grade and end-of-course tests to increase the number of instructional days.

— Allow state workers to volunteer for up to five hours a month in public school literacy programs.

Comments
(10)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
mrburney
|
March 24, 2013
The rantings that some of you are leaving are mind-boggling. To have someone say that most teachers were near the bottom of their class is ignorant at best. I enjoy waking up everyday to teach my students. I graduated #16 out of nearly 400 students. I hold a bachelor's degree, one masters degree and I am working on my second. I am extremely intelligent, hardworking, well educated and devote a great deal of time to becoming better. I teach without the luxry of a textbook for my students. I make countless phone calls each week to inform parents of their childrens' progress. I use digital gradebooks to allow students and parents to access their grades and information from home. I was a recipient of the legislation-killed, nationally admired North Carolina Teaching Fellows Scholarship. I also serve as local president of Robeson Association of Educators--an affiliate of the National Education association and the North Carolina Association of Educators. Teachers who want a fair contract so that they cannot be fired without due process, teachers who want a fair salary, and teachers who refuse to sit meekly and mildly while those who know nothing about education make all the rules are villianized as money-hungry sharks who prey on the public. Count the number of hours outside school that I spend on my classroom. Take a look at my next paycheck stub and tell me how money hungry I am.
ROSSisRIGHT
|
March 28, 2013
mrburney, You are an exception not the rule when it comes to teachers and education. I didn't make up that stat, your peers did. Google it.

It's not all, just most...sorry for the truth.

It's actually harder to earn a degree in art than in public education.
CoolChange
|
March 21, 2013
Today's students and teachers are both different breeds from the old days!

I go on school campuses and see that some of the teachers are wearing jeans with holes in them and their shirts untucked. In the old days the men wore suits and ties or at least sports coats. Women mostly wore dresses but I remember when pant suits came into fashion and the female teachers looked very professional in them. It was very seldom that we saw a teacher "dressed down" in jeans.

Teachers have to have different skills today than in the past! In the old days a teacher could get by just knowing the material and having communication skills good enough to transfer information. Nowadays, teachers have to be able to try to get the attention of the students, keep them in their seats, off their phones, away from each other, etc. Some teachers are very effective at maintaining a groups attention while others struggle. Some teachers also know their subject matter while others try to parrot the material they have available and they struggle with any questions that an inquisitive student might have.

Yes, it is a different generation and a totally different challenge for teachers today and it changed with the social decline of the family and has been further damaged by the removal of corporal punishment from the classroom.

A wise elder once told me that you have to have the attention of a student to be able to teach them anything and to get their attention it is important to have their respect!
nclumbee
|
March 20, 2013
How many idiots does it take to see what the problem is. If you were a school teacher or concerned parent then you could voice you opinions. The classroom is so much more than teaching. We have become, doctors, nurses, police, dentist, psychologist, and many other things. There are many great teachers in the world that are not recognized. You don't need merit for that. What is going to happen when the teachers begin to leave and they cant be replaced because people are not staying in the education field. You really need to visit and teach in a classroom for a month before passing judgement on teachers and assistants...SO to me we have people that say hey this sounds good but has no idea what goes on behind the scenes.
ReallyRobeson?
|
March 20, 2013
Your rebuttal misses a fundamental law of economics which is that as teachers who should have become doctors, nurses, dentists, and psychologists instead of teachers get out of the classroom, the worth of those who are truly talented at teaching will be rewarded commensurate to their abilities and that reward level will entice more quality people into the field.

This could be a great thing for us if we can keep politics from morphing this into a way to serve politicians.
Ex-Lumbertonian
|
March 20, 2013
Nearly every other job position on the planet be it the military, any public sector position, you earn more money with effort/results. You right your own paycheck with the effort you put into your work each day. Kudos to those who appreciate those teachers who deserve more for their hard work and results. This will trim the fat so to speak for those who just do the minimum to get by. We all know one or two that could give a better effort.
locklear#11
|
March 20, 2013
I will be the first to agree we have teachers in the class room that shouldn't be there. I personally think tenure has spoiled lots of good teachers. My wife taught for 32 years in the school system, 17 years in Hoke county and 15 in Robeson county. She loved it in Hoke, lots better than Robeson. Tenure is not the biggest problem in the school system. Most children today are not disciplined, show no respect to superiors and they are supported in this by the parent. Parents in general don't believe their little Johnny or Mary Sue would do some of the things they do. Teachers are in a no win situation in the classroom. When a teacher has a problem with a child and the principal and parent jump all over the teacher in front of the child, what kind of message is that sending to the child? If children act like wild goats at church, imagine what they are like in school. It goes back to discipline, you can implement all the laws you want, but until discipline is implemented you can forget it. Children have to be disciplined, taught right from wrong. I have never seen a child that had to be taught to lie. That is a trait they are born with. They have to be taught that telling the truth is the right thing to do. I guarantee that teachers had rather have a well disciplined group of children, which would allow them to be effective teachers. Most teachers today are not effective, not because of their incompetence but because they have children that will not allow them to show case their skills as taechers. I believe a disciplined child is a well mannered child that stands a much better chance of learning, not only from the teacher but from the students around them.
ROSSisRIGHT
|
March 20, 2013
Funny how Republicans and democrats differ so much. We Repubs hold the people responsible for their worth and the losers just "give it to em, who cares"... The dems have been in charge of NC for decacades and now the grown-ups are having to straighten out the kids mess. Remember the dems want an un-educated underclass of citizens, so they have dumbed down the education system for decades.

I dropped out of school in the late eighties, on the A-B honor roll. Me, imagine that. I did not have to apply myself 100% so school became boring to me. No challenge what so ever. How pathetic is that. Now I'm not stupid, but one would assume school would be a bit more challenging to me since my mother quit school in the 9th grade, but it was just too easy. Any kid not making straight A's in school these days needs to be removed and sent elswhere. It's just too easy.

A majority of the educators teaching our kids were at the bottom of their graduating class. So they end up taking the easiest degree available. PUBLIC EDUCATION. Google it. Sorry but you'd think America wanted only the best highest educated, but ohh noo. This is not pertaing to all, but you teachers that fall in to this catagory know who you are and so do we... At least when this passes you wont get to just take up space for 30 years and then get a retirement check... Like Mr. Trump says... YOU'RE FIRED!
ReallyRobeson?
|
March 20, 2013
Idea sounds good doesn't it? Given that this is Robeson I can see it now; the BOC, school board and other "leaders" end up with another opportunity to solidify their power bases by passing on contracts to only those who line their pockets or at least show up at meetings and support them blindly like the Dept. heads did during the Feb. meeting for fear of retaliation.

The best teachers do indeed need to be set apart from their less skilled colleagues but the way to best do that needs to be looked at in great detail to avoid curing a cold by giving the patient cancer. Just a thought.
Wedding announcement for March 31
Crystal Ann Locklear of Pembroke and Timmy Bullard of Prospect were united in marriage on Dec. 2...
Apr 04, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Reunions
Family reunions: Chavis and Ledwel Family Reunion will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday at the Anti...
Apr 04, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Oxendine Two-Stepping with Two Partners
Olivia Oxendine will be two-timing during the Dancing with the Robeson County Stars event. Oxend...
Feb 27, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Riverside Christian Academy Varsity Eagles 2013 NCCAA State Champions
The 2013 North Carolina Christian Athletic Association Basketball Tournaments were hosted at Beth...
Feb 25, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend
full story

Happy 236th
Thousands of people were dazzled by the fireworks display at the annual Lumberton Family Fourth celebration at the Lumberton High School football stadium on Tuesday. Many watched the display from parking lots and sidewalks around town and from their own front yards. Before the show, attendees were treated to a performance by the Carolina Breakers, and a stunt by the Army Rangers, who parachuted onto the football field.

News
Alexander McGirt
6 students win Gates scholarships
LUMBERTON — Six Robeson County high school seniors have been selected to receive the Gates Millennium Scholarship, which will pay for all of their academic expenses that are not met by other schol...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Gov. Pat McCrory
Wind energy permitting process among new NC laws
RALEIGH (AP) — Gov. Pat McCrory says a new law laying out rules for building wind farms in North Carolina will help create a diverse supply of energy for the state and boost the economy. McCrory...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More News
Sports
Scott Schlaufman | The Robesonian
Lumberton catcher Hunter Davis announced Friday that he will attend Methodist University this fall and play baseball for the Monarchs next spring.
Pirates’ Davis to continue career at Methodist
LUMBERTON — Lumberton senior Hunter Davis had the grades to go to plenty of colleges. But when it came down to it, he mainly wanted to keep playing baseball. “I didn’t want to look back and sa...
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Junior catcher Chance Leggett has been Fairmont's hottest hitter since making his season debut just before the Robeson County Slugfest. He's on a 12-game hitting streak and leads the Golden Tornadoes with 24 RBIs. | Contributed Photo
Fairmont expects North Brunswick's best in third round
FAIRMONT — Accountability. It's a factor Fairmont's baseball team has mastered this season according to head coach Sandy Thorndyke and a big reason why the Golden Tornadoes have rarely been tested...
May 16, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Sports
Opinion
Press finally getting adversarial
Rarely has the White House briefing room so resembled the main ballroom at a meeting of the Conservative Political Action Conference. After news broke of a sweeping Justice Department subpoena of The Associated Press telephone records, White House press secretary Jay Carney didn’t so much have...
May 18, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
ObamaCare handles the little things
For years, conservatives have pushed for a health-insurance model emphasizing catastrophic coverage. It works as follows: Consumers pay the cost of ordinary care, such as a checkup, a blood test or an eye exam. Insurance kicks in only for major crises — a heart attack, cancer requiring extensi...
May 15, 2013 | 3 3 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Opinion
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
What’s Happening for May 12, 2013
Today Water safety instructor class: America Red Cross is offering a class from May 12 through May 19 to anyone who wants to become a certified instructor . Participants must be 16 years or...
May 12, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Reunions for May 12, 2013
Family reunions: Taylor Family Reunion will be held at the Woodman Building on Derwood Road in Lumberton on May 19. For information, call Gwen at 910-733-2327 or Tammy at 910-258-2071. J...
May 12, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

Poll Question
May 14, 2013 | 273113 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Do you think fourth-graders should be transferred from Tanglewood and Rowland-Norment elementary schools to Carroll Middle School?

View Previous Polls
Special Sections
Living50
HMB January 2013
2012 Football
TaxGuide2012