Mr. Jennings and school board members,

In her latest Strib Opinion piece, Ms. Johnson praises Mr. Jennings bold 
leadership, and implicitly supports his reorganization plan, his proposal to 
eliminate teacher tenure rights, and the sponsorship of more charter schools, which 
will help to draw down enrollment in the district's own schools. 

The plan is expected to produce a decline in enrollment that will eliminate 
the need to rehire most of the layed-off teachers. The district will 
permanently lay off more high-seniority, high-paid teachers with the reorganization 
plan 
than without it. The district has a strong financial incentive for firing 
highly paid, high seniority teachers instead of low-paid, low-seniority teachers. 
That is what this reorganization is about.  

The district is losing students, and the state revenue that follows them. But 
the district doesn't lose any of the revenue produced by local property 
taxes. The district's strategy is to drive down the student population by 
eliminating bus service, closing schools, and by other methods of motivating parents 
and students to opt out of the Minneapolis Public Schools. Young families will 
move to the suburbs, empty-nesters will move from the suburbs to the city.

Tenure rights are important to preserve because they limit the ability of 
management to run the schools like banana republics. Teachers who don't have 
tenure and seniority rights have very few rights that the administration must 
respect. Without tenure rights, the teachers' union would be completely 
ineffective as a representative of the teachers.

The teacher tenure law says that teachers employed with the district for more 
than 3 years have the right to contest a decision to remove them from their 
positions. The law requires the district to have a good reason to remove a 
teacher from their position. Incidentally, ineffectiveness as a teacher is a "good 
reason" to fire a teacher. 

Ms. Johnson says that seniority as a decisive criteria in determining teacher 
assignments is an obstacle to closing the gap. How so? 
 
As I have pointed out, a class-size reduction program was carried out during 
the early 1990s without taking measures to prevent the concentration of 
inexperienced teachers in schools that teachers considered to be among the least 
desirable. That's a problem because teachers generally learn how to teach more 
effectively by teaching, and the learning curve is usually pretty steep in 
certain areas, such as classroom management. There is such a thing as overexposing 
students to inexperienced teachers.

In the 1990s, the MPS participated in a class size reduction program 
sponsored by the Federal government. In order to participate in that program, it was 
necessary for the MPS administration to work out an agreement with the union to 
create teacher-in-training positions that were evenly distributed throughout 
the district. That was done without eliminating seniority as a decisive factor 
in determining teacher placement in other teaching positions. That was done 
without changes in state law. Some teachers oppose this way of desegregating 
new, inexperienced teachers because it limits their mobility. By doing so they 
are also helping to perpetuate a problem that is driving students out of the 
district and contributing to the elimination of teaching jobs. 

The district's "bold leader" knows how to divide and conquer. Jennings is a 
politician and PR man by trade. Jennings serves an elite that has no interest 
in making the kind of education most parents want for their own children 
accessible to everyone. 

-Doug Mann, King Field
Author of "Flight from Equality: School reform in the US since 1983"
-
In a message dated 2/20/2004 7:45:35 PM Central Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

> Dear Ms. Johnson,
>      In your op-ed piece this morning you called for "full disclosure
>  about the systemic roadblocks that cripple successful education for too
>  many of our children."  I'm a teacher and I agree with you.  To that
>  end, please detail for me the efforts that you and the board made toward
>  reform of the teacher assignment process in this most recent contract
>  negotiations.  If the union that I am a member of thwarted your
>  intentions, I want to know about it, and I'm sure most of my colleagues
>  will as well.  I'm willing to talk about how we can make the system
>  better and I know a lot of other teachers are also willing; we actually
>  spend quite a few hours each week in such discussions in one form or
>  another.  If the union is getting in the way of making reforms in how we
>  can better teach our students, I promise I will do all I can to get that
>  corrected, and I won't be alone.
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