An ATR writes:
The Department of Education has been holding job fairs this month. But invitations have only been sent to new teacher recruits.
When ATRs contacted the DOE about the fairs they were told that there would be opportunities at the end of the summer. Of course, only the least favorable schools will still have openings at the end of the summer. None of this is surprising. This is a repeat of past years. The special problem this year is that chancellor Farina sounded off in recent years about ATRs' obligations to find positions for themselves and gave veiled threats to eliminate them. Her moves to "thin the pool" this year suggest that she could be pursuing this goal. The DOE & UFT have repeated the line that we need to retool, we need to get more 21st century appropriate licenses, we need to work on our resumes. Yet, constant word that ATRs are hearing is that principals can't or won't hire ATRs because they cost too much.
But why can't the UFT make the case for the value of experience over inexperience? Read the Chaz blog's latest entry which lays out the case for hiring
experienced, licensed teachers in specialized subjects, such as Earth
Science. As he points out, in scoring Regents exams it is clear that the Bloomberg-de Blasio policy of keeping experienced teachers out of class vacancies has a negative impact on Regents test scores. Read also the comments, which provide numerous
testimonials about administrators passing over experienced teachers
for novices.
Beyond personal testimonials, research backs up the case for experience over inexperience. Numerous studies indicate
that teacher effectiveness increases with the number of years of teaching.
See here and here. A 2005 study reported findings that teacher effectiveness increased with five years of teaching. A 2007 study found that teacher effectiveness
rose not just in the first three years, but in subsequent years as
well.
Yet, the supposedly progressive de Blasio administration continues
the Michael Bloomberg era New York City school bias for
inexperienced teachers over experienced teachers. In its adherence to
Fair Student Funding the city is maintaining strong disincentives
against experienced teachers getting picked up. All of the elements of deformer Bloomberg's war on
teacher professionalism are being continued unchanged: massive denial
of tenure, refusal to place veteran teachers, breaking of tenure and
the pension system through the sort of bogus, frivolous observations mentioned earlier this week.
Where is the UFT on the recruitment fair issue or Fair Student Funding? What happened to the hiring freeze that existed under some Bloomberg years? Any protests in the media or in back channels? We're waiting.
This blog is hosted on behalf of the ACR/ATR Chapter Committee, a group seeking ACR/ATR chapters in the UFT, advocating for ourselves and offering mutual support. We welcome testimonials of your concerns and troubles as a displaced teacher, librarian, secretary, guidance counselor, social worker, psychologist, or speech or hearing therapist in rotation for the NYC DOE. Email to atrnyc@gmail.com
ATRs, the unrepresented -- no elected representatives in the UFT
"The right of voting for representatives is the primary right by which other rights are protected.
"To take away this right is to reduce a man to slavery, for slavery consists in being subject to the will of another."
Thomas Paine, First Principles of Government
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What a sham. The DOE is hiring outsiders when they have all these ATR people in the system. So how the convoluted press has convinced the ignorant doe that atr educators are not all that... What a sham of organizations....
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