Archive for January, 2009

New Hampshire earns “F” on Teacher Reviews

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

January 29, 2009
Yahoo News

Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, and the District of Columbia earn “Fs” on Teacher Reviews

States get D-plus on teacher reviews

WASHINGTON – States are not doing what it takes to keep good teachers and remove bad ones, a national study found.

Only Iowa and New Mexico require any evidence that public school teachers are effective before granting them tenure, according to the review released Thursday by the National Council on Teacher Quality.

“States can help districts do much more to ensure that the right teachers stay and the right teachers leave,” said Kate Walsh, president of the Washington-based nonpartisan group.

Hiring and firing teachers is done locally in more than 14,000 school districts nationwide. But state law governs virtually every aspect of teaching, including how and when teachers obtain tenure, which protects teachers from being fired.

Tenure is not a job guarantee. But it is a significant safeguard, preventing teachers from being fired without just cause or due process.

Nearly every state lets public school teachers earn tenure in three years or less, the group said. In all but Iowa and New Mexico, tenure is virtually automatic, the study said.

States were given letter grades in the study, earning a D-plus on average. The group gave its highest overall mark, a B-minus, to South Carolina, saying the state does better than any other at allowing ineffective teachers to be fired.

South Carolina requires two annual evaluations of new teachers. Teachers there who get bad reviews are placed on a plan for improvement. Only those teachers on probation – not tenured teachers – can be dismissed if they don’t improve.

The rest of the states earned C’s or worse. Five – Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont – earned F’s, as did the District of Columbia.

In all, only 13 states say that teachers who get multiple bad reviews can be fired. Only about half the states, 26 of them, put teachers on an improvement plan after one bad review.

The National Education Association, the biggest teachers union, said job protections shouldn’t be blamed for keeping bad teachers on the job.

“No district-union contract in America states that bad teachers can never be fired from their jobs,” said Segun Eubanks, NEA’s director of teacher quality. “Yet too often, district-teacher union contracts are blamed for inadequate, ineffective and misused teacher evaluation systems.”

Eubanks said teacher firing should be part of a broad evaluation and support system developed in cooperation with teachers, either through unions or teacher groups.

That argument jibes with the study, which said that states are sorely lacking when it comes to evaluating teachers.

Only 23 say new teachers must be evaluated more than once a year. Nine states don’t require any evaluation of new teachers.

The study says states do little to keep teachers on the job, even raising barriers in some cases.

Also, 20 states insist that teachers take additional classes that don’t specifically help them improve. Five states make teachers get advanced degrees to be get professionally licensed, despite research indicating those degrees don’t necessarily help people teach better. Some 18 states require that teachers with advanced degrees be paid more.

The study also wades into a growing controversy over whether teachers should be held accountable for their students’ progress.

It said just 15 states require a look at whether kids are learning when teachers are evaluated. In addition, the study gave poor ratings to 35 states that don’t explicitly connect bonuses or raises to evidence of student achievement.

The NEA and other unions and teacher groups argue there should be multiple measures of teacher performance along with student achievement.

The study also rated 17 states poorly for not offering higher pay or loan forgiveness to teachers who work in high-needs schools or in math and science, subjects where there is a teaching shortage.

BCC Announces SB2 Petitions – Signatures Wanted

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Enthusiasm for change is high, Bow SB-2 petition drive meets goal in record time. Additional signatures are welcome.

Bow Budget Committee Members Cindy Martin and Rick Hiland have decided that we can no longer continue the status quo if we want to lower our taxes and have decided to be Co-Lead Petitioners for SB-2 for both town and school.

It is clear that the town meeting form of government is not serving the town of Bow well. Bow taxes continue to climb dramatically and fewer and fewer Bow residents are involved in the decision making process because of the exclusive nature of the archaic town meeting process. SB-2 is as simple as voting for president – you either vote for or against an article. SB-2 minimizes the chicanery and the abuse that is becoming more and more common in recent Bow town and school meetings where voters try to disenfranchise Bow voters by calling for a “revote” after many voters have gone home. SB-2 challenges town and school officials to keep budgets low because SB-2 evens the playing field by allowing the complete town to vote on every issue minimizing the power of special interest.

BCC welcomes the SB-2 debate and is more then ready to debunk the myths of those who are addicted to O.P.M (other people’s money). We ask Bow voters to come this website often to learn more about SB-2 and read learn how the opposition is trying to mislead you.

Please take the time to download both the town and school petitions and get your friends and neighbors sign them.

Rick Hiland reports that it took only 3 hours to get well more then the needed signatures to get SB-2 on the Ballot. Rick reports that the petitions have been turned in and the signatures have been validated which means that SB-2 will be on the ballot for both town and school in May.

SB2 School Petition Form
SB2 Town Petition Form

Concord Monitor goes on the attack against The Bow Power Plant

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Potential for huge problem for Bow Taxpayers

The elitist and arrogant editorial board of the dead tree media, the Concord Monitor, went on the attack of the Bow Power Plant. The implication of their and Stonyfield Farm Yogurt, CEO Gary Hirshberg attack on the Bow Power Plant can mean a huge tax increase to the taxpayers of Bow resulting in massive job losses to the plant’s employees, and teachers and town employees who work for the Bow taxpayer.

The efforts of the Bow Power Plant to reduce emissions should be applauded and the American Jobs from American energy should be factored in, when thinking about the future of the plant. Hirshberg and the Monitor should think twice about their attack as well as the people of Bow. Why would anyone from buy Stoneyfield Yogurt or the Monitor if we knew they were purposely going to bankrupt our town.

Consider how many carbon dioxide consuming trees the Monitor cuts down to produce their paper and how much pollution is given off to make and deliver the paper. Same thing goes for Hirshberg’s Yogurt, how much methane is produced from the Cows that supply the milk for his yogurt. Let’s stop the hypocrisy.