American Federation of Teachers (AFT) President Randi Weingarten recently talked about the union’s leadership role
on one of the education reforms getting the most attention of late: teacher evaluations. The union has developed an evaluation framework and has worked with more than 50 AFT locals to put it in place. A few of them, like Pittsburgh, PA, New Haven, CT, and Cleveland, OH, have made the evaluation framework a central part of their newly developed teacher contracts.
According to AFT’s document A Continuous Improvement Model for Teacher Evaluation
, “…teacher evaluation procedures are broken—cursory, perfunctory, superficial, and inconsistent.” But that doesn’t mean they are inconsequential. They are used to make critical decisions ranging from continued employment in a district to eligibility for incentive or bonus pay. They are seldom a useful tool in improving teacher performance.
The union calls for “regular, rigorous reviews by trained evaluators, including peers and principals, based on professional teaching standards, best practices and student achievement. The goal is to improve public education by helping promising teachers improve, enabling good teachers to become great, and identifying those teachers who shouldn’t be in the classroom at all.”
AFT’s evaluation model outlines the union’s principles for effective teacher development and evaluation, and as reported here earlier, student test scores are included as one measure of teacher performance. The model states, “Student test scores based on valid assessments should be one of the performance criteria, as should classroom observations, portfolio reviews, appraisal of lesson plans and student work.”
AFT’s framework includes these teacher development and evaluation components:
AFT notes that its role in developing more rigorous teacher evaluations—including the use of student test scores—may come as a surprise to some, but teachers as well as students benefit when they are surrounded by well-prepared and supported colleagues.
—“AFT Chief Talks Teacher Evaluation,” by Stephen Sawchuk, Education Week’s Teacher Beat blog, July 9, 2010.