November 8, 2006 | Get on the Bus | Observations on schools, kids, teachers, teaching and education by Scott Elliott, Dayton Daily News
 

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Wednesday, November 8, 2006

Dayton teachers vote down contract offer

Busy night tonight. Teachers meeting just broke up and the school board meets in 15 minutes. Quickly, Dayton teachers voted down a tentative contract offer from the board tonight. I spoke to about a half dozen teachers afterward and none said they voted for it. There was no vote total released, but the teachers I spoke with said there was very little support for the deal that would have given a 1 percent one-time payment in place of a raise.

I’ll have more later. I spoke with union President Pat Lynch in probably our longest conversation during these negotiations. In short, she said the members want the raise to be permanent, not a one-time payout, and that they believe the board has the money for a better offer and that it should focus more cuts on administration rather than teachers.

Permalink | Comments (39) | Categories: Dayton Public Schools

An omen of sorts?

In noticed in today’s Dayton Daily News that Fairborn schools settled their labor dispute yesterday.

Interesting timing, since Dayton teachers meet at 4 p.m. today at Dunbar High School to vote on the proposed contract offered by the school board. The sentiment of the teachers in comments here are pretty pointed. It will be interesting to see how the vote plays out.

If you’re a Dayton teacher, please come up and introduce yourself if you see me there. I’ll be the guy hanging around outside the meeting with a notebook in hand. I’d love to get your comments on the deal and today’s vote when the meeting is done.

Permalink | Comments (1) | Categories: Dayton Public Schools

Election 2006: What’s it mean for education?

strickland1.jpg

(Governor-elect Ted Strickland)

From this morning’s media reports, it seems the Democrats have taken the U.S. House and appear likely to also take control of the U.S. Senate. In Ohio, we will have a Democratic governor for the first time since 1991 and the D’s picked up several seats in the statehouse (although they are still well short of a majority).

That’s some serious change. And it has implications for education.

Let’s start on the national level.

No Child Left Behind

Democrats will now be in control when it comes time to reauthorized the controversial No Child Left Behind Law, which many of them have derided in political campaigns despite its bi-partisan birth in 2002. I see edublogger Alexander Russo doesn’t think they’ll be eager for big changes, but you can bet there will be changes that come with reauthorization and even small changes can have a wide ranging impact. There’s sure to be different priorities with Democrats leading the process rather than Republicans.

Ohio’s education priorities

For at least a decade, Ohio has been focused around standards and choice on the education front. The state has created one of the nation’s model testing programs, however it is controversial.

Ted Strickland mentioned education in his victory speech Tuesday, saying he wanted to do more to make early childhood education and college affordable. He is on record calling charter schools in Ohio a “rip off.”

So it would seem here that priorities will be different. As on the federal level, a big question in general is how the two parties work together. The need to do so is a big change, especially in Ohio where Republicans have pushed an education agenda all but independent of input from the other side. Strickland promised Tuesday to work cooperatively and House Speaker Jon Husted echoed that sentiment. That will be an interesting relationship to watch.

The state board of education

The state board in some ways is a smaller player than you’d expect when it comes to setting Ohio’s education priorities. But the board has tremendous impact on the details.

Susan Haverkos’ surprise win in the Dayton area’s third district replaces a politically-connected Bob Taft appointee —Tom Gunlock — with someone from outside politics. In an interview late Tuesday Haverkos described her goal of promoting more parent involvement and expressed some concern about the state’s approach to standards and testing.

Haverkos, who described herself as a conservative who is open-minded about teaching intelligent design, could also be pulled into that hot debate. On the same day she was elected, the chief intelligent design proponent on the board, Deborah Owens Fink, was soundly defeated after a nasty campaign.

Dayton will get a new school board member

Clayton Luckie was elected to the Ohio House in Dixie Allen’s old seat as expected. Look for him to resign quickly from the Dayton school board. The board, then, will be looking to replace the three-term board member in the next 30 days.

And you won’t see Luckie chumming around with Husted as Allen did. While Allen, who has now switched parties and was easily beaten by Judy Dodge for county commission, was a supporter of charter schools and one of the major proponents of vouchers, Luckie is stridently opposed to those initiatives. Instead, he’ll bring a new, informed voice in support of the issues of urban school districts.

While Allen and Husted shared similar views on many issues, Luckie and Husted are polar opposites on most of those issues.

(Image credit: AP)

Permalink | Comments (1) | Categories: My Favorite Posts, Schools and Politics

 

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