Thursday, June 28, 2007

Local Teachers Union Leaders Speak

Teachers unions are at the center of many raging education policy debates, and opinions about them are as strident and varied as they could be. But while representatives of the national unions, along with unions in big city schools districts, get most of the press covereage, the experiences and ideas of the leaders of the nation's thousands of smaller local unions are often left out. Which is a shame, because the local collective bargaining table is where many of the most important education decisions are actually made.

In a new Education Sector report, "Leading the Local," Susan Moore Johnson and her colleagues at the Harvard Graduate School of Education have conducted a series of in-depth interviews with 30 recently-elected local union leaders from a diverse group of districts across the country. Their thoughts, on a range of topics from teacher pay to union-management relations to leading multiple generations of teachers in an era of increasing competition and accountability, show that local union leader positions on these issues are much more complex and varied than people commonly understand. Regardless of where you stand on the issues, if you care about teacher policy, you should read this report.

No comments: