tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post6794835875590218043..comments2024-03-14T13:50:26.981-04:00Comments on Chaz's School Daze: The DOE And UFT Have Made It Easier To Termminate Teachers.Chazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09964739497720364749noreply@blogger.comBlogger30125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-48441589857406838742017-09-06T07:39:20.689-04:002017-09-06T07:39:20.689-04:00The letter was from Karen Solimando, Esq., to Adam...The letter was <b>from</b> Karen Solimando, Esq., <b>to</b> Adam Ross, Esq.<br /><br />Karen is currently DOE's Executive Director of the Office of Labor Relations.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-25505025053768696972016-03-22T23:59:52.572-04:002016-03-22T23:59:52.572-04:00Terminated left and right. Literally true since th...Terminated left and right. Literally true since there have been exactly two, one on the left and on on the right. You are an hysterical henny-penny.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-8984727262874591922016-03-20T12:20:28.631-04:002016-03-20T12:20:28.631-04:00Thanks for the answer. The thing about the teachin...Thanks for the answer. The thing about the teaching profession is that veteran teachers really can't find work outside of the teaching profession that easily. If a veteran teacher is forced to quit working for the DOE due to BS politics, a pay cut in another district is better than no job at all. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-7020254199088509492016-03-20T11:04:02.143-04:002016-03-20T11:04:02.143-04:00Great question!
The quote is: " ...experienc...Great question!<br /><br />The quote is: " ...experienced (7 plus years) city teachers are simply priced out"<br /><br />The pay cut to step 1 is essentially unaffordable to them. They are priced out.<br /><br />(of course there are exceptions to this and to all things in life)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-35112274884783679112016-03-20T00:59:19.663-04:002016-03-20T00:59:19.663-04:00"Experienced teachers are simply priced out&q..."Experienced teachers are simply priced out". How are they "priced out" when you say that all newly assigned teachers are all placed on step 1? Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-66751818465606092882016-03-19T21:45:22.037-04:002016-03-19T21:45:22.037-04:00Anon 3:49
Step 1 and only Step 1 in my very large...Anon 3:49<br /><br />Step 1 and only Step 1 in my very large suburban school district no matter the length of experience. Been that way for the last 10 years or so. Will honor MA and grad credits. 300+ applicants for every job. Tenured teachers from other suburban districts rarely apply (too risky) and tenured and experienced (7 + years) city teachers are simply priced out.<br /><br />Most likely to be hired are 2-4 years experienced (full or part time) candidates with outstanding evaluations and recommendations who are excessed from the declining enrollment suburban districts. <br /><br />Not the profession I'd recommend to my children anymore.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-3158545055454689132016-03-19T15:49:44.122-04:002016-03-19T15:49:44.122-04:00Yes, but a teacher with say 15 or 20 years experie...Yes, but a teacher with say 15 or 20 years experience in NYC who gets a job in the suburbs will at most be placed on step 7 of most salary schedules. The question is, will suburban school districts be willing to pay a teacher at step 7 if they have tons of experience? Once again, this is all about money. This kind of nonsense never happened in the 90's when the economy was good and school districts were practically begging for experienced teachers. Today, experience equals less money for the district. All about the almighty dollar.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-52939312301847345652016-03-19T13:50:05.174-04:002016-03-19T13:50:05.174-04:00Very hard to get s teaching job in the suburbs ev...Very hard to get s teaching job in the suburbs even if you have a perfect record. Seems unfair too me. <br />NYC is not the only place the newbies are more prized than the experienced ones. Unfair also.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-57143368750058558522016-03-19T09:04:38.327-04:002016-03-19T09:04:38.327-04:00How in the Hell can you provide a reference from y...How in the Hell can you provide a reference from your prior principal if you quit your teaching job due to the fact that your principal was a menace to your career? A teacher who is leaving his or her school is most likely leaving BECAUSE of the principal. Do you actually see references from principals when a teacher left a school seeking a job in the suburbs?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-15587793887585347052016-03-19T09:00:41.380-04:002016-03-19T09:00:41.380-04:00"Experience beyond there or four years is not..."Experience beyond there or four years is not necessarily valued". Well, I guess you really are on a hiring committee as you plainly admit that the of hiring prospective teachers is all about money and not the vast amount of experience and knowledge that a veteran teacher could bring to your district. If I was a criminal in big trouble you can bet that I would want a lawyer with 10, 15, or 20 years experience to defend me. Teachers who would want to leave NYC after teaching for this long probably have a good reason to want to leave and that reason is either being bullied by a vindictive/ young principal or a the teacher is simply sick of the oppressive working conditions in NYC. (overcrowding, violence, etc.) If a hiring committee does not have the wisdom to see this or weight the fact that a teacher has had a successful 15+ year run as a teacher, then that hiring committee is just as bad as the ed-deformers who shaped this whole mess to begin with. Yes, you are telling it "like ti is" and that is what makes it so sad.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-9427507434795658682016-03-19T06:22:29.774-04:002016-03-19T06:22:29.774-04:00Anon 5:30/7:55
If you want to stand out from the ...Anon 5:30/7:55<br /><br />If you want to stand out from the experienced and inexperienced pack of job applicants in the suburbs (several hundred for each posted opening), you must highlight your excellence (if any) in your previous teaching position (if any). Past excellence is seen as the very best possible indicator of future excellence. Nothing new there. And provide written verification of such. Of course, you don't have to. Nor do you have to provide highly relevant references such as your former principal. Nor do you have to provide your undergraduate and graduate transcripts. Heck, you don't even have to dress modestly and appropriately. You won't be hired.<br /><br />I see less and less teacher applicants with "10, 15, 20+ years" experience in NYC teaching now find employment in suburbs in any case (since experience beyond three or four years is not necessarily valued, new hires are essentially on the step-1 pay scale, and there are several hundred applicants for each position). Again, not commenting on labor law, education law, far-fetched examples, or hopeful assumptions...just telling you like it is. <br /><br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-48704925871037747792016-03-18T07:55:34.286-04:002016-03-18T07:55:34.286-04:00The previous year or two prior to your interview i...The previous year or two prior to your interview is the most relevant. I cant imagine a district outside the DOE wanting to see an entire ten to fifteen year transcript of your previous ratings.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-85137051077073752842016-03-18T07:36:27.825-04:002016-03-18T07:36:27.825-04:00I was discontinued after my fourth year. The disco...I was discontinued after my fourth year. The discontinuance was based on an ineffective rating in my fourth year alone. My experience is that is/was near impossible to get a job on Long Island anyway even before this happened. I am currently working in a charter school where we do not use the Danielson ratings.<br /><br />I also think that it depends on the proximity to when you are applying to your new position.<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-62850379809920895692016-03-18T05:30:01.006-04:002016-03-18T05:30:01.006-04:00How does a hiring district get these evaluations? ...How does a hiring district get these evaluations? (Other than if a teacher provides the evaluations) I thought information in an ex teachers record are matters of privacy that are in a personnel file. I also thought that labor law only requires that a former employer only has to provide proof that an employee worked for whatever amount of time that he or she did in fact wok. The above poster who states that he or she works on a hiring committee on Long Island, can you please tell us how your district gets copies of a prospective teachers evaluations? Lastly, if a teacher has 10, 15, or 20+ years in as a teacher in NYC with a clean record up till the last year or so of their career, does this mean that ALL of these positive evaluations are also included when you look at a prospective teacher to hire? In other words, if a negative evaluation is emailed to your district, are not all the other 99% of the positive evaluations also emailed to your committee as well?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-87079437130633069352016-03-17T22:53:55.744-04:002016-03-17T22:53:55.744-04:00Of course a hiring district will want to see your ...Of course a hiring district will want to see your evaluations. And speak to your principal. And see your transcripts and certification. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-80260531839413219872016-03-17T17:05:13.177-04:002016-03-17T17:05:13.177-04:00If a teacher quits the DOE and applies to another ...If a teacher quits the DOE and applies to another district in NYS, my understanding is that the DOE only has to provide verification that the teacher worked for the DOE. If a teacher was rated ineffective and quits, that information is sealed in the DOE records. If a teacher wants to admit to a new potential district that they were rated ineffective, that his his or her own business. Someone fired from 3020a charges is a whole different ballgame as you have to state on a new job application that you either were terminated or you quit pending termination proceedings. However, if you quit the DOE after a mere ineffective, there is no way that a new district should be able to know that rating from my understanding as that info in not to be shared. Anybody here able to back this info up?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-64719188199513680212016-03-17T16:36:55.609-04:002016-03-17T16:36:55.609-04:00They will call your previous principal before hiri...They will call your previous principal before hiring youAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-67989614273718183152016-03-17T05:29:45.083-04:002016-03-17T05:29:45.083-04:00I agree. How would any other school district know ...I agree. How would any other school district know that you were rated "ineffective" (Unless you tell them at an interview) Anybody have any more thoughts on this topic?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-34964905620339392522016-03-17T05:02:40.371-04:002016-03-17T05:02:40.371-04:00Anon 8:11
Your past performance in an identical po...Anon 8:11<br />Your past performance in an identical position is the most important indicator to a potential employer (this is apart from having a relative on the local school board). Ineffective ratings, tenure denials, firings etc, will kill your chances . No surprise there. I can only speak for Long Idland and my 35 years of experience on hiring committees here.<br />Professional references, job interview, and demonstration lessons are certainly important too. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-14648594762212389882016-03-16T20:11:11.804-04:002016-03-16T20:11:11.804-04:00Anon 5:45. That's not true. How you do on your...Anon 5:45. That's not true. How you do on your job interview is what matters the most.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-59918843339728605132016-03-16T17:45:35.475-04:002016-03-16T17:45:35.475-04:00ANON 5:27
If you are rated ineffective in NYC you...ANON 5:27<br /><br />If you are rated ineffective in NYC you will NEVER be hired here on Long Island (given the number of applicants who do not have any past ineffective ratings).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-7745162711383165132016-03-16T15:32:49.092-04:002016-03-16T15:32:49.092-04:00And if they beat the charges they get thrown in AT...And if they beat the charges they get thrown in ATR pool for torture. Sick system! Union is behind it all and playing stupid while robbing millions every pay period.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-39152189360986843782016-03-16T15:31:39.398-04:002016-03-16T15:31:39.398-04:00Anon 9:15
The arbitrators are paid by the State a...Anon 9:15<br /><br />The arbitrators are paid by the State and not the DOE. However, it does appear these new arbitrators are siding more with the DOE than the teacher and the "awards" are more severe, including termination.<br /><br />Anon 5:27<br /><br />Yes, you can resign at anytime and the DOE simply puts you on their "do not hire" list but you can get a job in another NYS school district.Chazhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09964739497720364749noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-23569141151031486882016-03-16T15:27:29.431-04:002016-03-16T15:27:29.431-04:00Doesn't the UFT have an obligation to inform m...Doesn't the UFT have an obligation to inform members of this waiver of our rights? It's terrible that the UFT signed off on this, but it's even worse that they kept it hidden from us, especially when it can have such a dramatic effect on those of us being brought up on charges. I'm not a lawyer, but it would seem to me that a CBA has an affirmative legal obligation to inform those it represents of something like this. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20674128.post-35818770931879924452016-03-16T09:15:42.592-04:002016-03-16T09:15:42.592-04:00TENURED teachers are being terminated left and rig...TENURED teachers are being terminated left and right because the "unbiased arbitrators" are in no way "UNBIASED." They are pawns of the DOE and are being paid by the DOE. This is a total sham. No one is doing much about it because the union is powerless and weak. All "dues" money should be returned to the teachers and the union should just close up shop. It doesn't matter who the Union president is; they're all in the DOE's pockets. In a few years there will be no tenured teachers remaining and no one will stay long enough to retire!! They will have gotten their wish: NO MORE TENURE and NO MORE PENSION benefits. It's all over!<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com