Teachers Unions and Resistance to Education Reform
A WSJ editorial on teachers unions resistance to ed reform:
Education reformers had good news at the
ballot box this month as voters in Washington and Georgia approved
measures to create new charter schools. But as the reform movement
gathers momentum, teachers unions are giving no quarter
in their massive resistance against states trying to shake up failing
public education.
…The tension is especially acute for black
parents whose children are trapped in the worst public schools. In other
states, black organizations that march in lockstep with Democrats and
their union allies have also been slow to catch
up, but the message is getting louder. In Harlem last year, thousands
of parents protested the NAACP's role in a lawsuit to block school
closings and the expansion of charter schools.
No reform effort is too small for the
teachers union to squash. In this month's election, the National
Education Association descended from Washington to distant Idaho,
spending millions to defeat a measure that limited collective
bargaining for teachers and pegged a portion of teachers' salaries to
classroom performance. In Alabama, Republican Governor Robert Bentley
says he's giving up on his campaign to bring charter schools to the
state after massive resistance from the Alabama
Education Association.
Unions fight as hard as they do because they
have one priority—preserving their jobs and increasing their pay and
benefits. Students are merely their means to that end. Reforming public
education is the civil rights issue of our
era, and each year that passes without reform sacrifices thousands more
children to union politics.
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