ok, how do you propose we get rid of bad teachers and keep (and reward) the good ones?
I disagree with most of the shit said about teachers in this thread, especially the crap about it being a "dream job" (lol, wtf?) but I've never heard a good argument why tenure is necessary or even a good thing.
Fine here we go:
1. Have a team composed of teachers who are nationally board certified in the subject area to evaluate lessons, to sit in on classes unannounced, and who interview a broad spectrum of kids that the teacher teaches in a private manner. Ensure these teachers do not teach at the district and that they have no personal conflicts with the teacher. Allow them liberal access to the teacher's record. Have these evaluations randomly - not everyone gets evaluated yearly (cost and time involved would be more intense). Interview colleagues. Interview the school principal. Interview the counselor. Interview parents from different socio economic and racial groups which are all fairly represented. With all of these interviews you should have a good measure of a teacher's ability. Design an improvement plan that EVERY teacher gets. Do not make it punitive - UNLESS - not followed or ignored. Teachers who do not follow these improvement plans should then be disciplined.
Say 30% of the staff should go through this each year - new teachers yearly until a certain point decided locally. When next evaluated the teacher would need to have a detailed folder full of proof of their attempts to follow the improvement plan. End standardized testing totally. The only tests colleges look at are grade point averages, difficulty of classes taken, and ACT/SAT scores. This should be enough.
After 5-10 excellent ratings and national board certifications, allow these excellent teachers to be evaluators.
2. Allow teachers academic freedom. Most people don't realize that teachers (especially math and English) are FORCED to teach scripted curriculums. It is crazy to evaluate professionals for regurgitating a scripted curriculum that tells you to be on page 97 problem 10 at a certain date. These decisions are political, yet the teacher gets blamed when they do not work. Allow every teacher to do it their way. You will get wonderful diversity and maybe not wreck the souls of so many talented professionals. Principals should review lesson plans and ensure that the teachers are teaching the proscribed curriculum and follow up with some class visits. In other words, all teachers have to teach histograms - but leave it up to the teacher to design the lesson.
3. Allow teachers more planning time. Teachers could design wonderful interdisciplinary units with other teachers more often if they had more time.
4. Ensure you have top of the line principals. They are paid excellent salaries.
5. Back teachers up as an authority figure. End the discipline mess in most schools. If you can't behave and let others learn, you need a special alternative program.
6. Give teacher's respect and recognition. All they get is dumped on. The reality is that most teachers cannot change a student's background in 50 minutes a day 9 months of the year. You have an occasional superstar in the field - such as Jaime Escalante was. Is this not true of every field? No one expects every NBA player to be as good as Michael Jordan, yet everyone seems to have these unrealistic expectations for teachers. Everyone knows that home is where education and respect begins. I don't know what ever happened to the common sense that you can lead a horse to water, but you can't really make them drink.
7. Allow teachers to earn extra money for tutoring, doing weekend extensions with kids, etc. Don't expect them to walk on water for free. I know alot of teachers get 'some' extra pay for doing these things, but it is normally not that good.
8. Realize that the median pay for teachers vary widely. In some states you are lucky to start in the mid 20's and retire 20 years later in your lower 40's. Many many states go from around low 30's on the pay scale to mid 40's. Only a few states do much better than this.