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History of Teaching

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History of Teaching Back in the1800 s, school was different from today. * * Nea.org/history * * * * http://www.aft.org/about/history/ * http://futureofchildren.org ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of Teaching


1
History of Teaching
  • Back in the1800s, school was different from
    today.

2
The Student Body
  • Students of all ages were in the same class.
     Some of the younger students were three or four
    years old and other students were sometimes older
    than the teacher!

3
Class Size
  • 80 or 90 pupils in one class from all grades
    with one teacher.

4
Letter from a student 1901
  • Right now Miss Matheson is living at the
    Durkson's house.  But next month it will be our
    turn to board her.  I wonder if one day parents
    will build the teacher her own house?

5
Compensation
  • Most teachers didn't get paid very much money.
     They received 4 to 10 a month.  A lot of
    teachers had to " board round", meaning they had
    to live with their students.
  • A teacher could not afford to support a family
    solely on this salary.

6
Discrimination in pay
  • According to Pennsylvania annual school reports
    published in local newspapers, men consistently
    received a higher salary than women.

7
(No Transcript)
8
Sound stressful?
  • Maria Waterbury, a teacher who went to a "water
    cure" resort in Elmira, New York, to recover her
    health, reported that the physician who greeted
    her said he was used to seeing members of her
    profession...

"We have the most trouble with teachers of any
class of patients. They are worn out. They wear
out faster than any other class of people."
9
The Right to Bargain Collectively
  • In 1935 Congress passed the National Labor
    Relations Act (Wagner Act), which guarantees the
    right of private employees to form and join
    unions to bargain collectively.

Note13 states still expressly prohibit
collective bargaining by public school teachers
or other public employees!
10
It got better
Slowly labor unions around the country fought
against oppressive, and debilitating work
environments.

11
But not much
  • The Depression years accentuated the problems
    facing teachers low salaries and economic
    insecurity. Worse, female teachers found
    themselves faced with contracts which still
    stipulated that an employed teacher must wear
    skirts of certain lengths, keep her galoshes
    buckled, not receive gentleman callers more than
    three times a week and teach a Sunday School
    class. -The American Teacher

12
Many teachers lost their jobs fighting for basic
rights we have today.
  • In the early 1900s Loyalty oaths were being
    required in some locales, and teachers were
    dismissed for joining the union or for working on
    school board election campaigns.

13
Protecting Teachers
  • In the 1950s, loyalty oaths cropped up again.
    The union took leadership in opposing this blight
    upon academic freedom during the McCarthy period,
    defending those teachers wrongly accused of
    subversion.

14
Fighting for civil rights
NEA was also in the forefront of the civil rights
movement, filing an amicus curiae brief in the
historic 1954 Supreme Court desegregation case
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, and
expelling locals that had not followed an earlier
mandate to desegregate.
15
Public vs. Private
  • Until the early 1960s, teachers had no due
    process or collective bargaining rights. Many
    teachers had only a two-year college degree.
    School boards in some states fired teachers
    simply because they had attained too much
    education and had advanced too far on the salary
    schedule. No legal recourse for teachers was
    available.

16
The Right to Collectively Bargain
  • In 1962 Wisconsin became the first state to pass
    legislation governing public employee bargaining.
    The Wisconsin statute required local governments
    to bargain in good faith with employee groups and
    also created administrative enforcement measures.
    The law also marked the beginning of widespread
    recognition of the rights of public employees to
    bargain collectively. Within the next five years,
    New York and Michigan passed similar laws, and by
    1974 thirty-seven states had passed legislation
    permitting public employee bargaining a number
    that remains unchanged to this day.

17
What rights did we achieve?
  • The far-reaching rules established may
    include working conditions, such as the length of
    the school day, hours of instruction and
    preparation time, and interaction time with
    parents class size the number and
    responsibility of supplemental classroom
    personnel, such as aides employment protection
    assignment to schools and grade levels criteria
    for promotion reductions in force professional
    services in-service and professional
    development instructional policy committees
    student grading and promotion teacher
    evaluation performance indicators grievance
    procedures student discipline and teacher
    safety and the exclusion of pupils from the
    classroom.

The list goes on
18
Today
  • Suffice it to say that collective bargaining
    agreements, through negotiated rules and
    regulations, establish school policy and govern
    how teachers, administrators, parents, and
    students interact in the delivery of educational
    services.

As the Wall Street Journal noted nearly three
decades ago, Teachers unions have become
crucial forces in deciding how public education
should be run in the U.S.
19
The following are some of the matters that are
often the subject of bargaining today
  • Academic freedom
  • Curriculum
  • Wages and salaries
  • Training
  • Hours, workload, and teaching responsibilities
  • Tenure and probationary period
  • Promotion
  • Reappointment
  • Reclassification and reduction
  • Evaluation procedures
  • Grievance procedures
  • Personnel files
  • Student discipline
  • Retirement benefits
  • Sick leave
  • Leaves and sabbaticals

20
Some Important National Issues addressed by NEA
today
  • No Child Left Behind (NCLB) /Elementary and
    Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
  • Education funding
  • Merit pay
  • Minority Community Outreach
  • Dropout prevention
  • Achievement gap
  • Social Security Offsets (GPO/WEP)
  • School vouchers
  • Charter schools

21
Join Us!
  • Youre one of the hardest-working people in the
    United States, and youre doing our most
    important workpreparing the next generation of
    citizens. Youre not paid what youre worth,
    though youll likely spend a good deal of your
    own money for things your district wont supply
    your students. Youre getting better every day,
    though policymakers who havent been in a
    classroom since they were students will tell you
    how to do your job.
  • Hang tough! Keep the faith! And keep putting your
    students firstyour Association has your back.
  •  
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