Merit pay for teachers not such a great idea
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Alan Remington
Regarding teacher merit pay, when you come right down to the nuts and
bolts, merit pay for teachers isn’t as good an idea as it might seem
-- not because it’s not a good idea, but because the judging will
need to be mostly subjective, and when talking money, objectivity is
more sensible.
Retired now, almost 30 years ago I left the business world to
teach. As a small business owner with fewer than 250 employees, I had
been able to give merit raises. Talented people were the heart of my
business, and that was a good way to keep them. The school at that
time was also a tightly run ship. No more.
As the public seems to sense but is unable to pin down in
specifics, their tax dollar supports a bloated educational
bureaucracy. At one time, the curriculum determined the budget. Now
the school’s educational programs are allocated whatever is left.
Good teachers deserve more money than they get, and merit pay might
seem like a quick fix, but it’s like putting a Band-Aid on cancer. A
better solution than merit pay might be to take a good, hard look at
the entire education payroll. We need to be paying more to those who
come in direct daily contact with our kids rather than to those who
merely handle the paperwork. There are administrators making more
than $100,000, while some teachers earn a third of that. Which is
more valuable to our society?
* ALAN REMINGTON is a resident of Costa Mesa.
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