Plan to host Teach for America at Univ. of Washington highlights hypocrisy of ed reform

A controversial new plan to host and fast-track Teach for America recruits alongside regular M.A. teaching students at Seattle’s University of Washington sparks protests and highlights the hypocrisy and double standards of ed reform

The doublespeak of ed reformers who repeatedly declare that the key to a successful education is to put an “excellent” teacher in every classroom, and then turn around and promote young, Teach for America recruits — with only five weeks’ training, no in-class experience, and only a two-year commitment to the profession — as the answer, has come into sharp focus at the University of Washington in Seattle these past two weeks.

On May 11, the University of Washington’s College of Education announced it would sponsor Teach for America at its teaching college, providing the missing component to the deal that TFA, Inc.  struck with the Seattle School District last fall.

Last November, Seattle’s school board approved a (troubling and one-sided) contract to allow TFA, a short-term alternative teacher credentialing program, into Seattle’s hiring pool for the first time. TFA, Inc. also demands a financial and university sponsor in order to brings its program to a new location, and charges school districts an extra $4,000 or more per year for each trainee it hires, in “recruitment, placement and training” fees. (Evidently the millions of dollars from private investors and the $50 million recently granted to TFA, Inc. by the federal government isn’t enough to cover expenses.) Those in the parent ed advocacy community guessed that corporate ed reform sugardaddy Bill Gates would pony up at some point. And he did — his new Washington STEM organization will pay the $4,000 annual fee for the science and math TFAers, which would otherwise be billed to our cash-strapped district. But who would be the university sponsor? We waited for an announcement.

There were rumors that the University of Washington was going to take this on. After all, the new Dean of Education, Tom Stritikus, is a former TFAer himself, and he coincidentally wrote an op-ed in the Seattle Times about the values of “alternative” teacher preparation programs, just a few weeks before then-School Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson out of the blue proposed bringing TFA to our already teacher-filled, recession-struck district.

The University of Washington already has a well-regarded M.A. teacher ed program (ranked ninth in nation by U.S. News & World Report in 2011). It takes two years and requires a year of student teaching in an actual classroom.

Then the announcement finally came two weeks ago. From the U.W. press release:

Teach For America negotiated directly with Seattle and Federal Way school districts to allow their corps members to interview alongside other candidates for open teaching positions in those districts. Corps members who are hired complete an intensive summer training institute before becoming U-ACT students and begining (sic) full-time teaching.

Those hired will enroll as graduate students in the College of Education. They will earn teacher certification through U-ACT and, in subsequent years, a master’s degree through one of the college’s existing programs — in Curriculum & Instruction, Special Education, Leadership & Policy Studies or Educational Psychology.

In this new arrangement, the students in the TFA special program will be housed alongside the full program students, but would only be required to take a five-week course, after which they would be deemed immediately eligible to apply for a full-time, full-salaried teaching position, while still learning on the job. The full-term U.W. students, meanwhile, won’t be certified and able to enter the workforce until they have completed the first year of their program.

Not surprisingly, this announcement was not well received by Dean Stritkus’ current M.A. teaching students. Outrage, dismay and confusion soon followed. One student referred to the UW-TFA deal as a “slap in the face.” You can’t blame them for feeling betrayed by Stritikus and the university.

Here they have been spending two years following the rigorous standards the dean ostensibly believes in, diligently studying the art and science of teaching, paying their own way for a $23,000 ($50,000 nonresident) masters degree at what they thought was a reputable teaching institution. They are spending hours of in-class time in actual public school classrooms getting invaluable experience, all in the hopes of applying for one of the rare teaching positions in the fall. Now they are being told that a stream of fresh grads will be brought in alongside them at U.W., given a special, condensed education, will do little to no student teaching, but will compete against them for the same jobs.

It must feel like running a 10-mile race, only to have the judges allow a group of new runners join in the last 100 yards and race you to the finish — on skateboards.

To have these two programs side by side at U.W. will send a pretty schizophrenic message to the students there. After all, here is Stritikus, essentially telling one group of his students that it takes two full years of dedicated study towards an education degree to be fully qualified and ready to be a solid teacher, while telling another group, a five-week “accelerated” course is all you need.  It’s clearly inconsistent — and defies common sense. It’s also a recipe for huge resentment.

The University of Washington has a credibility problem on its hands — and reputation.

How could anyone find this double-standard even remotely fair? It isn’t. Furthermore, how can Stritikus, a TFA alum and loyal supporter of the enterprise, not show favoritism towards the TFA-ers? So there’s a potential conflict of interest problem as well.

This hypocrisy was highlighted at a tense and emotional meeting last week between Dean Stritikus and his M.A. students, which was covered by a local TV news station. Understandably, Stritikus’ current students had a lot of questions and opinions about the proposed arrangement.

Why is Stritikus and U.W. bending over backward to accommodate TFA? Here are a couple of clues. Stritikus himself is a TFA alum with very little primary and secondary teaching experience. So he comes into the equation with a potential bias and perhaps limited understanding of the true demands of the field. He became dean only last September, coincidentally right before Seattle’s school superintendent introduced a proposal to bring Teach for America to Seattle. Then-Superintendent Goodloe-Johnson was trained by the pro-privatizing Broad Foundation, which has vowed to help institutionalize Teach for America in the nation’s public schools system, and until recently, she was a member of Broad’s board of directors — alongside Wendy Kopp, CEO of TFA, Inc.

More recently, a trove of hundreds of documents and e-mails between Stritikus and Teach for America has emerged, revealed by the public disclosure requests of two parent activists, one a local education blogger, the other the public school parent of a child with special needs, one of the categories of children TFA plans to focus on in Seattle. These reveal that Stritikus had plans, dating back from at least since his appointment last fall, to facilitate the introduction of TFA to Seattle using his new position at U.W. to do so.

According to Melissa Westbrook on the Save Seattle Schools Community Blog:

•      The day before his appointment was even announced (August 18th), he contacted Wendy Kopp, the head of TFA.  He asks her if she wants to build an on-line endorsement program for TFA with UW and to do press for him.  She replies, “As you say, this is a terrific moment in the history of TFA and hopefully is a just a harbinger of all that’s to come in terms of the influence of alumni on teacher education.”

•     Further on in the e-mail, she says, “Let’s absolutely see what we can cook up in terms of ways of working together…”

•    Just one week later, he is tries to get together with TFA staff in Washington, D.C.  He says, “I would love to be able to get a set of possible ideas for collaboration on the table and identify priorities.”

•    Also that week, he says, “I offered to help Janis in anyway she needed.” Janis is Janis Ortega, the TFA director for Puget Sound.

•    In an e-mail on Sep 13, 2010, again just weeks after he became Dean, Stritikus writes to a TFA official and says, “By that time (9/29-10/1), I will have talked to key faculty, developed a sketch plan for the master’s degree, and gotten a handle on the certification issues.”

It would seem that Stritikus has a severe case of divided loyalties.

Given the fact that students in the U.W. MA teaching program are likely paying their own way (or into debt), while the TFA-ers get their training funded by TFA, Inc. ($50 million of it coming from taxpayers) and local school districts, which have to pony up an extra fee for each TFA-er they hire, and you’ve got economic inequality in the mix as well.

The public disclosure documents also indicate that Stritikus is trying to arrange special funding for the TFA-ers that the other students will ostensibly not be eligible for.

Indeed, an announcement for a Teach for America general recruiting “info session” that was held on the U.W. campus last October 14 explains these benefits in more detail:

Benefits include:

•Full salary and benefits ranging from $27,000-$50,500 (depending on region/cost of living) •Two year deferral/forbearance on loans •AmeriCorps Education Award of $10,700 over two years •Graduate school and employer partnerships •For ALL academic backgrounds and majors

In the latest development in this story, the College of Education has just announced a new summer school option for existing M.A. students to graduate early. This appears to be a response to the obvious inconsistency inherent in sponsoring the TFA program. But, in this apparent effort to quiet controversy and level the playing field, rather than demanding equal rigor, investment of time and money from the TFA students, the U.W. College of Education is potentially lowering the bar and diluting its rigor to match the standards of TFA.

It has never been clear why TFA should be brought to the Puget Sound area in the first place. There is no teacher shortage here. In fact, the Seattle School District recently announced it would lay off 30 teachers this year. Have low-income, minority parents or those with special needs children (both targeted communities for Seattle’s TFAers) been demanding short-term, fast-tracked young temps in their kids’ classrooms? No. Or are major ed reform funders like the Gates Foundation, and others who would like to bring privatization to Seattle’s public schools, trying to create a spigot of young, impressionable, non-union teaching staff for future charter schools? (Charters are currently illegal in Washington State, but there are forces here trying to change that.) Or do they want teaching staff or future “leaders of education” who will absorb and perpetuate their brand of top-down, test-heavy, approach to teaching? These are some of the theories swirling about.

Dean Stritikus, the University of Washington and Teach for America can try to spin this problematic arrangement all they want. They can even give the special program a different name to disguise its connection to TFA  (U.W. has christened the TFA path “UW Accelerated Certification for Teachers, or U-ACT” – not to be confused with “U-ACT,” the anti-human-trafficking organization). But it doesn’t matter. This dual-track teaching certification plan is patently unfair and inconsistent. It’s rigged in favor of the TFA-ers.

The Seattle School District has signed a (biased, liability-heavy) contract with TFA all but assuring it will hired 25-35 TFAers in the fall — Wendy Kopp confidently stated as much on local radio recently. (It’s not lost on district observers that this number almost exactly matches the number of teacher layoffs just announced by the Seattle School District. Meanwhile enrollment is growing district-wide and classrooms are overcrowded. Parents fully expect that the district will need to rehire for those positions in the fall. The question is, who will it choose to fill them?)

The TFA students will be given every unfair advantage. And in the end, as many as 80 percent of them won’t even remain in the profession past their third year. How is this worth the investment of time, money and now, resentment?

This controversy has prompted letters to Stritikus and U.W. like this one, from a U.W. alum (commenting as “MapleLeafer): “Your obvious willingness to appease the forces in our society aligned against public education has angered me, your obvious willingness to sell out the integrity of my alma mater has made me mortified and your obvious willingness to do virtually anything to support an organization like the T.F.A. has made me incensed. Shame on you and the whole U.W. College of Education – you should know better.”

According to the Seattle Times, “UW’s planning for the [U-ACT] program is well under way, and the program is awaiting final approval from the state’s Professional Educator Standards Board.”  Perhaps the Educator Standards Board will see through this contradiction and unfairness and not approve it.

In the meantime, however, the blatant hypocrisy, political maneuvering and self-interest of ed reformers doesn’t come much more clearly illustrated than this.

–Sue Peters

PAA – Seattle

Posted on by suep. Posted in Uncategorized
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  • hb

    Gates is a blight on Seattle.

  • ConcernedFriend

    If the TFA teachers stay for only two years, then how is this competing with other Washington teachers? Also, if after completing you M.A. in Education, if you cannot outshine such a “poorly qualified” competitor in an interview for an open teaching position… who do you really have to blame for that other than yourself. All college students are entering the work world with a debilitating sense of ENTITLEMENT. Just because you graduate with a M.A. In Ed does not guarantee you a job, and it is up to you to beat out the competition and sell your unique skill set and experience. Maybe schools want TFA because they are finding the current prospective teachers incompetent, difficult to work with, overconfident, or anything you could imagine. Don’t complain, welcome the competition to prove why you are the best teacher for their schools

    • Stephanie S

      If education was completely void of pay scales based on education (which under the current system is more on the necessary side even though I’m not a fan of it), your argument would stand up better. Ignoring TRI, incoming teachers with only a bachelors (that’ll be our TFA kiddos) will make about 8k less a year than teachers with a graduate degree. In other words, they’re more competitive because they’re cheaper and chances are they’ll leave once they get their masters which would make them more expensive.

      Please note, this concern isn’t one I have, but I understand the basis of the argument. The concern isn’t necessarily whether or not you’ll be competitive, but the fact under the current system it is impossible for teachers with a masters to compete with the bachelors in terms of pay, yet UW does not offer a credentialed bachelors program and requires longer commitment (and consequently more tuition) and experiences for their masters program than that which is required of the TFAers. You can’t, as an academic institution, say “yeah, you need to give us 24k and hang around for two years to be a teacher” to one group of people and tell another “eh, 5 weeks in this crash course & you’ll be fine because you came from a prestigious university and majored in business administration – which is sort of like teaching kids who were sexually abused and will smear poop on your face when you’re not looking”. I went to a great undergraduate school (woo, Tartan Pride), and while I know they can give you a lot of thinking skills essential to be a great teacher, it’s not going to give you the experience of working with a mentor teacher in a class setting.

      If you want to say it’s not about the money because if you throw on the 4k districts have to pay to TFA, this savings decreases to 4k (though I believe Gates is covering the math & science teachers, so that leads their special ed teachers as pricey). There are a number of other benefits TFA teachers receive that their masters counterparts at UW will not such as the bonus pay of 10k at the end of their 2 year contract that makes them better reimbursed than their masters counterparts, but I believe the district isn’t covering that additional cost but instead it comes from other taxes + a variety of different sources of funding.

      Honestly, for me, I’m not concerned at all about the competition from TFAers in an overcrowded district where they’re targeting essentially math and special education. Seattle is a disorganized hellhole where I’ve seen time after time special education students be subjugated to standards I simply find unethical – such as using the inclusion model with a student who continues to get further and further behind her peers in math when she is already 3 years behind, changing a self-contained severe disability program to include K-5 rather than just K or K-1 (you might not think this is mortifying, but when you have kids working on fractions paired with kids working on going pee pee on the potty, you’ll catch on pretty quickly), and so I refuse to work there.

      So what is my concern? The kids in special education are already behind. We don’t need to make them suffer any more through the ineffective teaching methods of TFAers (source below) who wander in blindly not knowing what effective instructional practices are for kids with LD, ID, ASD, EBD, or even more severe disabilities. Those teachers will be more effective once they’re credentialed usually, sure, but those kids don’t have time to lose or waste being a practice dummy so maybe those teachers will be more effective their second or third year. They’re aiming for a minimum of 25 TFA teachers. Then if they were all elementary teachers and had the doubtfully small case load or class size of 24, that’s still 600 kids being affected.

      I think the advantage of UW’s mentor set up is the kids won’t suffer if we suck. If we suck, the teacher will (hopefully) step in immediately, help us, and not waste any of the kids’ time. Learning on the job doesn’t offer that benefit to the student (customer). Not to mention all the legal implications of having untrained teachers without a special ed endorsement writing legal binding documents like IEPs, aha.

      If new TFA teachers were able to consistently stand as more effective than new credentialed teachers, I’d be all for it coming to the Puget Sound, but that research simply doesn’t exist and many saying the opposite is true does. Case is, we already have an excessive pool of potential candidates, an overflowing sub pool, and plenty credentialed candidates. Are ALL credentialed candidates going to be better than the young, starry-eyed, ambitious TFAer stereotype proponents of the campaign have idolized? Of course not. That’s what interviews are ideally for. Are TFAers going to be the cheapest possible teacher available for hire out of that pool? Under the current pay scale and assuming the district gets someone else to foot the bill for additional costs, you bet your ass they will be.

      Claims I made about TFA teacher effectiveness are based on this article discussing existing research: http://www.greatlakescenter.org/docs/Policy_Briefs/Heilig_TeachForAmerica.pdf

    • http://www.stonepooch.com/ablog Audrey

      The purpose behind using TFA is not to put the best teacher into the best spot, but to create jobs for a small elite whose intent is to use their privileged position to leverage themselves jobs and appointments elsewhere. Disadvantaged children are tools for the individual advancement of privilege. It is strictly an abuse of power to allow the children of privilege to fast track themselves into positions that they are not qualified for and that they have no intention of remaining in. When they leave, a new temporary crew of TFA graduates will be invited to to leverage their career prospects through the use of disadvantaged children and the quiet undermining of teaching profession.

  • Ivan Weiss

    @”Concerned friend”:

    TFA people are hardly “competition” for certified, credentialed teachers. The game has been rigged in their favor, as Sue’s account, the Seattle Times’ account, KING-TV’s account, and everyone else’s account demonstrates. The “entitlement” you speak of (in capital letters yet) is all in the other direction. Your argument falls flat.