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Monday, April 09, 2012

Tennessee’s Misguided Proposed Limits on Charter School Hiring

Recently, EdWeek and The Tennessean reported that Tennessee lawmakers are pushing legislation to limit the number of foreign born teachers that can be employed by a charter school. House Bill 3540 passed the House Education Committee earlier this week. The companion bill, Senate Bill 3345, cleared the Senate Education Committee last week and is headed to the Senate Floor. The bill has a host of other restrictions related to charter school affiliation with foreign nationals, and also requires charter schools to disclose all funding from foreign sources.

Without even getting into why the legislature would want to do this (here is a major supporter of the bill), this is a huge overreach into charter school autonomy. Autonomy is a bedrock principal of charter schools. And, as we’ve mentioned before, the ability to create and manage a team is a critical element of charter school autonomy. If charter schools are high quality and operating within the law, we should not restrict who charter schools can and cannot hire.

Moreover, this bill doesn’t even address any issues that currently exist. As reported in the EdWeek piece, Matt Throckmorton, the executive director of the Tennessee Charter Schools Association knows of only six teachers in the state who have been hired on a foreign-worker visa. But, he notes, the low threshold provided in this bill would restrict most charter schools from hiring even one foreign teacher on a work visa. Surely, limiting the potential pool of teachers can’t be productive, especially when we know there is a shortage of high quality teachers already.

Posted by: Eric Paisner, Vice President of Knowledge and Partnerships at 6:00 AM
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Monday, April 02, 2012

Charter Autonomy and Waivers: Can they coexist?

Last month, Greg Richmond, President & CEO of NACSA warned us in a guest blog about the potential losses of charter autonomy that could result from the state plans offered to the Department of Education in return for the first round of NCLB waivers.  Mr. Richmond wondered what might happen to low performing charter schools and the role of charter authorizers.

As we approach the second round of waivers, we continue to be concerned that charter schools could lose some of their flexibility, this time as it relates to staffing.  The ability to create and manage a team is a critical element of charter autonomy.  Todd Zeibarth, our VP of State Advocacy & Support stated the issue clearly in EdWeek: “Ensuring that charters preserve autonomy over teacher evaluations in the face of these statewide system overhauls has been an increasing challenge across the country…Some state policymakers... either overlook or don't care about preserving charter autonomy over these decisions in the process.”  This issue has come up outside of the waiver process (see here in Virginia where charter employees are considered district employees), and it has had an impact on charter growth.

Whether value-added-type measures proposed by some states for teacher evaluation are good solutions is still an open question.  But, either way, let’s make sure charters aren’t compelled to use these new state plans.  On top of being a threat to autonomy, it might actually be a step backwards for charter schools.  Many charters have done a really good job of figuring out how to hire, evaluate, reward and retain teachers.  Check out the Teacher Talent Toolbox released by the New Teacher Project this week to see what I mean.


Posted by: Eric Paisner, Vice President of Knowledge and Partnerships at 6:00 AM
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