Friday, March 30, 2012

In Big Change, Inslee Backs Teacher Evaluations as “Significant” Part of Hiring and Firing Decisions

As posted online at Publicola.com
Caffeinated News & Gossip. Your daily Morning Fizz

Jay Inslee at education fundraiser at downtown Sheraton this morning.
1. At a “Conversation on Education” sponsored by the Alliance for Education this morning (AFE is a nonprofit that raises money for Seattle Public Schools), the two gubernatorial candidates, former Democratic US Rep Jay Inlsee and Republican Washington State Attorney General Rob McKenna, agreed that the teacher evaluations bill that passed this session, one the teachers’ union had criticized, needed to go even further.
In a big change from last summer, when Inslee told me he opposed a bill last session that linked evaluations to “reduction in workforce” (RIF) decisions, Inslee told the crowd this morning that “to ensure teacher quality … when we make staffing decisions, we [should] make that evaluation system a significant part of the decision in hiring and firing and [reduction in force] decisions.”
Education reform issues such as teachers’ evaluations have caused an internal rift in the Democratic Party, something McKenna has exacerbated by making Democratic President Obama’s education reform agenda his own while Inslee has faced criticism for moving more cautiously.
Education has been a hot issue in the gubernatorial campaign this year. (The national teachers’ union is Inslee’s biggest lifetime funder at the congressional level—and the local chapter, the Washington Education Association, has endorsed Inslee. The teachers’ union has fought many of the reforms that McKenna has pushed for, such as prioritizing teacher evaluations over seniority in personnel decisions.)
At this morning’s forum, moderated by KCTS anchor Enrique Cerna, McKenna said the next step was to “move beyond” the bill to “pay our great teachers more” based on the evaluations. “Performance in the evaluation system needs to be linked to compensation and not be based on seniority,” McKenna told Fizz afterward.

McKenna at this morning’s education fundraiser
Fizz asked Inslee why he had changed his position on ed reform. “If it’s a change,” he said, “it’s a change in the right direction.” He elaborated, saying now that he’d seen the results of the evaluation pilot projects passed in 2009, he was more comfortable moving forward with evaluations.
McKenna came out in support of the idea in his campaign kickoff speech last June.

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