Teacher's Union Work Rules Have Consequences

Capitol Report New Mexico - In light of the protests concerning public sector unions in Wisconsin, Ohio — and to a much less noisy degree — Detroit and Tennessee, a study conducted by a Yale law student is drawing a lot of attention by concluding that when it comes to teachers unions, students in poorer neighborhoods end up getting shortchanged. On top of that, the study used New Mexico public schools as its laboratory. Benjamin Lindy, a former middle school teacher himself, wrote in the Yale Law Journal that New Mexico provided a perfect “natural experiment” to study the effects of mandatory collecive bargaining on public school students. Read full story here: News New Mexico
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1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Easy fix. If I were in charge, all principals, teachers, staff, etc would be rotated every 3 years, No ifs, ands, or buts. This would move these folks around, good and bad, break up clicks, and give everyone a chance to see how the other side lives. Those who didn't like it could leave.

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