BATON ROUGE, La. - Last month, the Louisiana state officials approved a plan to evaluate K-12 classroom teachers based on student performance. This marks a significant rethinking of how a teacher's performance is assessed.
Louisiana's outgoing evaluation process gives almost all teachers favorable reviews, which doesn't jibe with the dismal results produced by the state's public education system. A 2011 federal report finds only 22 percent of Louisiana's students perform at "proficient" levels.
Fifty percent of the new evaluation process, which takes effect next school year, will be based on "growth in student achievement," reports the Associated Press. Louisiana's educators will be rated as highly effective, effective, or ineffective.
Any teacher rated as ineffective "will be placed in an intensive assistance program and then must be formally evaluated," reports the National Council on Teacher Quality, a nonpartisan organization that promotes education reform.
Teachers that continually fail to demonstrate improvement over two years could be fired.
The plan hasn't taken effect yet, but Louisiana's teacher unions have condemned the change as "a flawed idea" and a "fiasco" that will create a generation of "demoralized teachers."
Such union hysterics can also be heard in Oklahoma and Ohio, two other states that will soon switch to teacher evaluation models that incorporate evidence of student learning.
Louisiana, Ohio and Oklahoma are part of the growing trend toward injecting more accountability into public education. Parents and taxpayers in 23 states have passed laws requiring that teachers be evaluated based - at least partly - on whether or not they are getting the job done in the classroom.
Sandi Jacobs, vice president of the National Council on Teacher Quality, believes several more states could join the list of reformers in 2012.
"I suspect there are some states that are poised to move in (early 2012)," Jacobs told EAG, citing Connecticut, New Mexico, and New Jersey as possible contenders.
"There's a growing realization that the old way of evaluating teachers is really dysfunctional," she said. "There was a lot of activity about teacher evaluations in 2011.The states saw that this is not a taboo topic anymore."
Big changes in two years
As recently as 2009, only four states linked student learning to a teacher's performance. Many schools determined a teacher's effectiveness based on little more than the occasional classroom observation and the level of college degree he or she had.
Union collective bargaining agreements often complicated matters by stipulating rules that made honest assessments of teacher performance difficult, if not impossible.
Some stipulate that classroom observations must be done on schedule, so teachers can be ready to put forward their best effort on that day. 

Some contracts say administrators cannot use video equipment to observe teachers without their knowledge, as if it's somehow unfair to watch a teacher at work, doing what they generally do when they don't think administrators are watching.
A lot has changed in two years. In addition to D.C. public schools, 17 of the 23 states that link student learning to teacher evaluations do so in a significant way, according to the NCTQ report.
The states that make student achievement a major part of teacher evaluations include : Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and Tennessee, as well as D.C. public schools.
Eleven New Jersey school districts have begun implementing a pilot program that could lead to teacher tenure and pay being linked to student outcomes, reports NJSpotlight.com.
But the teacher unions still wield considerable power in all three states - Connecticut, New Mexico and New Jersey - that are close to making evaluation changes, making success far from a sure thing.
Paul Gessing, president of the Rio Grande Foundation, said that while teacher evaluation reform will be on the agenda when New Mexico's legislators convene for the upcoming 30-day session, it'll be "a tall order to get it done."
"New Mexico is resistant to any reform, even though we're 49th in almost everything, including graduation rates," Gessing told EAG.
Gessing said the state legislature is controlled by Democrats, who are mostly controlled by the teacher unions. As a result, "Everything here happens at a snail's pace," he said.
Obama's 'Race to the Top' credited for new reforms
In its recent "State of the States" report, the NCTQ writes that tying student learning to teacher performance  "marks an important shift in thinking about teacher quality" - away from teacher qualifications and toward "their effectiveness in the classroom and the results they get with students."
NCTQ credits President Obama's Race to the Top initiative for motivating states to rethink the evaluation process.
"The 2010 federal Race to the Top (RTTT) competition spurred unprecedented action among states to secure a share of $4 billion," the report reads. To qualify for federal funds, states had to devise in-depth plans for improving their K-12 systems, many of which included new teacher evaluation systems at least partially based on student test scores.
The federal government is currently offering another reform incentive to states. States can apply for waivers from No Child Left Behind benchmarks in exchange for reform commitments, including how teachers are evaluated.
That's happening in the Kentucky legislature, which seems likely to approve a bill that would standardize how teachers are evaluated throughout the state.
The bill's sponsor, State Rep. Carl Rollins, a Democrat, said he supports basing 30 percent of a teacher's evaluation on student achievement.
Unions support changes?
With the public generally supportive of accountability-based teacher evaluations, the nation's two largest teacher unions are eager to be seen as cooperative.
"Sadly ... we once again hear this myth about the union standing in the way of performance," wrote Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, in a recent letter to the New York Times.
Weingarten urged lawmakers to find a way "to fairly evaluate" teachers.
Last summer, delegates to the National Education Association's annual convention voted to adopt a new policy that acknowledges student performance a legitimate part of the evaluation process.
"What it says is, now we are willing to get into that arena," NEA President Dennis Van Roekel said. "Before, we weren't."
But look past the agreeable rhetoric and it's clear that the unions don't believe it's possible to incorporate student achievement into evaluations in a fair or scientifically valid way.
"We believe that there are no tests ready to do that," Segun Eubanks, the director of teacher quality for the NEA, told the New York Times.
Bottom line: The national teacher unions support performance-based teacher evaluations in theory, but not in practice.
The unions' double-talk may not matter, in the end. Lawmakers in both parties seem committed to these reforms, and this trend seems destined to keep growing.
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - The threat of going on strike has become an accepted, and unfortunately profitable negotiation ploy for Illinois teachers unions.
And sometimes the teachers actually walk out, over seemingly minor issues.
That could very well happen tomorrow in the Nokomis, Illinois school district, where teachers are scheduled to go on strike if a last-minute compromise is not reached.
There have been efforts to curb this trend, but nobody knows how effective they will be.
The state's new education reform law, SB 7, requires teacher unions and school boards to disclose their final, best offer once contract negotiations reach an impasse. It was hoped the new transparency measures would make teacher unions reluctant to divulge their wage and benefit demands, and more likely to quietly settle contract disputes without threats of striking.
But a recent spate of "intent to strike notices" filed by teacher unions in the Altamont, Nokomis, North Boone, and Lake Forest High School districts shows it may take more than public opinion to prevent unions from threatening to walk out, or possibly following through on their threats.
That was obvious last summer in the Illini Bluffs district, where the union delayed the start of the school year by nine days in order to protest the school board's desire to ensure its classrooms were being staffed by drug-free educators.
The union thought this was too oppressive, and decided to hit the picket lines. Judging from recent intent to strike notices, unions are willing to threaten work stoppages over issues like the amount of teacher prep time, the length of the contract, and differing future estimates of the Consumer Price Index.
The mere threat of a strike works to the unions' advantage, because it puts public pressure on the school board to give teachers what they want, regardless of whether the district can afford it.
These threats leave students hanging in the balance, wondering if their educations are going to be delayed over some adult labor disagreement. Parents are also left in limbo, wondering about child care if the teachers walk out.
The strike threats - and the occasion walkout - are ugly forms of extortion that should not be tolerated by Illinois state law. Teachers strikes are illegal in 38 states and it's high time Illinois got on that list.
As we've repeated many times, children should have an absolute right to a public education uninterrupted by adult disputes. And taxpayers have a right to see the schools they fund operating on a timely basis, regardless of labor concerns.
Unionized teachers never 'work without a contract'

Each teachers strike threat begins with the claim that the union is working without a contract. That's usually a bunch of baloney.
In Illinois, teacher union contracts are "evergreen," meaning that while a pact may have technically expired, the terms of the agreement stay in effect until a new deal is reached.
Many taxpayers don't realize this, and buy into the unions' propaganda that teachers are contract-less and vulnerable to random cuts in pay and benefits. In reality, working under the conditions of an "expired" contract might work to the union's benefit, especially during an economic downturn.
All Illinois school districts are facing severe financial difficulties, and need to balance their budgets, either by trimming labor costs or cutting student services. A teachers union can delay making necessary financial concessions by dragging its feet during contract negotiations. This allows members to live off the fat of the most recent contract while school board members sweat.
Board members will only sweat so long before breaking down and giving the union what it wants, or at least most of its wish list. This may be bad for taxpayers and students, but it's a way of life for union teachers in the Land of Lincoln.
Public schools exist for students, yet the unions feel no remorse about their habit of holding children hostage to get what they want at the bargaining table.
Is transparency enough?

Ben Schwarm, associate executive director of governmental relations for the Illinois
Association of School Boards, said the number of teacher unions that follow through on their strike threats has dropped in recent years. The Illini Bluffs strike has been the only one so far in 2011-12, and there were only two work stoppages during the 2010-11 school year.
But strike threats remain a common and effective tool for unions.
"Some believe the threat of strikes is harmful," Schwarm told EAG. "It can put pressure on a school board that increases the contract settlement."
Schwarm believes SB 7's transparency rules are a good move and will "keep things honest" during negotiations.
Collin Hitt, senior director of government affairs for the Illinois Policy Institute, said there have been few work stoppages in the past because teacher unions tend to get what they want during negotiations.
Under SB 7, school boards have the right to declare an impasse in negotiations, which requires the final offers from both sides to be made public.
"Because of this, the public will see relatively few teacher strikes and school districts will get better deals," Hitt told EAG.
Allowing taxpayers to know what is being negotiated during contract talks is a very good idea. For years the unions have managed to get their way at contract time largely due to citizen ignorance or apathy. Many people are hoping union leaders will feel a bit of embarrassment, and not be so demanding, if the public gets to see their self-serving and expensive wish lists.

On the other hand, some union leaders may feel no shame at all, and the new law may have little effect.
An 'intent to strike' roundup

The Nokomis district is bracing for a teachers strike on Dec. 1, unless a deal can be reached. The Nokomis Education Association, the local teachers union, wants its salary demands to be met, even though the district "expects to be $157,000 in the red this year," reports the State Journal-Register.
"However, the teachers believe the school can afford their requests," the paper reports.Neither side has offered the public details about demands or counter-offers.
In District 115, members of the Lake Forest Education Association recently voted 109-5 to authorize a teachers strike if a new contract cannot be reached by Dec. 7.
The union is upset that the school board estimates the Consumer Price Index will increase by 2 percent; the union believes the CPI will rise 2.8 percent. We assume the CPI is being used to determine the size of staff members' raises.
The length of the contract also has the two sides at loggerheads.
In Unit 10, the Altamont Education Association filed an intent-to-strike notice in October. The union wants a new three-year contract "with modest raises," while the school board is countering with a one-year deal containing a "soft freeze," reports the Effingham Daily News.
AEA members, who are paying about 25 percent of their health insurance costs, are upset that insurance rates have gone up and eaten into their take-home pay. Welcome to the real world, folks.
AEA Secretary Jeni Aldrich complained that a new initiative giving every high school student a lap top computer will result in more work for teachers.
"It's devastating that teachers are being asked to take on more responsibility," she said.
In North Boone, the union and the board have sparred over salaries, health insurance costs and retirement contributions. The district's website announced that a tentative agreement has been reached, but the details will only be revealed "after ratification by both parties."
The Galesburg and Sullivan school districts recently agreed to new contracts with their teachers unions, thus side-stepping the unions' threat to strike. The union representing teachers with the Zion-Benton Township High School district recently voted to strike, although the group has not filed an "intent to strike" notice with the state.
Contact Ben Velderman at ben@edactiongroup.org or (231) 733-4202