I'll leave you to judge this report from Murry Bergtraum CL John Elfrank-Dana for yourselves:
Janella Hinds, VP High Schools, was asked if the UFT sees that the
Tennessee teachers union (TEA) got their state legislature to drop
evaluating teachers by test scores in their Teacher evaluation scheme.
Can we call in the Vote Cope chips to do the same here? Janella says we will work with the current system.
If you missed it, this from Diane Ravitch (note: TN State Ed Comm, Kevin Huffman, is Michelle Rhee's ex and father of her 2 children - and another Teach for America slug posing as an educator).
In a stunning reversal,the Tennessee Legislature overwhelmingly repealed a law to evaluate
teachers by test scores, and the law was swiftly signed by Governor
Haslam. On a day when Arne Duncan withdrew Washington State’s failure to
enact test-based teacher valuation system, this is a remarkable turn of
events.
Joey Garrison of The Tennessean reports:
“Gov. Bill Haslam has signed into law a bill that will prevent
student growth on tests from being used to revoke or not renew a
teacher’s license — undoing a controversial education policy his
administration had advanced just last summer.
“The governor’s signature, which came Tuesday, follows the Tennessee
General Assembly’s overwhelming approval this month of House Bill 1375 /
Senate Bill 2240, sponsored by Republicans Rep. John Forgety and Sen.
Jim Tracy, which cleared the House by a unanimous 88-0 vote and the
Senate by a 26-6 vote.
“That marked a major repudiation of a policy the Tennessee Board of
Education in August adopted — at Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman’s
recommendation — that would have linked license renewal and advancement
to a teacher’s composite evaluation score as well as data collected from
the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System, which measures the
learning gains of students.
“The bill to reject the policy had been pushed chiefly by the
Tennessee Education Association, the state’s largest teachers’
organization, which engineered a petition drive to encourage Haslam to
sign the legislation despite it passing with large bipartisan support.
“Huge, huge win for teachers,” the TEA wrote on its Twitter page,
thanking both bill sponsors as well as Haslam for “treating teachers as
professionals.”
“Eyeing a 2015 implementation, the state board in January had agreed
to back down from using student learning gains as the sole and
overriding reason to revoke a license. Composite evaluation scores, in
which 35 percent is influenced by value-added data, were to
centerpiece.”
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Two interesting points here: one, Duncan has been hailing Tennessee as a
demonstration of the “success” of Race to the Top, in which test-based
evaluation of teachers is key. What happens now?
Second, state Commissioner Kevin Huffman is so unpopular that
anything he supports is likely to be rejected. His enemies hope he
doesn’t leave Tennessee because whatever he recommends generates
opposition, even among his allies.