In Chicago, teachers…forget it. I could never say it as well as Rebel Diaz already has.
Listen up. If you don’t know, now you know.
Homey i was taught by a Chicago teacher, Chicago teacher,
Chicago teacher
I learned to read and write from a Chicago teacher
So I’m inspired by the fight for my Chicago teachers…
There is a story about school reform
that has caught on in recent years. It goes something like this: Politicians,
researchers, and superintendents — who know what children need — are trying to institute
brave, progressive new reforms in our failing school system. But standing in their way
are teachers who are simply not trying hard enough, and evil unions that selfishly
protect adults and don’t care about children. The solution? Break the unions and let the
leadership do whatever it thinks best.
This story is manipulative and misleading. It ignores the abuses of power that led to the
need for unions in the first place; it ignores the deep flaws in the corporate reform
and testing movements; it ignores the need for quality teacher professional development
and support; it ignores the vast diversity among teachers unions; and it fundamentally
puts forward a regressive, untenable solution to our educational woes: improvement
through the dis-empowering of a massive number of people.
Fortunately, teachers in Chicago are putting forward a different story, one about
empowered teachers acting collectively to improve schools for both teachers and
students. Despite confining limits on the union — including a state law that forces them
to debate only wages and benefits — the CTU and its progressive new leadership are
putting reform issues front and center. The CTU deserves our support. If we are going to
have a productive national debate about the reforms we need — even the need to reform
some teachers unions — we need to toss aside the anti-teacher narrative for good.
For more info on supporting the CTU, visit
http://www.teacheractivistgroups.org/chicago-teachers/