Saturday, March 03, 2007

Don't touch my grades.


This is an interesting case in Stockton, California where a student failed a teachers' class, but the school board later changed the grade. The teachers' union has taken the school board to court over it, saying that that was not one of the criteria the school board could change the grade under and they need to change it back to an F.

Mathematically, the student failed the course. Student X did poorly on tests, didn't turn in enough of her homework and would have had to have earned a 101% on the final exam to get a passing grade for the year; she earned a 65% on that test. The student failed the course for the year, but the school board went back and changed the grade.

In California where this occured, state law says teachers determine final grades, but they can be changed "in cases of fraud, bad faith, incompetence or a clerical mistake". During the time the student was in Julie Abate's class, the union was involved in some heavy level negotiations with the school district. It got so bad that the teacher's union began to work to the rule.

For the unitiated, working to the rule is a job action, similar (but less severe than) a strike. It involves teachers doing the bare minium that the contract requires and nothing more. Typically, teachers walk in when their contract says walk in, and leave the building when their contract says leave. Extra curriculars are cancelled that aren't part of the contract (through chaperoning duties or extra pay) and typically the school becomes a ghost town as soon as the bell rings.

The board is saying that teacher Abate's grade was changed for student X due to the fact that she didn't grade a test in a timely fashion during work to the rule. The lawyer for the board has called it bad judgement, which somehow falls under the clerical mistake piece of things in the state law where a school board can change a student's grade. I would disagree with the lawyer's stance on this one, I think she's scrounging for an argument.

Some of you may be wondering why the union is spending dues money to defend a student's failing grade. It's quite simply, really-- the teacher did nothing wrong. If you're going to truly follow "work to the rule" you can't grade papers at home, and you have to find a few moments during your contract day to grade 'em, which is really, really hard. The teacher was excercising their right to participate in a collective bargaining action, and this needs to be supported.

Make no mistake about it, the case is not about whether a student passed or failed; it is about the rights of the Tracy Education Association to engage in a collective bargaining action and not face any retribution as a result. Clearly the school board seems to think that by participating in such an action, a teacher loses professional credibility and efficiency. As those of you know who have participated in job actions before, this is not the case. Shame on you, Tracy School Board. I hope the TEA win this case and the school board pays their legal bills.

On a side note, Marlborough Educator's Asssociation in Marlborough, Massachusetts have been working to the rule. Give 'em some support.

3 comments:

Darren said...

Ed Code Section 49066:

49066. (a) When grades are given for any course of instruction taught in a school district, the grade given to each pupil shall be the grade determined by the teacher of the course and the determination of the pupil's grade by the teacher, in the absence of clerical or mechanical mistake, fraud, bad faith, or incompetency, shall be final.

Sounds pretty clear to me. Working to rule isn't fraud, bad faith, or incompetency.

Dr. Homeslice said...

So wait...does this mean you agree with me? :)

NYC Educator said...

Hey doc. Just wanted to let ya know I've posted on a teacher strike you haven't gotten to yet.

In Iran, of all places.

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