Vergara Plaintiff Talks Landmark Decision on Teacher Tenure
Landmark court decision puts students' needs above ineffective teachers and the unions that protect them.
"Being a kid in the California system right now is a lot like the lottery," says Julia Macias, a ninth grader who lives in California's San Fernando Valley. "You might get an amazing teacher one year and then a not so amazing teacher and you see your scores are reflected upon that."
Julia is a dedicated student with dreams to one day attend Harvard University. She loves to read and has a passion for science. Her hard work has earned her a spot on the honor roll, but Julia wasn't always getting the most out of class.
"There was a point in my elementary school where I did have a few ineffective teachers," Julia explains. "It was definitely scary when I figured out that I wasn't learning because it took a lot of courage to go to my parents and tell them."
Julia told her dad, Joe Macias, about her struggles with math in her second grade class. Concerned about his daughter's eroding confidence in school, Joe and his wife decided to go to the school to meet with the teacher, where they were told that their daughter just wasn't good at math and advised to have her tested for a learning disability. Joe and his wife went back to observe the class and found that the teacher was unprepared and unorganized. They switched Julia to a different class, where she flourished.
"She's coming home excited doing her work," says Joe. "And I thought what can you attribute that to because this is the same kid. But the settings changed. Different teacher."
The Macias' experience with ineffective teachers led them to join eight other students and become part of the landmark Vergara v. California lawsuit that challenged teacher job protections.
The case took on labor statutes that make it difficult to get rid of underperforming teachers, including the permanent employment statute, which gives a teacher tenure after just 16 months on the job. It also took on dismissal statutes which make firing a low performing teacher almost impossible and the last-in, first-out rule which forces districts to lay off teachers based on seniority, not performance.
"In California, the teacher tenure system is really an outlier among various states in the nation," says Joshua Lipshutz, an attorney with Gibson, Dunn, & Crutcher in San Francisco, California who argued on behalf on the Vergara plaintiffs. "Most states have a tenure period of three to five years and a few states don't have tenure at all."
According to expert testimony, only 2.2 teachers are dismissed each year on average out of 275,000 who are currently teaching in the state. The process can take anywhere from two to 10 years and can costs hundreds of thousands of dollars. While only about two percent of California's teachers have been determined to be ineffective, their presence can cause appreciable damage to their students' future.
A study conducted by Harvard professors Raj Chetty and John Friedman and Columbia professor Jonah Rockoff showed that students assigned to an ineffective teacher can lose over a year of learning and an estimated $1.4 million in lifetime earnings as a result of that single teacher.
In a ruling delivered on June 10, 2014, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Rolf Treu found in favor of the plaintiffs and struck down the state's tenure laws. In his 16-page decision, Treu wrote that the challenged statutes "disproportionately affect poor and/or minority students" and that the evidence "shocks the conscience."
The California Federation of Teachers and the California Teachers Association, both defendants in the case, denounced the verdict and vowed to appeal the decision. Appellate arguments are expected to be heard later this year.
Union representatives argue that the court's decision will hurt teachers by removing an important safeguard against arbitrary firings and that the focus on tenure will not help teachers improve in the classroom. They say the decision will only work to exacerbate education problems in the state.
"I'm tenured right now but if I break the law or if I'm acting inappropriately I can still be dismissed. It's not a guarantee for life," says Gabriela Ibarra, a fifth grade teacher in Los Angeles and a member of the California Federation of teachers. "Taking our rights away doesn't help us be better at what we're doing. It's just putting a negative image to everybody else that we're not doing our job properly."
But the Vergara case isn't about taking away a teacher's right to tenure—it merely seeks to redefine the period of time before a teacher is granted tenure. Nor is there any system in the United States that relies solely on test scores to evaluate a teacher's value in the classroom. Many of the teachers used as examples of poor performance in the Vergara case displayed numerous indicators of incompetence that did not rely on student performance.
"Throughout the entire case we had lots of teachers who came out to support us," says Lipshutz. "[They] really explained both to the public and to the court that having ineffective teachers in their schools and in their midst is terrible for them and terrible for the profession."
As the case makes it way through the appeals process, it has already prompted advocacy groups in other states to take action. Last month, a group of families filed a similar lawsuit in New York and cases are expected to be filed in Connecticut, Maryland, Oregon, New Mexico, Idaho and Kansas.
Though it could take years for a final ruling, Julia Macias is busy focusing on her future.
"I do have a goal of making kids aware that they can and do have the ability to succeed in life with the right type of education," says Julia. "I find it very important to have that goal heard and my voice heard."
Reason Foundation is a partner in National School Week, an annual event that draws attention to increasing educational options for K-12 students and their parents. For more information on resources and activities, including more than 10,000 events taking place nationwide between January 25-31, go here now.
About 7 minutes.
Produced by Alexis Garcia. Camera by Garcia, Tracy Oppenheimer, and Paul Detrick. Lipshutz interview by Tracy Oppenheimer. Music by Podington Bear.
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Ol' Jeb just claimed his first victim - Romney just said he won't run again.
THE PATH IS CLEARIN'!
Didn't Jeb Bush legalize beastiality or something to the defense of horse fucking?
Why? Are you looking for a good reason to move to Florida?
HnR comments are like a whore house. You want to let Fist go first. Apologies.
How dare people of color break ranks with their unionized saviors? Next they'll think they can solve their own problems.
Concerned about his daughter's eroding confidence in school
Who says schools are teaching kids.
I'd be concerned if my daughter didn't have eroding confidence in public schools.
squirrel ate my n't.
Your poor 'n't. Was there enough left for a burial?
Naw, but I got another one.
I went to PS, I can name every teacher that was worth my time and count em on one hand. The rest would contradict themselves, quote memorized information (and when they memorized it wrong would fight VEHEMENTLY about how they're correct because they're the teacher), and have little to no understanding of the subject matter(which never mattered to most students because they're only there by force.)
I think the best thing we can do for our education system is to make it voluntary
"I'm tenured right now but if I break the law or if I'm acting inappropriately I can still be dismissed. It's not a guarantee for life,"
Red herring. This isn't about teachers who act inappropriately or break the law. It's about teachers who suck at their job. And if you suck at your job, tenure protects you from being fired so that the school can hire someone who is good at teaching.
And a complete fucking lie. Look at New York's rubber rooms.
And Mark Berndt. Molested children in the LA school district for DECADES, then the district had to make a $40,000 payoff to him and the union lawyers just to get him out of the classroom.
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Funny enough my first grader went throught that. Due to some medical issues, tubes in and out several times, we entertained the evaluation for a learning disability last year. Once the school figured out he didn't have one, and they couldn't get any more funding they gave zero micro-fucks about the whole thing. Guess he wasn't worth their time at that point.
Amusingly enough when we tried to get the records for a speech pathologist the school couldn't find them. And that was the tipping point for my wife to agree with me that leaving california at our first opportunity was worth our time.
Okay, but don't get the idea that you'll be better off in Texas.
Thanks for your worthless comment.
Yea, public schools get a lot more state funding for learning disabilities...so once they figured out that gravy train wasn't going to be pulling in for your kid, they didn't care any more. I mean, they certainly weren't going to try any harder to teach them.
This article has nothing to do with libertarianism. That's ok the magazine can touch on areas of course. But do you really want to be on the same side as Bill Gates and other rich fascists? It should make you think twice. Bill Gates is out to destroy the middle class and this is part of his war on it.
There is a libertarian approach to education but this has absolutely nothing to do with it. It's to get government the fuck out of the way. I'm sure Bill Gates and his other rich pals like Warren Buffet would totally disagree.
"This article has nothing to do with libertarianism."
True, but as someone who started subscribing to Reason in the 70s, I can tell you they've always had a pragmatist outlook, and have had other causes in which they were bent only on improving the management of government enterprises (traffic management being a prime example).
I wish they would concentrate less on those types of improvements (they're not "solutions") and concentrate more on pure libertarianism.
"Bill Gates is out to destroy the middle class and this is part of his war on it."
Um, I don't think so.......
Lol wut?!
Bill Gates is conspiring with Warren Buffet, the Trilateral Commission, The NFL, the Bilderberg Group, the Council on Foreign Relations and the The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to not only destroy the middle class and keep the black man down, but to wage a personal war against me and my desire to share the truth!
And they are using chem-trails and the Jooish media to do it.
Reason has written numerous articles advocating for vouchers and charter schools. Since vouchers are unlikely to happen overnight, there is nothing un-libertarian with writing an article which notes that more accountability has been brought to public schools in California. Libertarians want people to be able to succeed, and this ruling potentially makes that more possible.
I don't doubt that this little girl is smart and hard-working enough to be better than the average student at Harvard, but I doubt that they would let her in. Harvard is a bastion of ruling-class party line believers, and I don't think they will forgive her for having any part in derailing the NEA gravy train.
-jcr
Taking our rights away doesn't help us be better at what we're doing.
You don't have a right to a job on the public payroll, you stupid cow. If you can't do the job, ANY job, then you deserve to get canned and replaced by someone who CAN do it.
-jcr
Oh yes she does have a right to a public job and a paycheck: she called dibs. And no takeseys-backseys too.
See that's how rights work in their minds.
Joe and his wife decided to go to the school to meet with the teacher, where they were told that their daughter just wasn't good at math and advised to have her tested for a learning disability.
"Well, I'll consider it. But first, I'd like to see you derive the quadratic formula."
Kudos to these parents. All the time, effort, and hassle they're investing to try and make things better for future students.
the focus on tenure will not help teachers improve in the classroom.
Indeed. So why not get rid of it?