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Milwaukee's Daily Magazine for Tuesday, June 18, 2013

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Readers Blog

Blaming Barrett for School Failure

A current TV attack ad  blames Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett for the abysmally low graduation rate  of Milwaukee Public Schools  (MPS):  about half of all ninth-grade students ever graduate  from high school.  But  is this fair?

MPS,  like every other school district in Wisconsin, is governed by an elected School Board.  In 2009 Mayor Barrett made a major effort to take over the selection of Board members and the Superintendent; despite support from then-Governor Jim Doyle, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel  and the Greater Milwaukee Committee,  the effort fizzled in the Legislature.  The only legal role  for the Mayor in operation of MPS  is to sign the annual tax levy bill, which includes the tax levied by the Board of School Directors. Either the makers of the ad either do not know that Mayor Barrett has no responsibility for the operation of MPS, or they think that most voters don't  know that.  But if Barrett is not responsible for the low graduation rate, who is?

Conservatives often blame the job-security provisions of  public teacher union contracts for  the persistence of  incompetent  teachers in many schools.  Unless a teacher breaks a law  (like fondling a student), it is very difficult to fire a teacher after the first three years on the job.  (Similar seniority and job-security rules protect incompetents in the civil service, police and the military.)  On the other hand,  the improved pay and benefits that  collective bargaining has won for school teachers over the past few decades have also made teaching  in public schools a more  attractive career  than it would be otherwise, especially in large urban school systems like Milwaukee.  In no other occupation that requires a college degree  (plus a boat-load of education courses) are people expected to control and educate large numbers of  recalcitrant  and often violent youngsters.  Without the generous pay and benefits, including job-security rules,  the only people teaching would be those who had no chance of getting any other job at all.   

The reduction  in state aid to school districts, coupled with elimination of collective bargaining rights,  makes teaching school less appealing today than just a year or two ago.  But  the current lousy job market keeps many teachers on the job  for now.  My guess is that if and when the economy improves enough,  many of the more capable teachers  (especially those with marketable degrees  with math, science and economics majors) will leave for private-sector jobs.

The inconvenient truth is that most of Milwaukee public school pupils  have been raised in poor, dysfunctional homes,  in which education is not valued.  That is why so many do not take school  seriously, and by high school  they  lack the skills  to succeed there.  They get frustrated and drop out.   Political ads do not mention this because it cannot be blamed on any party, union or public official. 

Gerald S Glazer

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Talkbacks

solitarius | May 14, 2012 at 11:41 a.m. (report)

One more thing.
Contrary to Mr Glazer's declaration it is highly unlikely that state employed teachers will leave their government jobs for private schools because in general both the salary and benefits of government employed teachers are still better than what teachers receive in private schools regardless of Walker.

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solitarius | May 14, 2012 at 10:23 a.m. (report)

LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
There are very few political ads on either side that are fair and honest. They all exagerate and hype and blame politicians for things beyond their control. But why does Mr Glazer only point out the exagerations of one side? Isn't that an exageration and an unfairness in itself? Barrett ads blame Waklker for the recent increase in unemployment in Wisconsin. How is that fair? How much control does a governor have over private employment in a state? The same is true in the other direction. How much control does Barrett have over private employment in Milwaukee? Is it fair to blame the unempolyment on him? Not really.

My point is that if Mr Glazer wants fairness and honesty in election campaigns then he must demonstrate it himself in his own writings otherwise it is just more political hype.

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