"Are Teachers Unions Good for Urban Education?"
Shavar Jeffries:
Largely because of these rules, our urban schools better resemble bloated, civil-service bureaucracies than efficient, professional academies of learning.
The problem of union-precipitated bureaucracy is especially acute in urban schools given that union fundraising and organization greatly outstrip the political resources available to urban parents. Given this disparity in political influence, urban-district teachers unions negotiate, disproportionately, with themselves: unions on one side of the table; union-backed school board members, often elected specifically because of union support, on the other.
This is obviously a heated issue all around.
Posted by Jim Zellmer at January 4, 2006 5:07 PM
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