As long as it is based on how the students perform against expectations based on those students prior performance, I'm all for merit based teacher pay. Obviously, you can't compare a teacher with a bunch of bright, motivated kids from good home environments to a teach with a bunch of illiterate kids with no parental support. You can, however, compare how a teacher's students performed relative to how they were performing before they entered that teacher's classroom.
If you do that, it should help attract and retain better teachers. They'll make more money than they do in a simple seniority pay system. Every private company I've ever worked for pays based on market value and rewards its better performers. They also fire their underperformers. The practice works well for them. I don't see why it wouldn't work for schools.
The union will never allow this.
Any time the topic of teachers' salaries/raises/etc. comes up, there are a bunch of teachers who state that student performance is not a good measure of success. Some arguments for this are more valid than others.
I'm curious to know - how would TEACHERS assess success? I think merit based pay is a necessity for teachers and frankly, I see all school districts moving towards this eventually. There is tremendous pressure for all government employees to justify their pay. Many other types of government employees have already moved to a merit-based system. Teachers are behind.
So the question is, how should merit be measured?
This is totally my opinion, but when someone is told their job/pay will depend on another's performance, you'll do anything to guarantee they succeed! This is not what teaching is about. To teach is to excite another to learn! Once you start teaching to a test, there is no joy in it (ie, "Sorry little Bobby, we can't go off topic or talk about other interesting stuff because it's not part of the plan"). I enjoy my job but get frustrated that my students are limited to what they are "supposed" to learn according to the state.
Not really sure if that answered your question, but I'm sure there is a better way to justify our pay (which is pretty crappy for what we do, if you ask me), but grades alone is not enough.
I know that's the reason teachers don't want to be evaluated based on grades, but how SHOULD they be evaluated?
In my years of teaching, I have seen many kids who just bubble in answers on the standardize tests because they don't want to take the test. When I called the parents to let them know that their child didn't try their best on the test, the parent would tell me that was my problem. So I would hate to have my pay based on those kids. This does happen more than one would think.
I received unannounced full classroom evaluations from my Principal and Assistant Principals each year. Also, my lesson plan book was evaluated with a set list of criteria. After each evaluation, I had a meeting with the administrator about the evaluation. I was expected to explain how I evaluated the kids on the lesson that was observed, what data did I receive from the evaluation, and how did I remediate those who didn't get certain objectives and how did I enrich those who understood the concepts. I think my evaluations were rather thorough.
I received unannounced full classroom evaluations from my Principal and Assistant Principals each year. Also, my lesson plan book was evaluated with a set list of criteria. After each evaluation, I had a meeting with the administrator about the evaluation. I was expected to explain how I evaluated the kids on the lesson that was observed, what data did I receive from the evaluation, and how did I remediate those who didn't get certain objectives and how did I enrich those who understood the concepts. I think my evaluations were rather thorough.
I know that's the reason teachers don't want to be evaluated based on grades, but how SHOULD they be evaluated?
At some point kids and families have to start taking some responsibility for their own progress or lack thereof.
For example, you can't let your kid sit up all night texting and playing video games and then wonder why he or she is not doing well in class the next day.
You can't be an absentee parent and instill zero discipline in your child and then expect them to go to school and actually respect and learn from a teacher.
If we have problems in schools it's not because teachers are any different today than they were 25 years ago. It's because there has been a total breakdown of the family in our culture. AND we have a youth culture that is riddled with drugs, alcohol, and disrespect towards authority. I don't blame the teachers. Teachers haven't changed -- families and our culture has.
But let's keep heaping blame on our teachers until absolutely NO ONE wants to seek it as a profession.