Will the teacher who gets lousy kids because he's "good with them"
You're describing me. I like the kids I work with, and no one else wants them. Yet some people would cut my pay because they'll never score as well as other kids.
So you don't get more money the more years you teach? that is an automatic raise.
So you are making the same exact rate as you were 5 years ago?
Nope. We've been in a salary freeze for two years now -- or is this the third year? We did not receive an earned bonus for the last two years (though no one ever said it was based upon availability of money, though apparently it was). Our insurance has gone up significantly, so we are bringing home
less than we did a couple years ago. At the same time, our teacher numbers have gone down, so we are teaching larger classes for less money.
While this isn't a unique situation in today's world, it is notable that teachers started at a lower salary point, so it hurts us more than it'd hurt a business executive.
NC teachers don't make a high salary, as compared to many other states. Our last governor had a plan to get us up to at least average for the US, but then he was gone and a new one came in who stopped all that. We don't have unions, so we are at the mercy of the state. Last year, we had a furlough imposed on us to pay for a budget shortfall. There were a lot of teachers eating ramen and mac n cheese that month!
I hope all the NC teachers will remember how our illustrious governer treated us when it's time for re-election. I promise you, if it were up to my county, she'd be out the door right now.
They could be reviewed by their principals just like almost any other professional is and their raises or no raise based on this review. Many other professions have no hard scores to base your performance on and they are reviewed.
This and the automatic increased done away with will be a start.
In theory this sounds good, but then so does Communism.
So many things happen that aren't "visible" to those outside the school. Here's just one example: Up until this year, all 10th graders were required to take the writing test and it was one of the things upon which our school was graded. So once a year we'd bring all the 10th graders together and give them the test. Yet the students knew ahead of time that their grade on the writing test wouldn't impact their grade in English class. So how many of them gave the test "their all"? The public sees those scores, judges that Teacher A is better than Teacher B based upon those scores, and schools receive money based upon those scores . . . but it's not clear to everyone that the students have no real motivation to take the writing test at all.
For several decades people in the education business, people who really know schools, people who are strongly motivated to improve things, have tried to figure out a fair way to do what you're suggesting . . . and they've continued to come to the same conclusion: It's not workable.