The Chicago Teachers Union strike supposed to end on Monday but the contract is still not approved. About 26,000 teachers and paraprofessionals will go over the contract and decide if it satisfies their demands. Both sides, CTU and CPS, simply cannot agree on the basics and the arguments seem to point to a power struggle between Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis and Mayor Rahm Emanuel. What’s the issue? NYT has a great list of the issues and how the CPS compares to other major school districts in U.S.
Photo by igoghost at sxc |
For now, 350,000 Chicago students are waiting for the school year to begin. If it’s truly all about the kids, both sides handle the situation is the worst kind of way.
Remember Reverend James Meeks and the stunt he pulled in 2008? He bused 1,500 students from the poor neighborhoods of Chicago to the affluent, suburban school district of New Trier to show the discrepancy is the school founding. Of course, non-district kids failed to enroll in the New Trier schools due to residency requirements.
What did he accomplish? Absolutely nothing, besides some disappointed kids and one day out of school. He’s career hasn’t flourished after that stunt either. Nothing, except high income, prevents anyone from renting or buying in New Trier district but how the schools are being founded, that’s a totally different issue.
So who’s the loosing side during the strike? Kids and families.
Kids, since they cannot move on with their education. Families, since they have to take off work or find another place for the kids outside of school. How will family making below average pay stay afloat without the paycheck or overtime? What about single moms having to pay for a sitter or some temporary care service? Not cool CTU. Not cool.
If nobody knows what is the real issue, the issue if money. You can use kids as paws but everybody knows that the money is behind CPU’s actions. Never mind the $750 million CPS budget gap. The union “deserves” higher raises and “job security” based not on the performance but on some vague standards. I wonder what the property owners will think when their property taxes go up again and again to cover the budget gap.
There is no simple or quick solution to the Chicago schools poor performance debacle but the problem haven’t materialized itself overnight. It’s been known for years. Nobody seems to have large enough cojones to tackle that issue head on. Well, maybe Emanuel. But the core of the poor test scores and lack of attendance is simple: broken families and lack of higher income. My friend Michael brought up and excellent point: doesn’t matter how much money you throw at the educational system if the majority of the kids in the district are homeless or from broken families living in homeless shelters or on the street. Fix the social fabric of the society and the rest will follow. Teaching the kids blackmailing is not in the curriculum.
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