Sunday

Merit pay for teachers is worth a look- Toronto Star

Interesting...this is something that has recently come up in England as well...thoughts?

Sachin Maharaj of the Toronto Star writes:


Several U.S. jurisdictions — including Denver, Austin and Washington, D.C. — are experimenting with merit pay for teachers. The goal is to pay effective teachers more than ineffective ones. Given that Ontario spends over $12.5 billion on teacher salaries, is this something we should consider?

Merit pay systems usually, and predictably, are met with fierce criticism from teacher unions. Yet while merit pay has its drawbacks, it should be evaluated in comparison to the system currently in place: the single salary schedule that pays teachers based on seniority and academic credentials.

Prior to the implementation of the single schedule, there was systemic discrimination in Canadian public schools. Women and minorities were paid significantly less than non-minority males. Thus in 1920, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation passed a motion supporting “equal pay for equal work.” The May 7, 1921, edition of the Toronto Star tells of female teachers sending a letter to the Toronto Board of Education demanding equal pay and recognition as their male counterparts.

Thus the single schedule created an objective, non-discriminatory system of pay for all teachers. Yet while this was undoubtedly an improvement at the time, is the single salary schedule still the best system of pay for the teaching profession 90 years later?

One of the main flaws of the single schedule was originally one of its virtues: it treats all teachers the same. While this served an equity purpose in the 1920s, it has now led to perverse incentives. Thus a teacher in a high-needs school located in a low-income neighbourhood with kids who are not native English speakers gets paid the same as a teacher in a school in an affluent neighbourhood with kids for whom language is not an issue. Obviously teaching in the former is more difficult than the latter but the single schedule fails to recognize this.

With pay being equal there is an incentive for teachers to try to avoid the more difficult task of teaching in high-needs schools. So it is not surprising that this is what the research shows. In general, teachers tend to transfer into schools with high-achieving middle-class students and away from schools with high concentrations of low-achieving, low-income or minority students, and students with special needs. So while much talk in education centres on closing the achievement gap, it is curious that more attention is not paid to policies to improve the quality and retention of teachers in our neediest schools.

Yet perhaps the biggest problem with the single schedule is that it does not encourage effective teaching. The two things on which teacher pay is based — years of experience and academic qualifications — have little relationship with how well teachers actually teach. And the automatic yearly increases that are awarded with no regard to teacher effort or effectiveness provide no incentive to work harder or improve teaching practice. Lazy or ineffective teachers are paid the same as hardworking or effective ones. Excellence goes unrewarded, mediocrity goes unaddressed. This was clearly not the intention of the advocates of the single schedule.

One alternative is to incorporate merit into the schedule based on existing performance evaluations. This was one of the recommendations in the 2005 OECD report Teachers Matter: Attracting, Developing and Retaining Effective Teachers: “Although the principal focus of formative assessment is on teacher improvement, it can also provide a basis for rewarding teachers for exemplary performance. For example, outstanding performance and contributions could enable teachers to progress two salary steps at once.” Another alternative is to provide additional pay for teaching in high-needs schools. This has been implemented in places like Austin and Denver and has led to an increase in retention rates.
So while merit pay systems certainly have their issues, that does not mean we must uncritically default to the system that has been in place for the last 90 years. As the teaching profession has evolved so can its pay system. In addition to benefiting students, this will allow teaching to continue to attract, reward, and retain our best and brightest and thus rightfully take its place among the top professions in our society.

Sachin Maharaj is a graduate student at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto and an assistant curriculum leader in the Toronto District School Board.

Thursday

Le Passé Composé flow chart

I use this flow chart to help my students find a way to sort out the Passé Composé. 
Before showing it to them, we do one together where I ask them to tell me what the thought process should be. It seems to help them figure out how to approach the conjugation, whereas prior to explaining it they tend to randomly conjugate it.
Please visit my TPT site to download a copy of the file. 



Master Chef Spanish Style

Tacos, churros, crema catalana, burritos, galletas, leche frita, jamón frito...my Grade 11s cooked up a storm while practising their Imperative conjugation. 
Recipes from the Latin food world were chosen by each group, ingredients purchased, recipes using the Imperative were neatly prepared and "memorised" and a lot of eating was done. 
For some, it was their first time trying anything like this and they all enjoyed each others' dishes. As you can see from the pictures, it was a very fun activity and each and every one has asked if we can do it again before the end of the semester. 

Friday

Clothing Lesson

In our Grade 11 Spanish class we have been learning clothing vocabulary, so naturally to practise this vocab my student teacher and I brought in some of our own clothes. The activity was basic. The clothes were piled onto the tables, teams were created, what should have been the only 3 boys in the class were "the models" but one was sick so I had to step in (oh joy), sentences were read out à la "Fui a una fiesta y llevé una falda, un collar y una blusa.", then the team members had to rifle through the clothing, pull out the correct items, dress the model and yell out "Terminado". 
The activity was a huge success, minus a few complaints when the boys saw the bikinis on the table!  We even got in trouble from some of the other teachers who complained that we were too loud!
A very simple kinaesthetic activity, a great listening activity which allowed the students to verify understanding.
Identities have been concealed due to embarrassing factor of outfits.

Large size skirts +  thin boys= funny combination

Thursday

Mola Activity

Here is the first round of pictures of my students preparing our version of a mola. In a previous post I wrote about the presentation I did for them about the Kunas and about the activity we did.
Click on an image to enlarge it to see some of the detail.








Come back soon to see the final product!

Spot the mistake

Do you always tell your students to revise their work prior to handing it in? You know those kids that finish their test in 10 minutes when it should have taken them at least 30 minutes and then its full of silly mistakes since they rushed through it. Well, today, I modeled the reason why you should always revise your work.
Last night my husband invited me to a concert last minute, therefore the evening's plans changed suddenly. Whereas I had planned on attending an info night at school and then going over my lessons, it did not go this way. We had to drop the baby off at his grandma's which meant we sat in traffic for an hour, eat dinner on the fly, go to the concert, pick the baby up and so we got home at 12:30am which is way past my bedtime. I was exhausted and didn't even think about today's lessons, mainly because I was relying on the fact that my student teacher would be doing the lessons. 
So as I was showering (and it so happens that that is always where I remember things or get really great ideas, but of course do not have anything to write them down on), I suddenly remembered that I had said I would teach the first lesson of the day so my student teacher could observe me. I tried to get to school early so I could revise my powerpoint on les pronoms relatifs, I made some changes, but didn't really focus on what I as doing. 
Come lesson time, there I am yapping away at the front and noticing various spelling mistakes on my slides. I have no problem admitting to my mistakes and will gladly point them out to my students, then I challenge them to try and catch my mistakes, and there were plenty of them today! I fessed up. I told my Grade 9s that because I went out on a school night, I did not revise my work and as a result, here I am teaching and having to correct silly spelling mistakes. I said that of course it is normal to make mistakes, but this was unacceptable, because had I read over my slides, I would have caught the silly mistakes and not had to waste class time correcting.
It even got to a point where we made bets to see if my next sentence would have mistakes, and I forgot a question mark which resulted in them winning an extra day to prepare for their vocabulary test. 
Lesson learned on my part!

Hugh Laurie speaks French

Gwyneth Paltrow speaks Spanish very well