Tag: Ohio teachers

  • Ohio teachers take action amid state, federal education funding uncertainty

    Ohio teachers take action amid state, federal education funding uncertainty

    Public education supporters rally at the U.S. Capitol in early February, speaking out against proposed cuts to the federal education budget, and the possible elimination of the U.S. Department of Education. Members of the Ohio Education Association attended the rally. (Photo by Jati Lindsey, courtesy of the National Education Association.)

    By:  – Ohio Capital Journal

    With state and federal funding up in the air, Ohio teachers are speaking out about what budget cuts would mean to their districts, about the importance of public schools to families and communities, and about how schools need to be strengthened to prioritize students’ futures.

    In her 31 years as a teacher in Cleveland Public Schools, Tracy Radich has never felt the need to fight for public school funding as much as she has this year, with state and federal budgets both giving public schools uncertain futures.

    “Having everything be so up in the air and … how we prepare and think about what might happen next school year, it makes me very fearful and very worried for the future of my school, my students,” said Radich, who has spent her career at Joseph M. Gallagher School, where she currently teaches third grade.

    Radich joins many public school advocates in questioning the funding of private school voucher programs in Ohio at a rate of more than $1 billion last year, while public schools who educate 90% of the state’s student population sit on pins and needles awaiting the fate of their funding.

    The state budget is currently being developed by the state legislature, but debates have been raging about whether or not funding for a model that’s been in place for years, called the Fair School Funding Plan by supporters, will stay in place for it’s last round of phase-in funding.

    Members of the Republican supermajority have questioned whether or not the plan is sustainable, and while Gov. Mike DeWine’s executive budget included the final phase-in of funding, public education advocates criticized the governor’s lack of inflation inputs as part of the final round of funding.

    Even one of the authors of the funding model, former state Rep. John Patterson, spoke out at a League of Women Voters of Ohio event to say leaving out inflation inputs would “create disruption” in the formula, increasing the costs for taxpayers.

    Dan Fray, a middle school English-Language Arts teacher and educational technology instructor with Toledo Public Schools, sees rallies and days of action as ways to raise awareness of what public school teachers do for the vast majority of students in the state.

    “We didn’t become teachers to get rich or to do anything but help students learn,” Fray said. “In this day and age, we didn’t become teachers to get cussed at or told what we’re doing is wrong.”

    To bring more attention to their cause, Radich and Fray will be part of a “day of action” on March 4, when teachers who are members of the their local teachers unions, along with the Ohio Federation of Teachers and the American Federation of Teachers as a whole, will promote education as the spending priority they think it should be.

    GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

     

    The action will start first thing in the morning at Radich’s school, with a celebration line of teachers welcoming students at the start of the day, and passing out information to parents about the impacts of funding changes on their child’s education.

    Some teachers will head outside in Toledo, where Fray said signs will inform passersby of their aims, and blue shirts worn by teachers show educators’ desire to “preserve public education.”

    “We’re not protesting to say we hate the governor or we hate the budget or anything like that, it’s more what education is about and where we are in it,” Fray said.

    The view of the role of educators, particularly within the legislature, has “taken a hit” over the years, Fray said. He and Radich agree that despite the varying needs of school districts across the state, standardized testing has become king.

    “These high-stakes tests, by the time any data comes back from that, my students have already moved on to the next grade, so those tests don’t really help,” Radich said. “They inform the state, they punish schools, but they don’t really help the students.”

    In Fray’s view, state testing has impacted education decisions to such a degree that “the world is definitely a teach-to-the-test kind of world,” to the detriment of teaching and education in general.

    Focusing legislation and budgetary decisions on test scores that don’t give a full view of education, and the expansion of private school vouchers not only misses the point of education, the teachers say, but flies in the face of multiple state supreme court decisions ordering the state to bring back a thorough and equal system of learning in the state.

    “From a classroom teacher standpoint, it just seems like that continues to get ignored, and at this point, not only does it seem like it’s ignored, but they’re thumbing their nose at it,” Fray said.

    Disruptions to the federal contribution to the state’s education budget could add even more problems to the system, as Ohio’s school districts receive an average of about 10% of their revenue from the feds.

    “I don’t think people realize how cuts made in Washington, D.C., are going to directly impact thousands of children in Cleveland, Ohio, in rural communities and urban communities, everywhere,” Radich said.

    For some Ohio educators, that meant traveling to D.C. and standing on the steps of the U.S. Capitol earlier this month, to engage with members of Congress and urge rejection of changes or possible elimination of the U.S. Department of Education.

    Those who went to D.C. hoped to sway leaders against proposed cuts to programs within the education department, especially those benefitting lower-income students through Title I funding, and students who qualify for federal career training and college grants and loans.

    According to the Ohio Education Association, more than 800,000 students in the state receive Title I funding, and special education programs in Ohio would lose more than $550 million in proposed federal cuts.

    “Ohio educators and parents expect elected officials to prioritize our students’ futures and strengthen our public schools, so they remain a cornerstone of opportunity and equality,” the Ohio Education Association said in a statement following the D.C. rally.

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    _____________
    Susan Tebben
    Susan Tebben

    Susan Tebben is an award-winning journalist with a decade of experience covering Ohio news, including courts and crime, Appalachian social issues, government, education, diversity and culture. She has worked for The Newark Advocate, The Glasgow (KY) Daily Times, The Athens Messenger, and WOUB Public Media. She has also had work featured on National Public Radio.

    Ohio Capital Journal is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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  • Ohio teachers demand change as wages lag

    Ohio teachers demand change as wages lag

    A Gahanna-Jefferson Education Association teacher opted to arrive in costume for the first day of a strike outside Gahanna Lincoln High School. By Jake Zuckerman.

    By Susan Tebben and Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio teachers are adapting to COVID-19 learning, while also fighting for wages and benefits that are lower than professionals with similar education and experience.

    Teachers from across the state shared their experiences in an event hosted by the progressive think-tank Policy Matters Ohio.

    Tati Weaks, of the Greenfield Exempted Schools, which serves portions of Fayette, Highland and Ross counties, said investment in the community is an important part of being a teacher. But in an area that lost thousands of jobs when DHL pulled out of the Wilmington Air Park more than a decade ago, and saw the wealth in the area change to poverty as factories went elsewhere, she said keeping teachers engaged in the area isn’t easy.

    Despite the fact that Wilmington Air Park has had investment since DHL left, the roller coaster of success and loss creates stress with a state public school funding system based on property wealth.

    “We want to attract good teachers, we want to keep good teachers,” Weaks said. “But our base salary is already so much lower due to school funding.”

    “Wage Penalty”

    Experts call the lower wage that teachers receive compared to other professionals with similar education and experience a “wage penalty.”

    In a 2020 study by the Economicy Policy Institute, the teacher wage penalty was shown to have grown from 6% in 1996 to 19.2% in 2019. The year before, the penalty had been even worse, at 22%.

    “This is something where there’s been an attack on teachers,” said one author of the study, EPI fellow Lawrence Mishel, during the Policy Matters discussion. “We have not been putting in the resources, and this is something we really need to do to guarantee children have the professionals that they need.”

    That lowering came from “widespread strikes and other actions by teachers in 2018 and 2019,” the study stated.

    In Ohio, the wage penalty stands at 15.2%, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

    Teachers actually received a wage higher than those of similar experience — called a wage premium — back in the 1960s and 1970s, when women teachers received pay that was 14.7% more than comparable female professionals., according to the EPI study.

    “In 2019, women teachers were earning 13.2% less in weekly wages than their nonteaching counterparts were — a 27.9% percentage-point swing over the last six decades,” the study concluded.

    The wage penalty for men was found to be larger than women, and getting worse, according to the policy institute.

    In 1979, the teacher wage penalty for men was 16.6%, and in 2019, men received 30.2% less as teachers than men did in other professions.

    Teachers sacrifice

    With less funding from their school districts, teachers are still sacrificing their lesser pay for supplies for their classrooms and students.

    Mandy Wagner had to get a second job for her first 10 years of teaching just to pay rent and make student loan payments. She also wanted to pursue her Master’s degree in English literature so she could teach higher level classes to her students, but that meant spending more money.

    “More education means more debt, so trying to benefit the kids, I’m putting myself in more debt,” Wagner said.

    Those sacrifices are being asked of them in collective bargaining negotiations as well, as Tamar Gray, of the Cleveland Heights-University Heights School District, saw first-hand. The teachers and the district just finished contract negotiations in which the district entertained the idea of raising health care costs 250%, with only a total of 8% in raises over the last ten years.

    The district and the teachers were able to come to an agreement, but Gray came out with a bad taste in her mouth, especially after teachers were called “heroes” at the beginning of the pandemic.

    “The fact that teachers are being asked to settle, to make less, to fix budget problems on one of the most important things that can happen in the state…there’s something wrong with that,” Gray said.

    Two education bills were in the General Assembly, and after years of work, House Bill 305 made it through the House. But the end of the lame duck session has run out the clock on the legislation, and the bill floundered in a Senate committee.

    The capital budget passed last week included only a small part of the school funding overhaul. Legislators have said they want to make education a priority, but need to see more studies on the cost of the funding formula before they sign on.

    House Bill 305’s funding framework would have taken some of the pressure off of property taxes as the main informer of funding levels for local school districts, and put more of the onus on direct state funding.

    Many teachers and school district officials spoke in support of the bill, seeing it as a sign of hope for teachers and struggling school districts.

    “We’re running education on a budget,” Wagner said. “And what are we doing having budget teachers and budget education? This is something that we should absolutely be investing in and prioritizing.”

    The teachers present during the Policy Matters event say the fate of education affects the poor, affects people of color, and affects the disenfranchised. Therefore, it shouldn’t be hard for their representatives in the Statehouse to do something.

    “We’re supposed to have people that want to do well by the public, so to sit up here and say we can’t find the solution…it’s inexcusable,” Gray said.