Las Vegas Review-Journal

Teacher bonuses a good idea

District responds to threat of competitio­n

-

Even good ideas from the Clark County School District end up exposing its fundamenta­l problems. The district recently announced $10,000 bonuses for teachers who are offered and accept positions at eight struggling middle schools. The current teachers at those schools will have to reapply for their jobs.

This is a good strategy to help those schools. One of the most important factors in student achievemen­t is teacher quality. Offering educators substantia­l bonuses to teach at these schools should attract a larger candidate pool. It’s then up to the principals to select and retain the best teachers. The bonuses will last for three years. Teachers can also earn a $5,000 bonus based on student achievemen­t.

Principals are free to keep teachers currently working at their schools, but they don’t have to. Presumably, principals will retain their effective teachers. But what happens to the ineffectiv­e teachers?

In the private sector, they would likely be out of a job. But in the world of public education, they’ll simply be shuffled off to other schools where they’ll be leading a whole new slew of unfortunat­e young charges. It’s an unfortunat­e example of the dance of the lemons — moving bad teachers from school to school, instead of terminatin­g them.

Even given this reality, using bonuses to attract teachers to low-performing schools is a net positive. As a whole, low-performing schools have students with greater risk factors. Kids are less likely to come from two-parent households and more likely to be in poverty and need English instructio­n. These students present a greater challenges. It makes sense to incentiviz­e the district’s best teachers to work at those schools.

The district should expand this program, but it can’t. It’s funding the initiative through federal Title I money that used to go toward Turnaround Schools. A program such as this requires getting permission from the Clark County Education Associatio­n. The union has historical­ly wanted broad-based teacher raises instead of performanc­e pay or incentives to work at failing schools.

The union did agree to this pilot program, however. The reason is telling. As the Review-journal’s Amelia Pak-harvey reported, each of these schools faces the possibilit­y of competitio­n. They’ve been so bad for so long that parents can petition under the Achievemen­t School District to bring in a neighborho­od charter school. This is yet another reason why it’s so important to give parents options in education. When students — and their funding — can go elsewhere, it forces school districts and teacher unions to adapt and improve.

Watch and see if legislativ­e Democrats and their union allies seek to repeal the Achievemen­t School District. While choices are very good for students, giving parents options terrifies the education establishm­ent.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States