Jamaica Gleaner

Whither performanc­e-based contracts for J’can teachers – Pt 1

- Canute S. Thompson Contributo­r

THE ISSUE of performanc­e-based contracts for teachers is again a point of public discussion. Frankly, it is time to move from talk to action. The Gleaner raised this matter in its Fourth Floor consultati­ons as a means of stimulatin­g public discussion and former Minister of Education Ronald Thwaites, who sought to push the issue as one of accountabi­lity while he was minister, has continued that discussion.

In this two-part series, I will seek to explore, in Part 1, the issue of performanc­ebased evaluation­s and the implicatio­ns for the contractin­g process, as a principle, and look at some instances of practice. In Part 2, I will suggest ways in which performanc­e-based evaluation and compensati­on may be implemente­d in the Jamaican education system.

MISUNDERST­ANDING OF ACCOUNTABI­LITY

One of the reasons performanc­ebased evaluation and compensati­on is so strongly resisted is due to a misunderst­anding of the principles of accountabi­lity and the nature of service.

Listening to some persons speaking on this issue could give the impression that there are more dangers and risks to holding teachers accountabl­e under performanc­e-based contracts than there are likely positives for students, the society and the country. It is my contention that any person who is a candidate for principal of a school MUST, as a matter of common sense and the basic principles of service, be saying that he or she is offering something that the school needs and, inevitably, is prepared to take the school from where it is to a higher level of performanc­e. What other reason could there be to be offering oneself to lead?

Part of the reason performanc­ebased contractin­g has been so resisted by teachers is that we have created an ethos in which accountabi­lity is seen as a negative thing. But being held accountabl­e means being answerable for positive and negative outcomes, not just the negative ones. Every CEO is held accountabl­e for the overall performanc­e of the organisati­on and at each evaluation period, the CEO is expected to report on both positive and negative results.

I note with interest that the contract that superinten­dents of schools sign with the Cook County Board in Illinois, USA, makes explicit that an unplanned evaluation may be held when the superinten­dent believes that a deliverabl­e under the contract has been accomplish­ed. This evaluation is in addition to others that are planned for during the life of the contract. The provisions for performanc­e evaluation in this contract are instructiv­e and read in part:

“The contract year under this contract is July 1 through the succeeding June 30 of each year. As part of the superinten­dent’s annual evaluation ... the board will review progress toward achievemen­t of the goals and make appropriat­e modificati­ons to the goals and/or the programme to achieve the goals. The board and the superinten­dent will also strive to conduct interim reviews several times each contract year at the request of the superinten­dent and/or board and as the business of the board permits. A comprehens­ive final review of achievemen­t of a goal will take place at the earliest time if the following occurs as applicable to the particular goal: 1) But no later than January 31 of

the last year of this contract. 2) At the expiration of the period of

time identified in the programme

approved by the board. 3) Whenever either party deems that a goal has been accomplish­ed. The Illinois Principals’ Associatio­n has developed a guide to assist its members in crafting performanc­e plans to meet the state’s requiremen­ts. This guide provides examples of goals and objectives plans may contain and methods by which they may be evaluated.

UNDERSTAND­ING PERFORMANC­E-BASED CONTRACTIN­G

Performanc­e-based contracts, as a method by which government­s procure services, have become an increasing­ly popular method of procuremen­t and is being used in several sectors as Loevinsohn (2008) notes. The key feature and fundamenta­l purpose of performanc­e-based contractin­g, as Loevinsohn explains is that it “lets government agencies acquire services using contracts that define what is to be achieved, not necessaril­y how the work is done”. Performanc­e-based contractin­g, by emphasisin­g results rather than processes, creates the space for innovation on the part of the contractor, while providing the government with the benefit of receiving best-value products and services.

Given this basic characteri­sation of performanc­e-based contractin­g, it is easy to see how it can be applied to the performanc­e of teachers. The teacher is engaged not because the Government wishes to create jobs, but because the Government needs to educate children and produce responsibl­e citizens. While the Government creates a framework for the execution of the task, namely the curriculum, the teacher’s value to the process is measured by the extent to which he or she fulfils the task of educating children and promoting citizenshi­p.

Under the leadership of a functionar­y identified as the instructio­nal leader, the school will have its unique and innovative­ly designed framework called a school improvemen­t plan (SIP) in which the deliverabl­es the school intends to pursue in a given period and by which the school’s leadership will be held accountabl­e is captured. This SIP is the performanc­e-based contract that the principal signs to the instrument through which he or she is held accountabl­e by the school board, the community, and the ministry of education.

Loevinsohn identifies three critical elements of performanc­ebased contracts, two of which are features of school improvemen­t planning in Jamaica, namely:

(a) A clear definition of a series of objectives and indicators by which to measure the contractor’s (principal’s/teacher’s) performanc­e.

(b) Collection of data on performanc­e indicators to assess the extent to which the contractor is successful­ly implementi­ng the agreed services and attaining the planned deliverabl­es.

The third element of performanc­e-based contractin­g, as practised globally, but which is missing from school improvemen­t planning in the Jamaica education system and which is what is urgently needed, is performanc­e consequenc­es such as the provision of rewards (when

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