Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

DeSantis proposes bonus for teachers

- By Leslie Postal Orlando Sentinel

Gov. Ron DeSantis proposed new efforts Thursday to reward top teachers with bonuses and to recruit college students into the teaching profession.

His new bonus proposal would alter the controvers­ial Best and Brightest Teacher Scholarshi­p Program, doing away with the section that rewards teachers partly based on their scores on the ACT or SAT college admissions exams they took while in high school.

DeSantis said last week “that didn’t make sense,” echoing arguments teachers have made since the Florida Legislatur­e crafted the program in 2015.

The governor announced his proposal at a high school in Hillsborou­gh County on Thursday morning.

His plan, he said, would give nearly 45,000 teachers who had earned “highly effective” ratings bonuses of $9,000 or more. On Twitter, he wrote that teachers would earn more than $9,000 if they work in a school that gained at least 1 percent more in points in its school grading calculatio­n, used to issue A-to-F grades to public schools.

School principals could earn

bonuses of up to $6,500 if they are “creating classroom environmen­ts to help students thrive,” his office said.

“I’m proud to announce a renewed investment to recruit and retain the best, most dedicated educators for Florida schools,” DeSantis tweeted.

This year, the toprated teachers — those with “highly effective” evaluation­s and ACT or SAT above the 80 percentile — are to earn bonuses of $6,000 under the Best and Brightest program. Other teachers are to earn bonuses of $1,200 or $800, if they have “highly effective” or “effective” evaluation­s but didn’t post high test scores back when they applied to college.

Last year, more than 9,200 teachers out of nearly 190,000 won the top award, though many thousands more won the smaller ones, as about 98 percent of teachers earned “effective” or “highly effective” ratings.

DeSantis said he would propose “$422 million for compensati­on increases” and another $10 million for a new teacher recruitmen­t program that would provide tuition forgivenes­s to up to 1,700 new teachers a year if they committed to working in Florida for five years.

This year’s budget includes nearly $234 million for the Best and Brightest program.

The Legislatur­e crafts the state budget, so DeSantis’ proposal is just that at this point. But it will likely be welcomed by some educators, who are struggling with a teacher shortage and frustrated by a bonus program they say isn’t tied to excellent results in the classroom.

Walt Griffin, superinten­dent of Seminole County schools, for example, cited “teacher recruitmen­t and retention” when asked about the most-pressing issue in his district at a chamber of commerce event in Lake Mary on Thursday morning.

“As a state and as a nation ... we have to elevate the teaching profession. Until we start paying teachers what they are worth, we are going to be dealing with this problem.”

Walt Griffin, superinten­dent of Seminole County schools

“As a state and as a nation...we have to elevate the teaching profession,” Griffin said. “Until we start paying teachers what they are worth, we are going to be dealing with this problem.”

The Florida Education Associatio­n, the statewide teachers union, has been a harsh critic of the Best and Brightest program and said it viewed the governor’s proposal as “a start toward fixing the discrimina­tory and unfair provisions of that bad legislatio­n.”

The union also said it hoped DeSantis’ administra­tion will “push harder” to solve the state’s teacher shortage.

“There doesn’t have to be a revolution­ary way to solve Florida’s problem with recruiting and retaining teachers,” said Fedrick Ingram, the union president, in a statement. “We will be urging the governor and the Legislatur­e to go one step further: We need competitiv­e salaries for teachers and education staff.”

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Governor Ron DeSantis on Friday proposed a new bonus toreward top teachers andhelp with recruitmen­t efforts. Hespoke in Winter Parkin January.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL Governor Ron DeSantis on Friday proposed a new bonus toreward top teachers andhelp with recruitmen­t efforts. Hespoke in Winter Parkin January.

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