Law & Courts

N.C. Districts, Teachers Sour on State’s Anti-Tenure Law

By Stephen Sawchuk — April 22, 2014 7 min read
Benjamin C. Owens teaches an honors physics class at Tri-County Early College High School in Murphy, N.C. He says he’ll refuse to give up his tenure voluntarily, even if it means missing out on a salary increase that the legislature put in place to ease the loss of the job protection.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

It was supposed to be the spoonful of sugar to make a bitter medicine—the loss of teacher tenure—go down easier. Instead, a pay mandate in North Carolina has ignited debate about a recent law’s ramifications for the quality and stability of the state’s workforce.

As the Tar Heel State lurches toward the employment overhaul, required under a 2013 measure, districts must offer four-year contracts worth $5,000 in additional pay to a quarter of their teachers by July 1. Lawmakers hope the promise of a raise will persuade eligible teachers to relinquish tenure voluntarily before it disappears for all in 2018-19.

From the looks of things, it won’t be that simple.

Administrators’ and teachers’ associations alike are protesting the 25 percent quota as unnecessarily divisive in a state where salaries have been all but frozen since 2008. Some districts are requesting extensions in meeting the mandate; others are vowing not to carry it out; two are suing to overturn it.

“At our countywide meeting, the district’s chief counsel got up and said, ‘There is no fair way to implement this requirement,’ ” recounted Benjamin C. Owens, a seven-year physics and mathematics teacher in the Cherokee County district in rural Murphy, N.C. “That to me spoke volumes about some of the issues we as teachers have brought to the table with this bad legislation.”

The changes in North Carolina are the products of a 2013 budget measure that does away with the state’s tenure rules. Under the new policy, all teachers will be instead placed on one-, two-, or four-year contracts beginning in 2018-19, making it far easier for districts to dismiss them.

The next few years are a run-up of sorts, during which lawmakers hope to encourage teachers to transition voluntarily. The carrot: four-year contracts, worth an additional $500 in base pay each year, awarded to teachers who agree to give up tenure.

Districts charged with implementing that mandate argue that it is simultaneously prescriptive and vague. It specifies, for instance, that only a quarter of teachers can be offered the four-year contracts and salary increases. Eligible teachers must have taught for at least three years in the district and garnered satisfactory reviews. But beyond that, the law is silent on how superintendents and boards should identify the teachers.

It also comes during a drop in the state’s teacher salaries relative to its neighbors. According to National Education Association tables, North Carolina teachers’ wages have tumbled from 25th among the states in 2007-08 to 46th in 2012-13. The average teacher in the state now makes about $46,000.

For years, merit-pay plans have proved difficult to implement because of disagreements within the profession about how to identify top teachers.

To that, the North Carolina requirements have the added complication of surprise. They were last-minute additions to the budget bill, leaving administrators just a year to devise criteria that meet the letter of the law.

Preserving Career Status

In theory, some administrators embrace the idea of getting rid of tenure: The state’s school boards association adopted that position a few years ago. But even its supporters felt that teachers who already had earned career status should be allowed to keep it, and that the pay plan has muddied the discussion.

Ben Owens, a teacher at Tri-County Early College High School teaches an Honors Physics class to juniors on April 17. Owens has been teaching at the school the past seven years. Previously, he was an engineer with DuPont. Students Khyree Oneal, 17, Michael Reynolds, 16, far left, Ryan Matteson, 17, Zach Dyer, 17, and Samuel Davidson, 17, work on solving a problem.

“Across the board, most school board members want to be able to make sure all teachers are getting increases in their compensation,” said Leanne E. Winner, the director of governmental relations for the North Carolina School Boards Association. “Many districts feel that they have more than 25 percent of their eligible teachers who are performing well and should be eligible for the raise.”

There are no overall patterns among districts’ selection criteria, according to lawyers helping the state’s 115 districts devise the so-called “25 percent” plans.

Some are selecting 25 percent from each school, others from the district at large. Some are using mostly performance-based criteria, others are saving slots for teachers in shortage subjects, said Richard Schwartz, a partner at Schwartz & Shaw, in Raleigh, N.C., which represents some 45 districts.

There is one common element, though. “There has been pretty universal disdain for the whole process,” Mr. Schwartz said.

Concerned about grievances or litigation, some districts are writing criteria with an eye to protecting themselves. A handful, for instance, are incorporating a random lottery into their selection criteria, said Dean Shatley, a lawyer and partner at Campbell Shatley, in Asheville, N.C., which represents districts primarily in western North Carolina.

Most districts, Mr. Shatley said, have tried to involve teachers and administrators as they draft the criteria by surveying them or otherwise gaining feedback. Some are allowing teachers to “opt out” of the population that will be considered for a four-year contract.

“We’ve had clients say that a majority of their teachers wouldn’t accept a contract,” Mr. Shatley said.

Pay and Tenure in North Carolina

Under a 2013 law, teachers in North Carolina will be moved to a new employment system by 2018-19 that does not include tenure.

BRIC ARCHIVE

SOURCE: Education Week

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg district surveyed teachers and principals and held meetings with them before it settled on the criteria, said Terri Cockerham, the director of human resources for the 142,000-student district, the state’s second largest. Among other things, it plans to select teachers through a point system that assigns more to those teachers who hold national-board certification, who have credentials in hard-to-staff subjects, like math and foreign language, and who hold more than one license.

Board members spoke against the plan before approving it March 25, and they have also passed a resolution requesting a year’s delay in implementing the mandate.

Teachers understand that the board’s hands are tied, Ms. Cockerham added, but that hasn’t stopped them from being frustrated with the new plan.

“They were not in favor of it. Period,” she said.

Lawsuits Filed

Guilford and Durham counties, the state’s third- and eighth-largest districts, respectively, have sued the state to overturn the law. The lawsuit, filed in state Superior Court, says that the requirements interfere with districts’ employment contracts with their teachers and potentially open them up to litigation.

“The 25 percent mandate is so loosely, obscurely, and inconsistently written that the boards and superintendent must necessarily guess at its meaning,” the complaint says. If implemented, “they necessarily will make ad hoc, arbitrary, and/or subjective decisions.”

During a preliminary hearing April 16, a judge requested more information on whether the boards have the standing to sue, the Greensboro News & Record reported.

Separately, the North Carolina Association of Educators has also sued the state, charging that the law’s repeal of tenure violates teachers’ federal and state constitutional rights.

The lawmaker who championed the policies, Senate Majority Leader Phil Berger, a Republican, could not be reached for comment by press time. In a statement his office sent, he said, “We should embrace the opportunity to recognize and reward more of our top-performing teachers who make a lasting impact on the lives of their students, while promoting greater student achievement.” It also referenced a 2013 study on teacher evaluations in the District of Columbia indicating that teachers on the cusp of a pay bonus improved.

Rumors are already circulating, though, that the outpouring of angst occasioned by the law could prod lawmakers into offering fixes when the legislative session resumes in May.

In the midst of the confusion, teachers say they don’t know how much they’ll be making come fall—or even for the multitude of falls after that. After June 30 teachers can no longer earn a 10 percent pay premium for completing a master’s degree, according to the new rules.

Even the $500 annual base-pay increases for teachers selected for a four-year contract aren’t a sure thing, because they rely on the largesse of state appropriators. Only the first year of funding, amounting to some $10 million, has actually been reserved.

Nor is it clear whether some other pay revision will replace the mandate after it concludes in 2018-19.

Retention at Risk?

Anecdotally, observers say, the plan could prove so divisive that it could break down collaboration in schools and affect the state’s ability to keep its teachers.

“A lot of districts are seeing a number of teachers leaving the state to go to another state or leaving the profession altogether,” Ms. Winner said. “And we are also seeing recruitment issues for beginning teachers; we’re seeing fewer students coming out of the university programs.”

Mr. Owens, the Cherokee County teacher, says the fear is real. At a recent meeting of district-level teachers-of-the-year in Raleigh, four of the colleagues at his table were questioning whether to stay in teaching.

And if Mr. Owens is offered one of the four-year contracts, he won’t take it.

“I would just be going against my core beliefs in order to do that,” he said.

Pay and Tenure in North Carolina

Under a 2013 law, teachers in North Carolina will be moved to a new employment system by 2018-19 that does not include tenure.

Coverage of policy efforts to improve the teaching profession is supported by a grant from the Joyce Foundation, at www.joycefdn.org/Programs/Education. Education Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the April 23, 2014 edition of Education Week as N.C. Districts Sour on State’s Anti-Tenure Law

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Assessment Webinar
Reflections on Evidence-Based Grading Practices: What We Learned for Next Year
Get real insights on evidence-based grading from K-12 leaders.
Content provided by Otus
Artificial Intelligence K-12 Essentials Forum How AI Use Is Expanding in K-12 Schools
Join this free virtual event to explore how AI technology is—and is not—improving K-12 teaching and learning.
Student Achievement K-12 Essentials Forum How to Build and Scale Effective K-12 State & District Tutoring Programs
Join this free virtual summit to learn from education leaders, policymakers, and industry experts on the topic of high-impact tutoring.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Law & Courts Supreme Court Leans Toward Parents on Opt-Outs for LGBTQ+ Lessons
The U.S. Supreme Court took up a case on whether religious parents may remove their children from public school lessons on LGBTQ+ topics.
6 min read
A selection of books featuring LGBTQ characters that are part of a Supreme Court case are pictured, Tuesday, April, 15, 2025, in Washington.
A selection of books featuring LGBTQ+ characters that are part of a U.S. Supreme Court case are pictured on April, 15, 2025, in Washington.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
Law & Courts Supreme Court Faces Big Test on Religious Students' Opt-Outs From LGBTQ+ Books
The justices will weigh whether a school district must allow parents with religious objections to LGBTQ+ books to excuse their children.
9 min read
Jeff Roman works on homework with his son.
Jeff Roman, a parent who has religious concerns about LGBTQ+ storybooks used in the Montgomery County, Md., school district, works on homework with his son.
Courtesy of Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
Law & Courts Another Court Lets the Trump Admin. Keep Teacher-Training Grants Frozen
A federal appeals court overturned a lower court's order that had temporarily restored millions of dollars in terminated grant funds.
4 min read
Young Female Teacher Giving a Lecture During an Adult Education Course in School, Having a Conversation with a Older Female with Laptop. Diverse Mature Students Doing Textbook Exercises in Classroom
iStock/Getty
Law & Courts Supreme Court Allows Trump Admin. to End Teacher-Prep Grants
The high court, over three justices' dissent, granted the administration's request to remove a lower court's block on ending the grants.
5 min read
Erin Huff, a kindergarten teacher at Waverly Elementary School, works with, from left to right, Ava Turner, a 2nd grader, Benton Ryan, 1st grade, and 3rd grader Haven Green, on estimating measurements using mini marshmallows in Waverly, Ill., on Dec. 18, 2019. Huff, a 24-year-old teacher in her third year, says relatively low pay, stress and workload often discourage young people from pursuing teaching degrees, leading to a current shortage of classroom teachers in Illinois. A nonprofit teacher-training program is using a $750,000 addition to the state budget to speed up certification to address a rampant teacher shortage.
Erin Huff, a 24-year-old kindergarten teacher at Waverly Elementary in Illinois, pictured here on Dec. 18, 2019, says low pay, high stress, and heavy workloads often discourage young people from entering teacher preparation programs. The U.S. Supreme Court on April 4, 2025, allowed the Trump administration to immediately terminate two federal teacher-preparation grant programs.
John O'Connor/AP