Teaching Profession

Union Dues

By Jeanne Ponessa — April 17, 1996 6 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

This summer, both the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers plan to make a splash with major policy recommendations for how unions can increase their role in professional development.

The question for national leaders is not whether unions should take more responsibility for developing their members’ knowledge and skills, but how. They know full well that education reform is putting unprecedented pressure on teachers. Increasingly, they hear requests for assistance from members looking to unions for help with problems of practice, not just benefits and grievances.

And by embracing professional development as a new role, the national unions could take another step toward forging new organizations that reflect the complexity of teaching. Leaders acknowledge that in the late 1990s, industrial-style unionism is a poor fit with the movement to give teachers more leadership and decisionmaking roles in their schools and districts.

Inquiring Minds:
Creating a Nation of Teachers as Learners
The Missing Link
Union Dues
Money Talks
Teacher to Teacher
A Virtual Network
The Long Haul
Let the Buyer Beware

But it is also true that, in some districts, union practices themselves are a major barrier to improving professional development.

Contracts can put strict limits on teachers’ activities. Some teachers, steeped in the union mentality, resist putting forth any extra effort if they are not paid for each

hour of their time. In the worst cases, teachers walk out of workshops when they’ve put in their allotted time for the day. Eagle-eyed shop stewards in schools also can discourage willing teachers from getting together with colleagues if it means violating contract rules.

Keith B. Geiger, the president of the NEA, admits that too-rigid contracts can harm teachers more than help them, especially as they are expected to take on more tasks.

“There’s no question that the policies that we have in our contracts were bargained for some very good reasons, but it’s now 1996,” he says. “In the whole shared-decisionmaking process, all of us have to look at more flexibility.”

The NEA’s National Foundation for the Improvement of Education is preparing a report to be released at the association’s annual Representative Assembly in July. The document, in the works for two years, will review exemplary programs and approaches and include policy recommendations.

Albert Shanker, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, also plans to call for unions to take on a larger role in teacher training and retraining at the AFT’s convention this summer.

“The bottom line is that teachers’ unions can no longer thrive if they ignore the professional needs of their members,” says Adam Urbanski, the president of the Rochester Teachers Association, an AFT affiliate in New York. “The newer members lookto the union, and expect it to pay as much attention to their professional needs as to the bread-and-butter issues.”

Urbanski, whose union has crafted a number of professional-development projects, points out that taking responsibility for members’ knowledge and skills forces unions to take a different attitude, focusing on quality control and enforcement of standards.

“We can no longer say, ‘You are right because you pay dues.’ We have to say, ‘We have standards, we don’t want you in our union,’” says Urbanski, who has won re-election to his post every two years since 1981. “And surprise, surprise, you don’t get impeached or assassinated when you take that position. Good teachers feel very frustrated or get angry when uncaring or incompetent colleagues continue.”

In 1993, the Rochester Teachers Association launched the Leadership for Reform Institute with funds generated by a membership-dues increase. The institute publishes a pedagogical journal called Raising Standards, provides grant-writing assistance to teachers, and sponsors seminars and workshops on teaching and professionalism.

The union also holds an annual conference on instructional issues, at which nearly 1,700 teachers are expected this year. For those who can’t attend, the district has agreed to televise portions of the conference.

The Minneapolis Federation of Teachers also has been at the forefront of promoting professional development. The federation’s new contract includes a 20-page section on the topic, including a mentor program for teachers, a districtwide staff-development advisory committee made up mostly of teachers, and salary advancements tied to certification by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.

Though the federation had developed various projects over the past few years, says union president Louise Sundin, the programs were offered in a “piecemeal” fashion.

“We finally decided we needed to put it all in writing, in one place, and in a place where teachers trusted,” Sundin says.

The union had an advantage in working with the 47,000-student district, she says, because its desire to create professional-development programs outlasted a string of several superintendents and administrations.

“We’ve kept a pretty consistent vision of where we wanted to go to professionalize teaching,” Sundin says. “We think the union has a responsibility and a role in training teachers for the profession.”

But teachers’ unions can face roadblocks in taking on these new responsibilities when districts are reluctant to give up control or when poor labor relations poison a cooperative atmosphere.

The bottom line is that teachers' unions can no longer thrive if they ignore the professional needs of their members."

Administrators in the San Diego Unified School District, for example, balked at the San Diego Teachers Association’s request to negotiate a permanent council to oversee professional development. The issue was one sore point in a five-day strike in February.

The district argued, and the union later consented, that teachers should develop the project through a separate “memorandum of understanding” rather than through their labor contract.

In Poway, Calif., a 29,000-student district with a reputation for innovative approaches to professional development, a yearlong contract struggle has put many programs on hold.

The Poway Federation of Teachers had helped create a peer-evaluation program for new and experienced teachers and an intervention plan for troubled tenured teachers. Poway also offered a mentor-teacher program, which a union-district panel oversees. And Poway educators had just formed a professional-development governing board, with five union and four district representatives.

But because of the tough negotiations, says union President Don Raczka, everything except the new teachers’ peer-review plan has been shelved.

Raczka says it was “gut-wrenching” to see programs he had helped create die. But it was impossible to maintain the needed level of cooperation with the district while haggling over a contract.

“You can’t be in a dispute and hold hands and skip along a path at the same time,” Raczka notes ruefully.

Too often, school districts offer programs that aren’t helpful for teachers and then treat teachers’ requests to create their own as a bargaining issue, observes Ellen Dempsey, the president of IMPACT II, a national nonprofit group that funds and coordinates teacher-developed projects.

“For the school systems to look at it as something they’re giving to the teachers, rather than something they’re giving to the kids, is a ridiculous way to look at it,” Dempsey argues.

Rochester’s Urbanski agrees--and that’s why he says collaboration on professional development has to parallel working together on collective bargaining.

The Rochester school system and the RTA have retained a Massachusetts-based conflict-management firm to work toward “win-win” bargaining that benefits both sides.

“We have to invent ways to protect the new work of teachers’ unions and school districts from the old hazards,” Urbanski says. “Neither the interest of the union nor the district is considered to be the priority. The priority is what’s best for the kids.”

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the April 17, 1996 edition of Education Week as Union Dues

Events

Curriculum Webinar Selecting Evidence-Based Programs for Schools and Districts: Mistakes to Avoid
Which programs really work? Confused by education research? Join our webinar to learn how to spot evidence-based programs and make data-driven decisions for your students.
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
Personalized Learning Webinar
Personalized Learning in the STEM Classroom
Unlock the power of personalized learning in STEM! Join our webinar to learn how to create engaging, student-centered classrooms.
Content provided by Project Lead The Way
School & District Management Live Online Discussion A Seat at the Table: How Can We ‘Disagree Better’? A Roadmap for Educators
Experts in conflict resolution, psychology, and leadership skills offer K-12 leaders skills to avoid conflict in challenging circumstances.

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

Teaching Profession NEA Reaches Tentative Agreement With Staff Union After Monthlong Lockout
The largest teachers' union and its staff appear to have reached a detente.
3 min read
The staff organization for the National Education Association strike on Friday, July 5, outside of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia. The work stoppage, expected to continue through Sunday, effectively halts the representative assembly, which brings together more than 6,000 delegates from across the country to vote on the union’s priorities and budget for the upcoming year. Staff members accuse NEA management of unfair labor practices, including denying holiday pay as the staff works over the Fourth of July to run the annual representative assembly.
The staff organization for the National Education Association strike on Friday, July 5, outside of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia. NEA management announced it has reached a tentative agreement with its staff to end a lockout that has continued more than a month.
Brooke Schultz/Education Week
Teaching Profession Teacher Morale Dips Yet Again: 5 Takeaways From New Survey
After an uptick, teachers nationally are saying that their mental health has worsened and that they are less satisfied with their careers.
5 min read
Above view of a class at elementary school.
E+
Teaching Profession Teachers' Morale Is Still Low. They Say Principals Can Help Improve It
Supportive working conditions, spearheaded by principals, can improve teacher satisfaction, according to a study.
5 min read
Image of a teacher in a classroom working quietly at desk.
manonallard/iStock/Getty
Teaching Profession How Should Teachers Dress for the Classroom?
Teachers on social media weigh in on the notion of dressing professionally—and what that means in reality.
3 min read
Image of a hand moving hangers and clothes in a closet.
nicoletaionescu/iStock/Getty