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Schools show interest in pilot merit pay program

Tue., October 21, 2008

At least one Michigan school district has adopted a merit pay proposal for teachers and others who attended a merit pay forum this month expressed interest in joining a pilot project.

Larry Cobler, president of the Dexter Community Schools Board of Education, joins in the question-and-answer session during a merit pay forum in Livonia. Hosted by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, the forum introduced the concept of a privately funded merit pay pilot project.

“I challenge the rest of you to take up the torch. We are excited,” Superintendent Christine Beardsley of Oscoda Area Schools told attendees at the Livonia event.

Beardsley was one of more than 40 representatives from private and public schools at the education forum, titled "A Merit-Pay Pilot Program for Michigan Public Schools," sponsored by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Forum speakers outlined a team approach to merit pay that would reward educators for their students’ academic improvement.

The Mackinac Center publishes Michigan Education Report.

Oscoda is a rarity in conventional public education, according to forum speakers. While research shows that teacher quality is a major factor in student achievement, teachers generally are not paid on the basis of student performance, according to Patrick J. Wright, the Mackinac Center’s senior legal analyst.

Instead, nearly all conventional public school teachers in Michigan are paid according to their years of experience and level of education. But advanced degrees and years in the classroom have not been shown, generally, to significantly improve a teacher’s ability to raise student achievement, Wright said, with two exceptions: Studies show that teachers do tend to become more effective during their first five years on the job, and teachers with master’s degrees in math and science may produce slightly better student test results.

Speaking at the forum, Tom Watkins said that some private foundations are looking for effective ways to enhance education in Michigan and elsewhere. Watkins is the former Michigan state superintendent of public instruction.

Merit pay programs compensate teachers for the academic growth that their students show, regardless of the teacher’s experience or education, said Matthew Carr, education policy director at the Buckeye Institute for Public Policy Solutions in Ohio and another forum speaker.

Well-designed merit pay programs attract and retain good teachers, he said, and spur improvement among lower-performing educators.

“There is significant and growing evidence that merit pay is effective,” Carr said. The Mackinac Center has suggested a pilot merit pay program that would not eliminate the traditional salary schedule, but would add compensation on top of it for student achievement. “A Merit-Pay Pilot Program for Michigan Schools” describes existing efforts in other states and outlines a plan in which Michigan schools would partner with private foundations for funding. The district, its employees and the foundation would collaborate on details.

“What we have here is an opportunity to find districts that want to do this and marry them to foundations,” said forum speaker Tom Watkins, former Michigan state superintendent of public instruction.

The Oscoda proposal, developed independently and already written into the district’s collective bargaining agreement, will reward teachers primarily on the basis of meeting academic targets at the student and classroom level, with a smaller emphasis on building-level achievement and evidence of parent-teacher interaction. The plan also rewards non-core teachers, administrators and support staff according to criteria set for each of those groups.

“We set aside $25,000,” Beardsley said. The district is interested in working with a foundation partner in order to increase the dollar amount, but otherwise will move ahead on its own, she said. The Mackinac Center proposal suggests added compensation ranging from $3,000 to $10,000 per year per individual.

Successful merit pay plans have five characteristics, Carr said: transparency, teacher input, significant financial rewards, a collaborative school climate and objective measures of student achievement.

Teachers should understand and have a say in the plan as it is developed, he said, including an understanding of what is expected and how their performance will be evaluated.

Oscoda teacher Matthew Hinckley, who attended the forum, said his fellow educators would not support a merit plan that singles out individual teachers as the cause of strong or weak performance, given the varied factors that feed into student achievement. That is one reason why Oscoda’s plan is based on individual student achievement, but also on classroom-wide and building-wide progress.

“The kids are a major X factor,” Hinckley said, referring to students’ varied academic ability. Another factor is teaching assignments. Merit pay would work best if teachers – knowing their own skills – have some input on where and what they teach, said Hinckley, a biology teacher and the chief negotiator for the Oscoda Education Association.

He agreed that new, growth-model assessment tests could alleviate some of those concerns.

Most merit plans use a pre- and post-test system to measure student achievement. The pre-test predicts how much academic growth can be expected of a student in a school year, given his or her past performance, special needs and demographic factors. The post-test compares that prediction to actual academic growth.

There is a critical tradeoff in such systems, Carr said. The assessment process must be detailed enough to measure accurately, but not so complex that teachers and administrators mistrust the results.

To address the idea that merit pay is “not fair” to other employees who also contribute to learning, the pilot plan suggests that a wide range of school personnel participate. The largest amounts would go to core subject teachers, but smaller amounts would be reserved for administrators, support staff and teacher aides for reaching achievement targets.

“This isn’t The plan, capital T, but a plan that should be molded to local context,” Carr said.

Several other forum attendees also showed interest in merit pay programs, including a member of the Detroit Public Schools Board of Education.

“Why lose teachers who are frustrated?” Annie Carter told Michigan Education Report after the forum. “Give them a raise, but give them merit pay.”

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Questions and comments

A number of questions and comments followed the speakers’ presentation, among them:

Q. How would merit pay be treated for tax purposes?

A. If funded privately and paid directly to the individual from a foundation, the money likely would be treated as self-employment income and the recipient would be required to pay self-employment tax. Conversely, the payments would not be considered part of the public employee’s salary and so would not be factored into retirement calculations or the district’s costs for such things as workers’ compensation.

Q. Does workplace quality improve under merit pay plans?

A. Some critics of merit pay say it fosters unwelcome competition among teachers. That does not appear to be the case when the plan offers incentives to all employees who positively affect student learning. Teachers in Arkansas reported more cooperation and higher satisfaction levels in the Achievement Challenge Pilot Project.

Q. Why add merit pay instead of revising the single-salary schedule?

A. Teacher buy-in is a necessary component of merit pay. Imposing a change in traditional pay schedules would likely bring about resistance from teachers and teacher unions and potential legal complications. Some collective bargaining agreements specifically rule out the use of standardized testing as part of a teacher’s evaluation. The Michigan Teacher Tenure Act also contains provisions protecting teacher compensation. A well-designed pilot project, in particular one that is privately funded, would serve to introduce the concept in a collaborative way as well as reassure teachers that their participation would not involve any loss of income.

Q. How does merit pay address the disparity in student ability?

A. Student testing can take into consideration a wide range of demographic and academic factors for each student, ranging from their past academic performance to their free- or reduced-lunch status. The Northwest Evaluation Association, for example, has aligned its exams in Michigan with the state’s own content expectations.

Q. What about rewarding school principals?

A. Merit pay needs to be “fair,” but the concept of fair may vary from district to district. Some districts put more weight on classroom teachers than school leadership, but others may not.

Q. What happens when foundation funding runs out?

A. Ideally, a pilot project in any given setting would be funded long enough to prove whether it results in higher student achievement, year over year, and why. Those results will lay the groundwork for discussion about changes in traditional teacher compensation.

Q. Are there examples of successful merit pay programs?

A. The Mackinac Center policy brief, “A Merit-Pay Pilot Program for Michigan Public Schools,” discusses the results, strengths and weaknesses of merit pay programs in Arkansas, Chicago and Denver.

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User Comments
Is it true that young ones today are losing interest on these subjects? Obviously, the White House is promoting programs that will help students on coping up with math and science subjects. But, The federal government thinks that the quality of math and science education can repair credit with the scientific community and improve US education with a few <a rev="vote for" title="U.S. Government Spends $250 Million on Science and Math" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/Payday-Loans/ ">payday loans</a> of sorts. In reality, it will take far longer to accomplish than they might think – US educators can't even get students to accept that "irregardless" isn't a word, and the difference between their, they're, and there – our students can't even learn their own language! It's a noble aim, to be sure, but throwing money at it may not work in the long run. >>
I am a teacher in the same county who is presently trying to quit the union. Like Caldwell, I strongly disagree with the MEA.

This article was timely.

Rob Olson
Pittsford Area Schools

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I agree this is a change worth making. I describe some of the uneven effects of the idea on my blog at http://rickolson.blogspot.com/2009/08/statewide-health-insurance-plan-for.html which you may also wish to read.

The devil will be in the details, so this is one we will need to monitor closely.

Rick Olson from Saline, former school Business Manager >>

Nowadays, saving money is very crucial and properly investing the money can keep you and your family away from the effect of the financial crisis. The sad news is that a lot of the options for short term funding have been drying up. Short term funding is a necessary thing to have around, and going through traditional channels such as banks isn't an option for a lot of people anymore – basically it's only open to Ken Lewis. Installment loans are an option, but some people, including senior citizens, have been thinking about raiding their retirement fund. Getting into your pension retirement plan or 401(k) funds is the last thing you want to do if you don't qualify for any withdrawals yet. The penalties are substantial, and you'll end up needing installments loans to pay them if you use retirement funds for <a rev="vote for" title="Installment Loans Reliable Option As 401(k)s are Dwindling" href="http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/05/17/installment-loans-reliable-option-401ks-dwindling/">short term funding</a>.


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I AGREE >>
Godfrey-Lee on the west side of the state has been running all-day, every-day kindergarten for several years. >>
We have a problem in Detroit Public School, their system had cash flow problem for years now. And honestly it getting worst in terms in progression with more children leaving to charter their schools almost every year. The state decided to give the Detroit school districts cash advance of $70 million so they would meet the schools expenses, as well as payment for teachers. Robert Bobb, the newly appointed emergency financial manager, requested the funds early in order for him to get the house in order before he had to start panicking. President Obama has been giving out large sums of money for troubled school districts, perhaps that’s where a generous portion of the aid came from. Getting Detroit Public Schools in working order is a worthy cause.

LINK TO READ FOR MORE INFO:
http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/03/10/state-advance-detroit-public-schools-70m/


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I am all for school choice and think its great that charters are finally moving forward. However, I'm wondering if the research accounts for a playing field that is not level. I can't take my school buildings and move them anywhere I want, nor can I simply slap up a pole building and make it a school. If anything, public schools need less state regulation and oversight so we can play by the same minimal rules charters do. If you want public schools to compete to improve, remove the barriers to doing so. I will gladly except less funding per pupil if the playing field is level.
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The purpose is to encourage non excercising children to excercise but my daughter's highschool gave her an improper body fat percentage and made my healthy daughter who trains 20 hours a week in tap jazz and ballet believe she was overweaghit instead of a person with muscles.
I believe the public schools do not have the right to make the diagnoses with these kids because they are using one measurement and recording it from their arms that they have a certain percetnage of body fat with one arm caliper test.
Does any one have feed back?
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Specifically, 81 percent of students in religiously affiliated schools and 82 percent of students in other private schools have parents who report being "very satisfied" with their schools, compared to 55 percent of students in assigned public schools and 63 percent of students in chosen public schools.

High levels of satisfaction among private school parents also extend to opinions about their children's teachers, academic standards of the school, order and discipline at the school, the amount of homework assigned, and interactions with school personnel.

http://fitt.in >>