After college, I taught fourth grade in my childhood public school district. I learned much from the kids and teachers and thoroughly enjoyed my time in the classroom. Teachers perform miracles every day, and their impact on generations of children can be profound. I understand why they’re so loved and respected.
However, teachers are often confused with their unions. In concept, teachers uniting together to negotiate on behalf of their colleagues over issues of salary, benefits, and conditions in the classroom makes sense. Yet there’s a dark and unpleasant underside to these unions often revealed at the time of a strike, which usually happens in some of California’s worst-run districts.
After all I’ve seen, I don’t believe teachers unions can be fixed. I’m now convinced that it’s immoral and unethical for principled and religious teachers to belong to the union.
Let me explain.
That’s a lot of cash that doesn’t go to academics.
Some argue that there isn’t enough money in our public schools. That’s a debate worth having. It could also be argued that too much money is spent on politics impacting the classroom.
In this way, teachers unions have captured California’s public schools.
While many teachers go into the noble profession to enlighten young minds and mold them into engaged civic beings, the union undercuts the best teachers and protects the worst teachers. Add short tenure laws and a convoluted dismissal process to the mix and it’s nearly impossible to dismiss problematic teachers because of how vigorously the union defends them. And when budgets need to be cut, the state’s last-in, first-out policy sends new, bright, and innovative teachers to the curb regardless of how well they perform in the classroom.
Despite the U.S. Supreme Court freeing them from their obligation in the 2018 Janus case, many of them keep paying their dues. Why do decent teachers resent paying the thousand dollars per year in membership dues when they know it could be spent in other places and represents a significant amount of money over a 30-year career?
Fear of retaliation.
As any public school teacher can tell you, the place teachers dread the most isn’t the repugnant sex education classes they have to teach, playground duty, or parent-teacher conferences. Rather, they fear the teachers lounges. Most teachers are agreeable people and try to avoid sensationalism and conflict in the teachers’ lounge. Fewer still want anything to do with the organizing that regularly comes around the time that a contract is up for renewal and they’re going to be forced to strike against their own wishes. They know that strikes hurt the poorest and neediest kids the most.
It’s true. Go to your district website and look up the most recent bargaining agreement and try to figure out how you and your child fit into that contract.
So if we want schools to succeed, let’s take a short hiatus from talking about teacher salaries, classroom sizes, and the latest teaching fads. Instead, let’s focus on deposing the teachers union leaders who highlight these issues but can never seem to improve the education of their students despite hundreds of millions of dollars flowing into their political coffers every year.
In fact, go one step further—let’s help our forlorn and intimidated teachers out of their union so they can stop paying an organization to work against their beliefs. It’s the moral thing to do.