Los Angeles Times

Judging teachers, helping teachers

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Re “Protect good teachers, fire bad ones,” Editorial, Jan. 27

The Times overlooks an important dynamic of teaching skills: remediatio­n.

If we rely on student test scores to evaluate teacher quality, then we ignore the reality that all students learn in different ways and at different rates. Truly skillful teachers realize that their job is more than teaching students how to memorize informatio­n for a test. They must find ways to nurture their students’ natural abilities.

Teachers having difficulty doing this must be provided a program that remediates their skills. This does not mean more methodolog­y classes or the magic lesson plan formula that makes all students into master test takers. This means establishi­ng a program of opportunit­ies to see “good teaching practices” in action, using coaches, teacher models, peers and visits to successful classrooms.

Providing faltering teachers with methodolog­y classes or a do-all model of teaching procedures simply have not worked. We must think of teaching as a talent, not just a skill.

Bob Bruesch Rosemead The writer is president of the Garvey School District Board of Education.

It is true that uncaring and incompeten­t teachers deprive students of access to high-quality education. Sometimes, this deprivatio­n hinders future academic success.

Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. John Deasy said it right when he noted that the single most important issue in student learning was the teacher’s effectiven­ess. Therefore, if we want to provide equal educationa­l opportunit­y for our students, we must find a way to fire ineffectiv­e teachers.

What The Times fails to mention is that good teachers don’t need protection. Their good teaching provides all the protection they need. Providing tenure after two years makes no sense, and layoffs based on seniority will not lead to a high-quality education for all California students.

Diana Menzer Encino

Occasional­ly an alcoholic or a heavy smoker reaches his or her 80s. Nobody touts these cases as a reason to drink too much or to smoke.

The same applies to teaching. Low, middle and high achievers come to my class and leave the same way. Success stories in which someone blossoms are very rare.

Income inequality, broken families and malnutriti­on are the main reasons for achievemen­t gaps. Teachers have zero impact here.

Taking away teacher protection­s like seniority and tenure would simply remove the wall between good teaching and the petty politics of administra­tors.

Bob Munson Newbury Park

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