Published: March 1, 2000
Judging by the high-flying rhetoric of the nation's governors, teaching and education will be dominant issues in state legislatures this spring. Every year about this time, the chief executives of the 50 states announce their legislative agenda in a "State of the State" address, delivered before lawmakers with pomp, ceremony, and special guests. This year, many governors bemoaned the teacher shortage and presented plans to make the profession more attractive, including upping their state's ante with higher salaries and signing bonuses. Others promised to improve the quality of their state's teaching corps, proposing initiatives ranging from mentoring programs for new teachers to testing of teacher competence.
But the award for the most enticing teacher incentive should probably go to Arizona Governor Jane Dee Hull, a Republican. Talking about her state's efforts to repair school buildings, Hull promised, "the days of . . . backed up plumbing will soon be over."
Here, highlights from key speeches:
Governor: Gray Davis, first-term Democrat.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 48.
Educators Saluted: Faye Sarfan, principal of Mayo Elementary in
Compton, who has promised to dye her hair green if the school's
students read 60,000 books by April; University of California President
Richard Atkinson, California State University Chancellor Charles Reed,
and Gretchen Laue, executive director of the California Reading and
Literacy Project, for their work creating state-sponsored reading
institutes for teachers.
Proposals: Spend $20.5 million to ensure that at least four core
Advanced Placement classes are available to every high school student.
Invest in classroom technology and preschool.
Teacher Talk: Offer cash incentives for teachers who agree to
work in struggling schools-including forgivable college loans,
fellowships for top scholars, house loans, and a $30,000 award for
earning national board certification. Combat teacher shortage by
establishing five teacher recruitment centers and allowing retired
teachers to return to the profession and keep their pensions. Expand
the state reading and literacy project to provide professional
development to 70,000 teachers.
Sound Bite: "After parents, teachers are California's greatest
force for social good."
Governor: Bob Taft, second-term Republican.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 36.
Educators Saluted: The staffs of Pike and Roosevelt Elementary
schools, where the number of students passing the state reading test
has increased dramatically over the past three years; Grace Koo and
Mary Pauline Blazer, two OhioReads volunteer tutors.
Proposals: Spend $4.5 billion—on top of $1 billion set
aside last year—on renovating schools. Create a commission on
academic standards and measuring student performance. Expand summer
reading programs. Make computer proficiency a high school graduation
requirement.
Teacher Talk: None.
Sound Bite: "We must never retreat from high standards, rigorous
assessment, and accountability for results."
Governor: George Pataki, second-term Republican.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 19.
Educators Saluted: Gregory Hodge, principal of the Frederick
Douglass Academy in Harlem.
Proposals: Approve more charter schools. Encourage schools to
develop character education courses.
Teacher Talk: Attract new teachers to public
education—reimburse tuition for university students who commit to
teaching in the neediest schools, place college juniors as mentors and
aides in summer schools, allow noncertified citizens with "life skills"
to teach courses, encourage retired public employees to seek second
careers as teachers by allowing them to earn their pension as well as a
full salary, provide money to teachers training for
recertification.
Sound Bite: "We need to do everything we can to open the doors
of teaching to every truly qualified New Yorker. . . . Right now, Colin
Powell can't teach in the New York schools that he grew up in. Billy
Joel is not 'qualified' to teach piano to kids on Long Island. Eileen
Collins can pilot the space shuttle, but she can't teach science in
Elmira, her hometown."
Governor: John Engler, third-term Republican.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 43.
Educators Saluted: Dr. David Spencer, president of the Michigan
Virtual University, which will launch the Michigan Virtual High School
and the Michigan Advanced Placement Academy on the Internet this
year.
Proposals: Boost state education spending, setting a minimum
level of aid to districts at $6,500 per student—roughly $600 more
than before. Urge districts to reduce bureaucracy. Abolish the cap on
public charter schools. Introduce annual state tests in every grade.
Place AmeriCorps reading tutors in schools. Empower principals to hire
and fire staff, revamp curriculum, and offer employee incentives. With
the Eli Broad Foundation, create a national training center for
principals.
Teacher Talk: Train all Michigan teachers in computer skills
over the next two years and award proficient teachers with computers
and Internet access. Give cash awards to all employees at
high-performing schools.
Sound Bite: "Principals are spending more time filling out forms
than working with teachers to improve student learning. We need to
reverse that trend and restore principals to their rightful place as
education leaders."
Governor: Thomas Vilsack, first-term Democrat.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 22.
Educators Saluted: Christie Vilsack, his wife, for her work
advocating public libraries; Brian and Diane Bergstrom, young parents
who moved to Iowa from Chicago for the state's "quality education";
Nancy Gardner, principal of West Liberty Elementary School, and her
teachers, for their half-Spanish, half-English curriculum.
Proposals: Improve early childhood education. Provide direct
assistance for school repair and maintenance. Support Internet
schools.
Teacher Talk: Enact several teacher salary initiatives: study
how to make Iowa teacher salaries more competitive, offer incentives to
encourage districts to test teacher compensation systems, give tax
credits to districts, enable teachers to take early retirement.
Increase funding for teacher induction programs and peer
mentoring.
Sound Bite: "Learning in this century should take place any
time, anywhere, for anybody."
Governor: Jim Hodges, first-term Democrat.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 53.
Educators Saluted: The state's 34 teachers who have earned
national certification; Jeff Davis, former Tampa Bay Buccaneer who runs
a program that recruits African American men to teaching; Joanne
Skillman, assistant principal who runs East Aiken Elementary's
character education program; Rachel Hodges, his wife, whose "Reading
With Rachel" program promotes literacy.
Proposals: Provide money to develop a character education
program at every school. Expand First Steps, his administration's
preschool readiness program. Introduce a state lottery to pay for
classroom technology, college scholarships for students, and
professional development for teachers.
Teacher Talk: Loan teachers cash to cover the cost of earning
national certification and forgive the loan for teachers who pass the
test. Award $25,000 to the state teacher of the year and $1,000 to each
district's teacher of the year. Spend $1 million on teacher
recruitment.
Sound Bite: "It's time to require students to respect their
teachers. In every school, our students must use words that show that
respect. I'm talking about ma'am, sir, Mr., and Mrs."
Governor: Bill Owens, first-term Republican.
Percentage Of Speech Devoted To K-12 Education: 47.
Educators Saluted: Gary Trujillo, principal of Bessemer
Elementary in Pueblo, where students' scores on the state reading test
have improved dramatically over the past three years.
Proposals: Help schools, law enforcement agencies, and other
government agencies share information about disruptive children. Fund
start-up costs of charter schools for high-risk and expelled students.
Increase state testing of reading, writing, and math. Introduce report
cards that grade schools on student performance and safety. Subsidize
the transportation costs of students willing to travel to
better-performing public schools. Invite for-profit and nonprofit
groups to turn the state's worst schools into independent charter
schools.
Teacher Talk: Give teachers "enhanced powers" to remove
troublemakers from their classes. Provide $4 million in grants for
professional development. Abolish tenure for future teachers.
Sound Bite: "We are in danger of having two groups of children
in Colorado—one that can read and one that can't; one that dreams
and one that doesn't."
—Samantha Stainburn
Vol. 11, Issue 6, Pages 26-27
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