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When teacher groups unite, look out

January 27, 2008
Karl Priest
When teacher groups unite, look out
The last time the American Federation of Teachers and the West Virginia Education Association played footsie, they were going against a poll of their own members that supported criticism of evolution. The time before that they combined for a statewide teacher strike.

The last time the American Federation of Teachers and the West Virginia Education Association played footsie, they were going against a poll of their own members that supported criticism of evolution. The time before that they combined for a statewide teacher strike. Previous history of WVEA and AFT collusion is foreboding for West Virginia citizens.

Now, a perfect storm is stirring on the educational front. The ingredients are teachers angry over pay, an entrenched left-wing agenda, lack of moral standards (the Nitro book issue for example), low student performance and a dangerous environment.

Teacher quality probably is distributed on a bell curve.

Some teachers are wonderful and deserve a six-figure salary. On the other end of the scale are teachers who should receive a little above minimum wage. Some of those should not be in the profession and rely upon teacher union protection.

Good teachers punish themselves by being in unions that lock them into a non-performance pay system. If the talented teachers ever start entrepreneurial schools, the public schools will face the results of competition.

Sadly, teachers remain in teacher unions that promote a left-wing agenda that most teachers deplore. The excuses of "insurance" and "grievance representation" are not valid. There are other options. If anyone should have felt threatened by administrative reprisal, it would have been me. I had no need of the WVEA/AFT for the last several years of my career.

On State of the State night, teachers chanted (one with a bullhorn) for more pay. I agree with the AFT/WVEA that West Virginia faces a crisis. However, the crisis is not due to the level of teacher pay.

For the second year in a row, Gov. Manchin called for tougher anti-bullying rules. I taught for 35 years and we never had to designate a special anti-bullying category. The ever-present bullies were regulated by general school rules. The difference now is that "anti-bullying" is really code for "homosexual agenda."

I personally witnessed state government stealth tactics to implement a pro-homosexual program in Kanawha County Schools. That agenda is fully supported by teacher unions. If Gov. Manchin does not have a hidden agenda, his remarks should still cause concern for parents.

In the governor's own words: "I am determined to ... give our teachers every possible tool they need to take back their classrooms." That means that children are in serious danger of physical or verbal attack. From my experience in the public schools, he is right.