TUPELO, Miss. —
It’s standard business practice to align employee rewards with company goals and to provide financial incentives for exceptional performance.
That’s not the case in education. Salary increases for public school teachers in Mississippi are based strictly on longevity and advanced degrees earned. Measures of teacher effectiveness and student achievement aren’t part of the equation.
Education is not business, but the business of education is ensuring that children learn to the best of their ability. While multiple factors are at work, nothing is more important than an effective teacher. Every child deserves the best teacher possible and a system focused on children’s academic progress.
The time has come for Mississippi to build performance-based incentives into its teacher compensation system. Gov. Phil Bryant announced his support for recommendations in a report from Mississippi State University’s Research and Curriculum Unit that outlines how such a change could be introduced in Mississippi.
“Merit pay” has long been controversial in education circles. But the arguments against it pale when considered against the extraordinarily high stakes involved. We simply can’t afford to continue on the same path with so many students, particularly the economically disadvantaged, underperforming and never finishing school.
The MSU report proposes implementation of performance-based teacher pay incentives in conjunction with the new statewide teacher effectiveness evaluation system under development. That evaluation — along with student test scores — would be the standard for performance pay as the new Common Core curriculum is introduced in the 2014-15 school year. Other variables would be considered, and certainly it wouldn’t be fair to judge all teachers exactly the same way. The MSU recommendations leave some leeway to adapt the principle to local circumstances. ...
That’s not to lay all the blame for student performance at the feet of teachers. Our public school system has historically been underfunded and teachers vastly underpaid relative to the importance of their job. But without highly skilled, highly professional, goal-focused teachers, Mississippi’s legacy of educational underachievement and cyclical poverty will never end.
The details in such a system are critical, of course, and educators’ voices must be heard. But with a good faith effort, a fair system of performance-based pay that rewards outstanding teachers and benefits children is both possible and desirable.
Editorials
Merit-based teacher pay should be considered
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DOJ’s seizure of phone records is appalling
By The Vicksburg Post:
In today’s Department of Justice, the ends seem to justify the means.
And it is sickening. -
Bryant tantrum on education major standards was misguided
By the (McComb) Enterprise-Journal:
That was quite a tantrum Gov. Phil Bryant pitched at the College Board recently, criticizing its members for voicing concerns about his effort to increase standards for education majors. -
Legislature to City Hall not sure move
Five Mississippi House members are running for mayor this year, and while name recognition might provide some advantage, lawmakers have had a mixed record in trying to go from the Capitol to City Hall.
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Nation’s economy improving, but state’s still lagging
By The (Jackson) Clarion-Ledger
It’s been a long time coming, but finally there are bright economic signs nationally that seem here to stay a while. -
Armed teachers dangerous idea for school safety
By (Columbus) The Commercial Dispatch:
The Mississippi House of Representatives sent back to the Senate a bill that would arm teachers.
Before sending it over, the House, by a 70-46 vote, amended the Senate’s bill in two major ways. Actually, the House did more than amend it. They neutered it. -
Not every bill grabs headlines
The first two bills that Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant signed during the 2013 legislative session dealt with money.
House Bill 19 gave more cash to the agency that coordinates a program to put all emergency offices under the same digital communications system. House Bill 20 moved money from the car tag reduction fund to the Budget Contingency Fund. Lawmakers use the contingency fund to cobble together cash for the overall state budget. -
Transparency key to ‘best watchdogs’ oversight
By The (Tupelo) Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal:
Rep. Jerry Turner’s effort to require open meetings of water associations and notice of meetings in which members of boards of directors will be elected remains alive in the Legislature. It should be enacted in the interests of transparency in the running of the nonprofit associations providing water for a significant percentage of Mississippi’s population. -
Miss. makes news, good news, this time
By The (Columbus) Commercial Dispatch:
Generally, when Mississippi makes national news — especially of late — it is not the sort of notoriety we welcome. ...
So March 3, when Mississippi again made national news, we braced ourselves for the embarrassment that was sure to follow.
Only this time, it wasn’t anything to be embarrassed about.
Imagine that. -
Ag’s legal expenses top $2.4M for year
An ongoing lawsuit challenging Mississippi’s foster care system has cost the state at least $4.4 million in legal expenses and fees since 2008.
Expenses continue to rise as the plaintiffs and the state work toward a telephone status conference scheduled for April 25 with U.S. District Judge Tom S. Lee. The price tag this year is $1.35 million. -
Ag’s legal expenses top $2.4M for year
An ongoing lawsuit challenging Mississippi’s foster care system has cost the state at least $4.4 million in legal expenses and fees since 2008.
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DOJ’s seizure of phone records is appalling




