Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Congratulations Boston EF Teachers!


19-8!



          Boston EF teachers stood strong against their employer's anti-union campaign and voted 19-8 in favor of joining the NewsGuild - CWA. Jump over to their Facebook page and say congrats


Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Article about us (by us) in Working USA

Teaching and Organizing in For‐Profit Higher Education: A Kaplan Story

Joe Berry, Jon Blanchette
Abstract

This article attempts to do two things: one, to describe the sizeable for-profit higher education sector; and second—and mainly—to tell the story of one of the very few successful organizing drives in recent years in that sector. In this case, the drive was at Kaplan International Centers (KIC) in New York City. The article is coauthored by Joe Berry, who has studied and written about contingent faculty organizing, and participated in it for many years, and Jonathan Blanchette, who was one of the leading member-organizers of the successful organizing drive at KIC. As part of the narrative of the organizing drive and subsequent negotiations for first contract, the article deals with teacher consciousness, fears, and management antiunion tactics, and why the antiunion tactics were ultimately unsuccessful. The article concludes with some strategic considerations and conclusions, as well as summary lists of tactics used and references for further reading on this case.


Read the article in full



Wednesday, July 8, 2015

St. Giles ESL Teachers in San Francisco Unionize

Another ESL School in the US Organizes


St. Giles ESL in San Francisco has become the 3rd ESL school in the US school to form a collective bargaining unit. Reports depict a high level of solidarity, boldness, and a masterfully executed strategy. Reportedly management was informed of the organizing drive when teachers called a staff meeting where more than 50% vocally announced their support for unionization.

St. Giles becomes the 2nd ESL school to organize under TNG-CWA, specifically The Pacific Media Workers Guild:

Pacific Media Workers Guild

We are the Pacific Media Workers Guild, Local 39521 of The Newspaper Guild-Communications Workers of America. We represent more than 1,200 journalists and other media workers, interpreters, translators, union staffs and freelancers.

So congratulations teachers and welcome to the family!



(Copied and pasted for the lazy:)

ESL teachers unionize!



In a vote of 16 to 5, teachers from St. Giles International in San Francisco, an English language school, voted today for Guild representation.
The unit started organizing last November around issues of lack of pay for preparation time, low wages, inconsistent hours of work, job security and lack of benefits.
Carl Hall, Kat Anderson and Gloria La Riva from the Pacific Media Workers Guild worked on this campaign along with John Dugan from Communications Workers of America.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Congratulations to Kaplan teachers in Toronto!


On Monday, May 11th, 25 Kaplan ESL teachers in Toronto boldly stood up for themselves and commenced a strike action, one that would end up lasting 4 weeks. The main issue at hand was internal "performance matrix", which teachers and members of their union (Unifor Local 40) claimed was being used by management to randomly and unpredictably lay-off experienced and highly-skilled teachers in favor of shorter-term contract teachers with nearly identical student survey results. 


English language arts (ELA) teacher and test preparation instructor Brad Bartholomew, 45, said:
People with 10 to 15 years of experience are being laid off, instead of people who were hired in the last year,”
“Our employers recognize they have full rights to use progressive discipline in line with performance evaluation. They say this restricts them too much. That’s completely untrue, there’s no reason why they can’t manage us based on performance. In fact, we want to be managed on performance. We just don’t want it to be the sole basis for arbitrary dismissal.
“We want to be better teachers and deliver quality classes to students. But you could be a good performer in the bottom third of teachers and be arbitrarily laid off."
Management's rhetoric of "not wanting to be restricted too much" is something they repeat like a broken record, and as any Kaplan teacher knows is just a poor justification they use when they want to make decisions that decimate their employee's livelihoods in order to raise quarterly earnings a few points or even a few fractions of a point. To paraphrase another part of their response: "We only want to make sure that the students have the highest quality teachers possible." Anyone who has worked for Kaplan knows how hollow statements like these are. Teachers are judged, above all else, on student surveys given at the end of their time at Kaplan. These surveys however are given in English to non-native English speakers - and anyone with any sense of logic knows that a survey is as much of a popularity contest as it is an assessment with how much they've actually learned. A student may give a negative review to an amazing teacher who helped he or she improve their English tremendously, but perhaps the teacher had to be strict with the student and make them do things like (god forbid) put away their smartphones during class, or perhaps push them to work harder not only for their own benefit, but to keep their laziness from infecting the rest of the class. Or in some cases, a student may be upset at management or some other aspect of the school that's completely out of the teacher's hands, and reacts by giving poor marks across the board. In other words, negative survey results may stem from some form of resentment a student has against the teacher or the school itself, but is not an actual reflection of the quality of the education he or she received. Another aspect of the "perfomance matrix" which defies all logic and common sense is that what separates a "quality" teacher from a "poorly performing teacher" is completely relative to the other teachers in the school. According to Unifor: "Kaplan (is) now using the clause to dismiss long-serving employees with high approval ratings. Six members of staff have been dismissed in the past 12 to 18 months. The union claims that a 0.1 per cent difference in performance evaluation scores could cause a junior employee to be retained over a senior member of staff with more than 10 years experience."

Even if the surveys and "performance matrix" were an accurate judge of a teacher's ability to do what they're paid to do, teach, who's to say that the 25 teachers in Toronto aren't the best ESL teachers in the world? But since logically not all can be equally "the best", simply being one tenth of a point behind another colleague can put an amazing teacher on the chopping block. By that reasoning, Kaplan very well may have dismissed 6 of the finest ESL teachers to be found in the past 12-18 months. Also by that methodology, Kaplan can hire the worst ESL teachers in the world, but hey if the top 2/3 of the worst get higher survey scores than the bottom 1/3, they can tout the top performers as great teachers. The truth of the matter is, however, is that Kaplan doesn't like to have experienced staff members because they make more money than a new hire because of annual raises. This not only goes for teachers, but for management as well. The other reason for this game they play is just a tool used to scare people into performing as they believe their jobs could vanish at any moment - as opposed to simply rewarding good performance with fair compensation for their good work. In the end however, through their courageous actions, they managed to make the company meet their demands. After 4 weeks of work stoppage, the teachers of Toronto voted to accept a tentative agreement which Unifor says includes annual wage increases, vacation enhancements, and key improvements to language on job security they were fighting for.
Going out on strike is a bold action, an action fraught with pitfalls and uncertainty. However their decision to stand up and stand together after feeling pushed around for long enough are truly inspirational, and shows what can be achieved through solidarity. 

- Teachers for a Better Kaplan

Sources:
- This writer who has all too much experience being in the employment of Kaplan Intl. Centers. 

Friday, January 2, 2015

National Adjunct Walkout Day

Feb 25th is National Adjunct Walkout Day.


Rather than write another post, here is a link with a number of different posts on the event:

http://www.precariousfacultyblog.com/2014/11/nawd-links-from-bigreda-is-for-adjunct.html



Search social media sites for the hashtag:

#NAWD

- In Solidarity,
Those in Favor