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A young teacher in the Chicago suburbs who received a layoff notice last spring but kept his job said he likes the idea of keeping the best teachers, but wonders how schools can be sure they're keeping the right people. "You're letting go of the people who probably know the most about connecting with students," said Hemant Mehta, 27, who is in his fourth year teaching high school math in Naperville, Ill. Age and test scores are not the only ways to evaluate teachers, he added. The research found that using a strict seniority system for layoffs has a variety of other consequences, including: School districts lay off more teachers to meet their budget goals because junior teachers are paid less. Some districts lay off teachers in high-demand and hard-to-fill areas such as special education. Seniority-based layoffs disproportionately hit schools where the most needy kids are and the least senior teachers usually work. The value-added method of evaluating teachers has its detractors, including Goldhaber. He said the method is less accurate for teachers with shorter careers and more accurate when comparing teachers who have the same amount of experience. The researchers were able to explore this issue statewide, instead of using data from a single school district, because Washington state is ahead of most other states in tracking student and teacher data. The research drew support from others opposed to laying off teachers with less experience. A class-action lawsuit brought by the ACLU against the Los Angeles Unified School District argues that the district's seniority-based layoffs denied students a fair and adequate education because so many of the junior teachers taught in low-income areas where teacher turnover is high and attracting good teachers is difficult. "It confirms the common sense and backs it up with evidence that many teachers being forced out in the current approach are superstar teachers," said David Sapp, an attorney for ACLU-Southern California. "It's further exacerbating the inequity that exists." ___ Online: Center for Education Data and Research:
http://www.cedr.us/
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