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Rhee wants her organization to support states and school districts adopting policies that enhance the teaching profession. Rhee argues that 50 percent of a teacher's evaluation should be based on measurable student achievement growth. She said a teacher's contribution to the community should also be taken into account. Her group will support rewarding effective teachers with higher pay and eliminating tenure, the lifetime job protections that critics say protect mediocre and even incompetent teachers. It also supports allowing the number of good charter schools to expand, while closing those that don't work. In the area of accountability, Rhee says the organization will push for promoting board and education structures that put students first
-- including considering mayoral control, as was done in D.C. Rhee says that Students First, in the long term, could bring resources to districts willing to adopt the organization's agenda. It will also work on informing people on education policy topics that effect many families. "These policies are a major disruption to the status quo," Rhee says. "But at the same time, we believe it's really hard to argue against the things that we are pushing." While many districts share similar troubles, there are distinct differences between pushing for reform in the District of Columbia and in communities in other parts of the country. Mike Petrilli, executive vice president at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education think tank, notes that with districts under even greater fiscal restraint in the year ahead, they may be reluctant to take on costly reforms. He added that Rhee's natural strength is making the case for reform with elites, but that she struggled to do the same in Washington's most disadvantaged communities. "I would leave the grass-roots organizing to someone else, someone who might have more credibility in the community," Petrilli said. Rhee says her group will only go into communities where they are invited, and that they've already gotten a strong amount of interest, though no official collaborations have been announced. For now, her staff is slim -- just six full-time workers. She's also serving on the education transition team for Florida Gov. Rick Scott. The schedule, Rhee says, has been hectic. In Washington, she was known for responding to tens of thousands of e-mails each year, and keeping long, 18-hour days. Her current schedule hasn't changed that much. "Since we announced the launch, I've pretty much been traveling nonstop," she says.
[Associated
Press;
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