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Australia: performance-based contracts planned for school
principals
By Erika Zimmer
17 November 2004
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The Labor government in the Australian state of New South Wales
(NSW) has introduced measures allowing it to dismiss public school
principals who fail to meet as yet unspecified performance criteria.
The move is a thinly-veiled step toward placing principals and
all teachers on fixed-term contracts, with salaries tied to performance.
Legislation was unveiled in parliament last month, giving the
Education Departments director-general open-ended powers
to determine benchmarks for the states 2,200 school principals.
Principals will be measured against key accountabilities
including, but not limited to, students test results, student
enrolment and retention data, planning and budget management,
and resource and risk management.
Under the Teaching Services Amendment Bill 2004, principals
will be reviewed at least annually but more often
if deemed necessary by the director-general. Principals who fail
to meet targets will be put on a performance improvement
program. Those who fail to satisfactorily complete such
a program will be subject to dismissal or demotion.
In addition to annual reviews, a principals appointment
to a particular school will be assessed every five years, and
the positions of principal and senior staff will be opened up
to applicants from the private school sector and from other Australian
states.
Up to now, NSW school principals have been employed as permanent
teachers, able to be dismissed only through a breach of conduct.
The new laws also streamline the process of sacking
principals on misconduct grounds.
Performance testing is designed to pave the way for contract
employment. The Kennett Liberal government in neighbouring Victoria
introduced employment contracts for principals in 1994, replacing
the previous Labor governments system of employing principals
on five or seven year fixed-term appointments. It then extended
the system to classroom teachers. After Kennett was ousted in
1999, partly due to widespread hostility to his education cutbacks,
the incoming Bracks Labor government retained contract employment.
By linking employment to a schools performance in statewide
tests, the NSW legislation will accelerate the move away from
child-centred learning, in which the individuals interests
and needs are taken into account, back to narrow, test-centred
teaching methods that were discredited more than half a century
ago. The increased focus on school rankings will place pressure
on principals to exclude those students requiring the most attention,
such as students with learning or behavioural difficulties.
The legislation takes a major step toward transforming school
principals into managers, whose primary focus is not the education
of students but budgetting and account keeping. In order to keep
their jobs, they will have to regiment and police teachers, insisting
that they conform to official performance measurements.
A recent survey undertaken in Victoria found 8 out of 10 principals
experiencing high levels of stress, with half reporting work-related
illnesses and some suffering breakdowns or even committing suicide.
Their chief difficulty, the report said, was attempting to reconcile
their responsibility to their students with the demands placed
upon them by the education department.
The proposal follows the agenda being pursued by governments
internationally to undermine state-run schools. Under-funded schools
in poorer regions will be hardest hit and the onus placed on the
principal, rather than the education department, to decide where
to cut spending. Parents seeking a decent education for their
children will feel increasingly obliged to send them to private
schools, requiring the payment of costly fees.
In Britain, after national school tables were established,
poorly performing schoolsthe majority from disadvantaged
areaswere threatened with funding cuts and closure. Devolution
of increased powers to principals under the Tomorrows
Schools reforms in New Zealand overwhelmingly disadvantaged
schools in low-income districts.
In Australia, private schools have been allocated massive funding
increases, encouraging a steady rise in private school enrolments
at the expense of government schools. Public schools and teachers
have been blamed for the drop in enrolments, with teachers
inflexible working conditions a regular target of
attack in the media.
In its May budget, the federal Howard government tied school
funding to a range of measures, such as the publication of school
performance benchmarks in order to rank schools, and increased
autonomy for principals, including the right to hire and fire
teachers.
Premier Bob Carrs government in NSW is not the only state
Labor administration to introduce legislation in line with these
policies. The Western Australian government has declared that
from 2005, principals will be appointed to schools for only five-year
periods. Teachers in metropolitan schools will also be given five
year postings after which they can be moved on
by principals.
The role of the unions
In order to stifle opposition by principals and teachers, the
Carr government negotiated its measures with Australian Council
of Trade Unions president Sharan Burrow and the NSW Teachers Federation
(NSWTF).
The erosion of security of employment for school principals
was first revealed on June 15 when the Sydney Morning Herald
reported on the education departments Futures
Project, described as the first long-range plan for
public education in the state for 50 years.
Under the guise of halting the enrolment drift to private schools,
the plan targetted 10 areas for change, canvassing the de-regulation
of teachers working conditions, and the devolution of more
powers to principals, including the right to recruit and sack
staff.
Education deputy-director Alan Laughlin referred to the review
of schools every five years or so and measures to
deal with under-performing teachers, who were a continuous
thorn in our sides. He revealed that the NSWTF was involved
in the discussions, which had commenced months earlier.
The union, however, kept the states 60,000 public school
teachers, then in the final months of a year-long salaries campaign,
in the dark about the governments plans.
It said nothing until the Industrial Relations Commission decided
on June 10 to overturn pay parity by awarding Catholic school
principals $13,000 a year more than their government colleagues.
A week later, Education Minister Andrew Refshauge stipulated that
public school principals would receive equivalent increases, but
contingent on losing their security of tenure. Henceforth, government
school principals, like their private school counterparts, would
be hired on fixed-term appointments, Refshauge said.
In order to retain some credibility with teachers alarmed by
the governments moves, and to ensure the unions place
at the bargaining table, union leaders stridently condemned the
government, accusing it of resurrecting the agenda of the state
Liberal government of the early 1990s.
NSWTF president Marie OHalloran told teachers at the
unions annual conference on July 5 that if principals were
given the new responsibilities, schools would be left in
their local cases to sink or swim with ever decreasing (amounts)
of money.
While loudly denouncing the governments agenda, union
leaders had no intention of mobilising teachers to fight it. Instead,
they entered closed-door talks with the government, emerging to
fraudulently claim that the deal they had worked out ensured that
the government would not introduce contract employment.
However, the underlying agenda has quickly emerged. On November
7, the Sunday Telegraph reported that the government intended
to allow principals to hire teachers. This would threaten the
statewide staffing system, teachers transfer rights and
their job security.
The union has again rushed into print to denounce the Futures
Project reforms as redundant and dangerous.
But just as it has straitjacketed teachers and backed the introduction
of the Teaching Services Bill, it will play a similar role with
the entire package. The unions only suggestion is that concerned
teachers make written submissions to the department.
See Also:
Australia: Public schools to
be reduced to a residual safety net
[15 April 2004]
Report highlights deterioration
of Australian public schools
[11 November 2002]
Australian parents
pay for schools basic needs
[7 September 2001]
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