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Australia: NSW Labor government unveils performance pay regime
for teachers
By Erika Zimmer
14 June 2008
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Far from backing down following a 24-hour strike by New South
Wales (NSW) public school teachers against the dismantling of
the statewide staffing system, the state Labor government has
stepped up its offensive, announcing another far-reaching attack
on teachers working conditions.
On May 28, less than a week after teachers struck over the
governments introduction of a scheme to empower school principals
to hire teachers on a local basis, NSW Education Minister John
Della Bosca announced a performance pay regime, to commence this
month.
Until now, NSW public school teachers have been paid according
to an incremental scale based on length of service, with classroom
teachers usually reaching the top of the scale after 10 years.
While movement up the scale depends upon annual performance reviews,
signed off by the school principal, increments are rarely withheld.
The new scheme, which Della Bosca proclaimed the most
comprehensive in the nation, provides for a new level of
seniority. No details of any higher salary scales have been released
but the minister told the media the plan gave the government and
the NSW Teachers Federation (NSWTF) a range of options for
discussion in the negotiation of a new pay agreement.
The system requires teachers to apply for accreditation based
on standards of professional accomplishment and leadership
devised by the NSW Institute of Teachers, a body set up by the
government in 2004. At this point the scheme is voluntary, but
it begins a shift toward payment according to student results.
Opposition to performance pay has a long history. Originally
introduced in Australia in 1862 as a cost-cutting measure, it
was abolished in the early twentieth century, partly as a result
of teachers condemnation of the narrow, rote-based learning
and test-based curriculum inherent in a system where teachers
were remunerated according to student exam scores.
Performance pay was not revived in NSW until the late 1980s
when, together with other Australian states, the government and
unions introduced higher pay for Advanced Skills Teachers (ASTs).
The AST plan emerged out of the federal Hawke Labor government
and Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) award restructuring
reforms. In the name of making Australian business
internationally competitive, the centralised wages
system was replaced by enterprise bargaining, in which
pay rises were made conditional on trading off rights and conditions
to drive up productivity rates.
ASTs were phased out in NSW in the early 1990s. They were opposed
by teachers who felt the system was divisive and failed to meet
its purported objective of keeping highly experienced teachers
in the classrooms; instead ASTs were often roped into school administration.
In 2003, the Howard governments education minister, Brendan
Nelson, backed the introduction of performance pay nationally
and set up a National Institute of Quality Teaching and School
Leadership to oversee the process. When his successor, Julie Bishop,
foreshadowed tying education funding to the states to the adoption
of performance pay, the move was condemned by teacher unions as
a dangerous and extremist import from
right-wing think tanks in the United States.
Then in 2006, Labor leader Kim Beazley unveiled his partys
variant of performance pay, with a plan that would award top
teachers up to $100,000 annually if they agreed to work
in disadvantaged schools.
Within two months of the election of the Rudd government, Education
Minister Julia Gillard announced in January this year the new
Labor governments intention to introduce performance pay
and overhaul teachers salary structures.
Gillard, like her NSW counterpart Della Bosca, is well aware
of the hostility of teachers to payment according to student results,
and was careful to package the measure within a supposedly educational,
politically-neutral framework. She commissioned a university-based
company to develop, by the end of 2008, standards against which
teachers could be measured.
A business agenda
The bipartisan push for performance pay is not aimed, as its
proponents claim, at improving public education, but is part of
a right-wing agenda to subordinate the education of students to
the requirements of corporate Australia.
In the guise of rewarding the best-performing teachers, pay
levels for most teachers will remain low. The only way to earn
a decent salary will be to pursue a career path defined
in terms of meeting performance benchmarks, adapting to revised
curricula and acquiring new competenciesall
set to satisfy the narrow vocational and skills needs of employers.
An all-rounded education will increasingly be available only
to those students whose parents pay hefty private school fees.
Most working class youth will only be able to access technical
schooling geared solely to business requirements.
At the same time, the new system will accelerate the shift
to private education, by helping to set up what will effectively
become an employment market for teachers, in which the wealthiest
or best endowed schools will pay more to attract the top
performers.
This underlying agenda was underscored by the release, in the
same week as Della Boscas announcement, of a paper by the
Business Council of Australia (BCA), which represents the largest
companies operating in Australia. The BCA report, Teaching
Talent: The Best Teachers For Australias Classrooms,
proposed a federal scheme similar to the one being implemented
by the NSW government.
The BCA said its vision for education focussed on the necessity
to compete effectively in the global market of the 21st
century. Students needed the knowledge, skills and
values that will enable them to enter and be successful in a rewarding
career or vocation.
To this end, a national certification system was
needed to recognise excellent teachers and provide a new career
path, combined with a strategy to ensure that teachers continue
to learn and improve their teaching throughout their careers.
Significantly, the BCA report tied performance pay to a wider
strategy that included giving school principals the
authority to hire more of the teachers because principals
were best able to know the needs of that school and to match
those needs with the skills of potential teachers.
The only difference emerged when the BCA proposal, announced
in banner headlines, called for the best teachers
to have the opportunity to earn up to double the average
teaching salaryor about $130,000 a yearin return
for meeting specific criteria. Della Bosca dismissed
the proposition as ludicrous, claiming that state
governments could not afford to pay such salaries.
NSW teachers, like their counterparts in Victoria and around
the country, now face state and federal Labor governments determined
to introduce this radical, pro-market blueprint, using the low
salaries paid to public school teachers and the decayed condition
of the chronically under-funded public system as the pretext.
In so doing, they are counting on the full collaboration of the
teacher unions. The NSWTF has voiced no objection to Della Boscas
plan, except for the provision that teachers seeking accreditation
will have to pay the application fees out of their own pockets.
Likewise, the national union, the Australian Education Union (AEU),
has no principled opposition to performance pay. In 2001, an AEU
agreement with the Victorian Labor government initiated a link
between performance criteria and pay increments. Then in 2004,
the AEU signed up to a system that required schools to show continuous
improvement in student test results in order to access funding.
To develop a genuine campaign against these measures requires,
as a first step, the unification of the struggle of NSW teachers
against the dismantling of state-wide staffing with that of Victorian
teachers who oppose the AEUs sell-out industrial agreement
that cuts real pay for most teachers, drops the fight for smaller
classes and sanctifies contract teaching.
Above all, teachers throughout the country need to make a decisive
political break from Labor and its partners in the trade unions
and adopt an alternative socialist perspectiveone that challenges
the very basis of the profit system itself. Instead of ongoing
cuts and the destruction of teachers working conditions,
the Socialist Equality Party insists that billions of dollars
be allocated to provide free, high quality, fully resourced education
that meets the intellectual, social and creative needs of all
students.
See Also:
Australia: Victorian teachers union
opposes mass meetings to discuss industrial agreement
[3 June 2008]
Australia: Victorian teachers union
convenes delegates meetings to ram through industrial agreement
[2 June 2008]
Australia: NSW teachers strike
against attacks on jobs and conditions
[28 May 2008]
Australia: Details of the proposed
AEU-Victorian government sell-out teachers agreement
[24 May 2008]
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