Source: In These Times

Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) strike, by AB Images/Shutterstock.com
After making waves in West Virginia, Oklahoma, Arizona, Kentucky, North Carolina and beyond, the Red for Ed movement has now spread to Indiana. Fed up with disinvestment in public schools and disrespect for their profession, teachers from across the Hoosier State are converging in Indianapolis today to hold lawmakers accountable and demand change.
More than 15,000 teachers and supporters are expected to rally at the Republican-controlled statehouse for todayās Red for Ed Day of Action, organized by the Indiana State Teachers Association and AFT Indiana. While the protest is not officially a strike, nearly half of the stateās school districts have been forced to cancel classes because so many educators have taken the day off to participate.
The rally coincides with the state legislatureās āOrganization Day,ā where lawmakers discuss their priorities for the next legislative session which begins in January.
Teachers are demanding raises to their salaries, which average around $50,000āwell below the national average of $60,000ābut can be as low as $30,000 for new hires. After years of state budget surpluses, Indiana now has $2.3 billion in reserves. At the same time, Indiana teachers have seen the smallest salary increases in the nation, receiving an overall increase of only $6,900 between 2002 and 2017.
Rather than simply tapping into the stateās massive reserves to pay for teacher raises, Republican lawmakers say that any salary increases would have to be paired with cuts to other school expenses such as administration and transportation.
Earlier this year, Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb agreed to a one-time allocation of $150 million to pay down schoolsā pension liability, freeing up $70 million per year in the school districtsā budgets. While Holcomb framed the move as a roundabout way to provide teachers raises, schools were not required to use the savings for salary increasesāand apparently havenāt done so.
The low salaries compared to neighboring states has resulted in a statewide teacher shortage.Ā āClass sizes have ballooned because we donāt have the staffāwe canāt fill the positions that are open and we canāt find the money to hire staff,ā explained Daniel Brugioni, president of the Lake Ridge Federation of Teachers. āWhen youāre looking at almost 100% of districts in the state canāt fill their openings, you realize something has to be done.ā
A second demand of the teachers revolves around Indianaās new standardized test, the Indiana Learning Evaluation Assessment Readiness Network (ILEARN). The exam is computer adaptive, meaning the difficulty of questions changes based on studentsā responses. It was just rolled out this year, and fewer than half of the stateās students passed it. The result has not only angered parents, but also raised concerns for teachersāwhose compensation is tied to their studentsā ILEARN scores.
Teachers are calling on lawmakers to pass a āhold-harmlessā provision to prevent this yearās ILEARN scores from being used by the state to punish them, their students and their schools. At the same time, teachers are also questioning the stateās emphasis on standardized testing.
āAre the students weāre educating better off than they were 10 to 15 years ago? Weāve had an incredible amount of testing,ā said Tonya Pfaff, a schoolteacher in Vigo County as well as a Democratic state legislator. āStudents are full of anxiety, they donāt like school, they are learning how to do multiple choice tests⦠but life is not multiple choice. Itās about working on projects, collaborating and problem-solving.ā
Educators are also demanding legislators repeal a new law that went into effect this summer, which requires they complete a 15-hour āexternshipā with a local business in order to renew their state teaching license. The required āexternshipā was billed by Republican lawmakers as a way to advance teachersā professional development and help them connect students to job opportunities.
The new requirement outraged many teachers, who already attend conferences and workshops, as well as pursue continuing education, as part of their professional development. Fort Wayne Education Association president Julie Hyndman called it a ācomplete insultā this May. āItās another opportunity to demoralize public school teachers that the Indiana legislatures have continued to do, this year and most years prior,ā she said.
The Indiana day of action comes less than one week after teachers in Little Rock, Arkansas went on a one-day strike in defense of their collective bargaining rights, and one month after 25,000 educators with the Chicago Teachers Union held an 11-day strike for improved school services and smaller class sizes. In recent weeks, teachers have also gone on strike in Dedham, Massachusetts and Berkeley, California, among other places, proving that the Red for Ed movement is continuing to gain momentum.
While Indiana laws prohibit teachers from going on strike, similar laws have not deterred educators in other states from holding work stoppages. āThis is a warning shot,ā explained Kenneth Dau-Schmidt, a labor and employment law professor at Indiana University. āIf [state lawmakers] want to keep heading on the track that they are heading on, we very well could have an illegal teachers strike, and they will be in the same position as other states.ā
Jeff Schuhrke is a Working In These Times contributor based in Chicago. He has a Master’s in Labor Studies from UMass Amherst and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in labor history at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He was a summer 2013 editorial intern at In These Times. Follow him on Twitter: @JeffSchuhrke.
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