So you retract your previous statement about people benig forced to sit in the room. You acknowledge its a personal choice on their part, and since its a personal choice, then any so-called psychological damage they receive from sitting in the room is the result of their choice. Glad you see it the correct way.Lurker wrote:Some in NY do choose to quit rather than ride out the years long process. That doesn't mean quiting is the solution to streamlining the disiplinary process. As for Kulaf's "fix", that seems really extreme to address a problem that the district itself says only affects 0.009% of teachers. Seems more like he just wants to eliminate the union and isn't concerned with addressing the actual problems with the disiplinary process.
Also, does it really make sense to spend millions of dollars to protect 0.009% of the teachers? Life isn't perfect, sometimes people get the shaft. But couldn't those dollars be better spent on books/meals/classroom supplies than protecting 0.009% of the teachers?