Teachers’ Unions, Collective Bargaining, and the Response to COVID-19

IF 1.7 3区 教育学 Q2 ECONOMICS
A. Hemphill, Bradley D. Marianno
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

In response to the COVID-19 crisis, school districts worked quickly to roll out distance learning plans in the spring. Sometimes these plans impinged upon or were directly in conflict with provisions found in collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) negotiated between teachers' unions and district administration. In this brief, we unpack how urban school systems changed CBAs to make way for learning under COVID-19 conditions. We review COVID-19–related contract changes in 101 urban school districts around the country. We find that twenty-five urban school districts returned to the bargaining table with teachers’ unions to negotiate short-term fixes to CBAs that allowed for more flexibility to implement distance learning. These contract changes focused on several areas of the CBA, including compensation, workload, non-teaching duties, evaluation, leave, and technology. We argue that the lessons learned in spring contract negotiations have implications for the design and implementation of fall schooling plans, and that how fall schooling plays out will shape teacher morale and labor relations beyond the 2020–21 school year.
教师工会、集体谈判与应对新冠肺炎
为应对COVID-19危机,各学区在春季迅速推出了远程学习计划。有时,这些计划与教师工会和地区行政当局谈判达成的集体谈判协议(cba)中的规定相抵触或直接相冲突。在本文中,我们将揭示城市学校系统如何改变cba,为COVID-19条件下的学习让路。我们回顾了全国101个城市学区与covid -19相关的合同变化。我们发现,25个城市学区与教师工会回到谈判桌上,就cba的短期修复进行谈判,以便更灵活地实施远程学习。这些合同变化集中在CBA的几个方面,包括薪酬、工作量、非教学职责、评估、休假和技术。我们认为,在春季合同谈判中吸取的教训对秋季学校计划的设计和实施有影响,秋季学校的表现将影响2020-21学年之后的教师士气和劳资关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
46
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