
The Brief
Get Up To SpeedTeachers unions: They're powerful, they're defensive, and they're stubborn. And if it seems their leadership places a premium on protecting its members above all other interests we should not be surprised, because protecting jobs and wages is what unions were created to do. And there's the rub, say critics who argue the unions are shielding too many teachers who do their jobs poorly: teachers who should be replaced, for the good of the children. Indeed, so central is good teaching to good learning, some say it's the unions as presently constructed more than anything other factor that are undermining America's schools. But can it really be that simple? In a ranking of whom to blame for what's wrong in America's classrooms, do teachers unions really come before slashed budgets? Or crumbling infrastructure, broken homes and the influence of narcotics? Do bad teachers so outnumber good ones that the union represents a collection of educational misfits? The question comes down to a decision: do we need to reform the unions before we do anything else , and if we do, is that the fix that will once again make US public education the model system it once was?
View Debate PageRandi Weingarten

- President, American Federation of Teachers
Seyward Darby, New Republic, January 13, 2010
Randi Weingarten, Huffington Post, October 8, 2008
Randi Weingarten, Washington Post, February 16, 2009
Terry Moe

- William Bennett Munro Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
James K. Glassman, Wall Street Journal, June 18, 2009
Terry M. Moe, Stanford University, May, 2007
Rod Paige

- Former U.S. Secretary of Education
Ira Stoll, New York Sun, April 18, 2007
Greg Toppo, USA Today, February 23, 2004
Larry Sand

- Elementary Teacher, Webster Middle School
Meredith Jessup, Townhall, February, 2010
Larry Sand, City Journal, November 20, 2009
Larry Sand, Dailynews.com, October 29, 2009
Larry Sand, Sign On San Diego, July 2, 2009
Larry Sand, LA Times, March 26, 2009
Larry Sand, Daily News, November 20, 2008