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| accessdate = 2007-06-14 }}</ref>, as well as concerning itself with the wage and working condition issues common to other labor unions.
| accessdate = 2007-06-14 }}</ref>, as well as concerning itself with the wage and working condition issues common to other labor unions.


The NEA is a [[volunteer]]-based organization that relies upon its members to perform much of the Association's work. In turn, the members are supported by a network of staff at the local, state, and national levels. The stated goal of NEA's work is encapsulated in its [[tagline]]: "building great public schools for every student."<ref name="nea.org"/>
The NEA is a [[volunteer]]-based organization that relies upon its members to perform much of the Association's work. In turn, the members are supported by a network of staff at the local, state, and national levels. The stated goal of NEA's work is encapsulated in its vision: "building great public schools for every student."<ref name="nea.org"/>


At the local level, [[affiliates]] perform a variety of activities (as determined by the local members), which may range from raising funds for scholarship programs to conducting professional workshops on issues that affect faculty and school support staff to bargaining contracts for school district employees.<ref name=autogenerated5>[http://www.nea.org/aboutnea/whatwedo.html NEA: About NEA<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
At the local level, [[affiliates]] perform a variety of activities (as determined by the local members), which may range from raising funds for scholarship programs to conducting professional workshops on issues that affect faculty and school support staff to bargaining contracts for school district employees.<ref name=autogenerated5>[http://www.nea.org/aboutnea/whatwedo.html NEA: About NEA<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Revision as of 21:30, 15 December 2009

National Education Association (NEA)
Founded1857
Members
3.2 million (2006) [3]
AffiliationsEI
WebsiteNEA Website

The National Education Association (NEA) is the largest professional organization and largest labor union in the United States,[1][2] representing public school teachers and other support personnel, faculty and staffers at colleges and universities, retired educators, and college students preparing to become teachers. The NEA has 3.2 million members and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. With affiliate organizations in every state and in more than 14,000 communities across the nation, it employs over 550 staff and had a budget of more than $307 million for the 2006–2007 fiscal year. Dennis Van Roekel is the NEA's current president. NEA is incorporated as a professional association in a few states and as a labor union in most states (but it is not a member of the AFL-CIO, however it is a member of Education International, the global federation of teacher's unions). On its website, the NEA describes itself as a "professional employee organization,"[1] although it is often categorized as a labor union with strong leftist and liberal leanings, particularly by critics.[2]

The group holds a congressional charter under Title 36 of the United States Code.

Mission

The stated mission of the National Education Association is "to advocate for education professionals and to unite our members and the nation to fulfill the promise of public education to prepare every student to succeed in a diverse and interdependent world."[3], as well as concerning itself with the wage and working condition issues common to other labor unions.

The NEA is a volunteer-based organization that relies upon its members to perform much of the Association's work. In turn, the members are supported by a network of staff at the local, state, and national levels. The stated goal of NEA's work is encapsulated in its vision: "building great public schools for every student."[1]

At the local level, affiliates perform a variety of activities (as determined by the local members), which may range from raising funds for scholarship programs to conducting professional workshops on issues that affect faculty and school support staff to bargaining contracts for school district employees.[4]

The activities of NEA state affiliates are equally wide-ranging. State affiliates regularly lobby state legislators for funding and other resources; they seek to influence education policy; they campaign for higher professional standards for educators and support professionals; and, they file legal actions to protect academic freedom and the rights of school employees. [4] The extent to which the NEA and its state and local affiliates engage in political activities, especially during election cycles has, however, been a source of controversy. [5][6][7]

At the national level, the NEA lobbies the United States Congress and federal agencies on behalf of its members and public schools, works with other education organizations and friends of public education, provides training and assistance to its affiliates, and generally conducts activities consistent with the policies set by its elected governing bodies.[4]

Political activities

The National Education Association headquarters located at 1201 16th Street, NW in Washington, D.C.

NEA has played a role in politics since its founding, as it has sought to influence state and federal laws that would have a positive impact on public education. Every political position adopted by NEA was brought by one of its members to the annual Representative Assembly, where it was considered on the floor, debated, and voted on by elected delegates.

The organization tracks legislation related to education and the teaching profession and encourages members to get involved in politics through a comprehensive Legislative Action Center on its website.

  • 1912: NEA endorses Women's Suffrage
  • 1919: NEA members in New Jersey lead the way to the nation's first state pension; by 1945, every state had a pension plan in effect
  • 1941: NEA successfully lobbied Congress for special funding for public schools near military bases
  • 1945: NEA lobbied for the G.I. Bill of Rights to help returning soldiers continue their education
  • 1958: NEA helps gain passage of the National Defense Education Act
  • 1964: NEA lobbies to pass the Civil Rights Act
  • 1968: NEA leads an effort to establish the Bilingual Education Act
  • 1974: NEA backs a case heard before the U.S. Supreme Court that proposes to make unlawful the firing of pregnant teachers or forced maternity leave
  • 1984: NEA fights for and wins passage of a federal retirement equity law that provides the means to end sex discrimination against women in retirement funds
  • 2000s: NEA has lobbied for changes to the No Child Left Behind Act
  • 2009: NEA endorses same-sex marriage.[4]

In recent decades the NEA has greatly increased its visibility in party politics, endorsing almost exclusively Democratic Party candidates and contributing funds and other assistance to political campaigns. The NEA asserts itself "non-partisan", but critics point out that the NEA has endorsed and provided support for every Democratic Party presidential nominee from Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama and has never endorsed any Republican or third party candidate for the presidency [5][6]. However, NEA has endorsed and supported Republican political candidates for Congressional and Gubernatorial offices. In 2006, NEA funded over 300 candidates, a list which included Democrats, Republicans and Independents, such as Mike Simpson, Richard Lugar, Olympia Snowe, Jim Gerlach, John M. McHugh and Bernard Sanders, among others.

Based on required filings with the federal government, it is estimated that between 1990 and 2002 ninety percent of the NEA's substantial political contributions went to Democratic Party candidates. Although this has been questioned as being out of balance with the more diverse political views of the broader membership, [8] the NEA maintains that it bases support for candidates primarily on the organization's interpretation of candidates' support for public education and educators. Every Presidential candidate endorsed by NEA must be approved by majority vote among the members themselves at NEA's annual Representative Assembly.

Others benefitting from NEA funding, according to the most recent filings, include Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, Amnesty International and AIDS Walk Washington.[7]

Structure and governance

NEA's 3.2 million members are served by 14,000 local affiliates (including some 800 higher education affiliates), 51 state-level affiliates (50 state associations and the Federal Education Association), and roughly 555 staff members working at its headquarters in Washington, D.C., and in regional offices. [9]

Representative Assembly

NEA members themselves set Association policy, most notably through the Representative Assembly or "RA." The RA—a delegation comprising elected representatives from each local and state affiliate, coalitions of student members and retired members, and other segments of the united education profession—is the primary legislative and policymaking body of the Association. The RA meets annually the first week of July to adopt a strategic plan and budget, make resolutions, and develop other policies that guide the work of the Association. Those delegates with full voting rights also elect the executive officers, Executive Committee members, and at-large members of the NEA Board of Directors as appropriate. The RA is the largest democratic deliberative assembly in the world and adheres to Roberts Rules of Order.[10]

Executive Officers, Board of Directors and Executive Committee

The executive officers of the Association are Dennis Van Roekel, President; Lily Eskelsen, Vice President; and, Rebecca Pringle, Secretary-Treasurer. These three posts are elected by the Representative Assembly.[10]

The Board of Directors and Executive Committee are responsible for the general policies and interests of the Association, and are subject to policies established by the Representative Assembly. The Board of Directors consists of one director from each state affiliate (plus an additional director for every 20,000 active members in the state), six directors for the Retired members, and three directors for the Student members. The Board also includes at-large representatives of ethnic minorities, administrators, classroom teachers in higher education, and active members employed in educational support positions. The Executive Committee consists of nine members: the three executive officers and six members elected at large by delegates to the Representative Assembly. The executive officers and other members of the Executive Committee are ex officio members of the Board of Directors.[11]

History

The NEA was founded as the National Teachers Association (NTA) in 1857, and adopted its present name in 1870. It was chartered by Congress in 1906 and merged with the American Teachers Association, formerly called the National Association of Colored Teachers, in 1966. In the 1960s, the NEA adopted union activities to supplement its long history of operating as a professional association. At the 150th anniversary of its founding, NEA membership had grown to 3.2 million.

Early history

Prior to the NEA's founding, teachers had formed professional associations in 15 individual states, but there was no cohesive national association uniting them. That changed in 1857 when Thomas W. Valentine, president of the New York State Teachers Association, issued a nation-wide invitation to teachers to unite behind a common voice for America's growing public school system. Soon after, NTA was born. Initial membership was close to 100.[12]

Even though minority educators were able to join the Association from the start, women were barred from joining until 1866.[7] Over the ensuing decades NEA became a leading voice in the national movement for women's rights. NEA elected its first female president, Ella Flagg Young, in 1910, a decade before Congress granted voting rights to women.[8]

NTA became the National Education Association in 1870 when it merged with the American Normal School Association, the National Association of School Superintendents, and the Central College Association.[13]

On its 100th birthday in 1957, NEA had over 700,000 members.[14]

NEA-ATA merger

NEA merged officially with the American Teachers Association—the historically Black teachers association originally founded as the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools (NATCS)—in 1966, but mutual interests had fostered a close working relationship between the two organizations over several decades before that.[15]

In 1926 the two organizations formed a Joint Committee of members of both organizations that was tasked with studying the lack of accreditation of Black high schools, which blocked Black students from acceptance in many colleges and universities.[14] Eventually, the Committee garnered evaluation and accreditation for Black high schools. It also advocated for equal school funding, collected data on the status of Black education, and promoted fair treatment of Blacks in textbooks while pressuring publishers to do so.[16]

Although racial segregation in public schools was still the norm, NEA advocated for change. In the 1940s, the Association had refused to hold Representative Assemblies in cities that discriminated against delegates based on race. It had also affiliated with 18 Black teacher's associations in states where Black teachers were prohibited from joining White organizations.[17]

Finally, in 1966, after more than 20 years of collaboration, cooperation and planning, NEA and ATA agreed to a merger at the RA in Miami Beach, Fla.

NEA-AFT partnership

In 1998, a proposed merger with the American Federation of Teachers failed when it was rejected by NEA's Representative Assembly [18]. In the meantime, several NEA state affiliates have merged with their AFT counterparts, effectively forming a single union in those states; unified NEA-AFT associations include those in Florida, Minnesota, Montana, and New York.

Further, NEA and AFT continue to cooperate and work towards common goals through the "NEAFT Partnership." This Partnership leaves each organization free to differ and to conduct work separately and independently, but enables the two groups to collaborate at every level of each organization.[19]

Recent growth

Before the 1960s, only a small portion of public school teachers were unionized.[9] But that began to change when, in 1959, Wisconsin became the first state to pass a collective bargaining law for public employees. Over the next 20 years, most other states adopted similar laws. The passage of these laws had a significant impact on NEA, which began to serve members as a labor union, in addition to serving members as a professional association. Passage of these new labor laws, along with NEA's new role as a labor union, helped NEA membership grow from 766,000 in 1961[10] to roughly 3.2 million today.

In the 1960s, the NEA's demographics were changing. This was due the merger with ATA and the decision to become a true labor union, among other factors.[20] In 1967, the NEA elected its first Hispanic president Braulio Alonso. In 1968, NEA elected its first Black president, Elizabeth Duncan Koontz[21].

In 2006, the NEA and the AFL-CIO also announced that, for the first time, stand-alone NEA locals as well as those that had merged with the AFT would be allowed to join state and local labor federations affiliated with the AFL-CIO.[11]

Recent NEA Presidents

Funding

Most NEA funding comes from dues paid by its members ($295 million in dues from a $341 million total budget in 2005).[23] Typically, local chapters negotiate a contract with automatic deduction of dues from members' paychecks. Part of the dues remain with the local affiliate (the district association), part will go to the state association, and part will move on to the national association. Although dues moves through the state and national associations, a large portion typically comes back to the local chapters through grants.

Federal law prohibits unions from using dues money or other assets to contribute to or otherwise assist federal candidates or political parties, in accordance with their tax-exempt status. The NEA Fund for Children and Public Education is a special fund for voluntary contributions from NEA members which can legally be used to assist candidates and political parties. Critics have repeatedly questioned the NEA's actual compliance with such laws, and a number of legal actions focusing on the union's use of money and union personnel in partisan contexts have ensued [12].

Criticism

Substantial criticism has been leveled against the NEA and other teachers unions for allegedly putting the interests of teachers ahead of students and for consistently opposing changes that critics claim would help students but harm union interests.[13] It has been countered that attacks on NEA and "teacher unions" may be a mask for those who wish to weaken public schools: "If my objective were to dismantle public schools, I would begin by trying to discredit them. I would probably refer to them as 'government' schools..I would never miss an opportunity to sneer at researchers and teacher educators as out-of-touch 'educationists.' Recognizing that it’s politically unwise to attack teachers, I would do so obliquely, bashing the unions to which most of them belong." notes Alfie Kohn[24] The NEA has often opposed measures such as merit pay, school vouchers, weakening of teacher tenure, certain curricular changes, the No Child Left Behind Act, and many accountability reforms. In a 1999 interview, right-wing commentator Pat Buchanan said that "ever since the judges have gotten heavily into education, and the National Education Association has gotten into control of that Department of Education, test scores go down, there’s violence in classroom, things are going wrong". David Frum has correlated the drop in student achievement since the 1960s with a simultaneous increase in teacher pay and recruitment of less-qualified teachers, beginning in the 1970s.[25] Frum writes: "The inept and lazy gained a huge new increment of job security. Assignments would be distributed by seniority, rather than skill."[25]

Apple Inc. CEO, Steve Jobs, has criticized the NEA and other teacher unions for its lack of support for voucher programs, merit pay, and the removal of bad teachers. On February 17, 2007 at an education reform conference in Texas, Jobs said, "What kind of person could you get to run a small business if you told them that when they came in they couldn’t get rid of people that they thought weren’t any good?”[26]

With the recent scrutiny placed on teacher misconduct, regarding specifically sexual abuse, the NEA has been criticized for its failure to crack down on abusive teachers. From an AP investigation, former NEA President Reg Weaver commented, "Students must be protected from sexual predators and abuse, and teachers must be protected from false accusations." He then refused to be interviewed.[27] The Associated Press reported that much of the resistance to report the problem comes from "where fellow teachers look away," and "School administrators make behind-the-scenes deals."[27].

Also criticized is the NEA's alleged "goal of changing public opinion on homosexuality, starting with the youngest generation,"[28] according to a former chairman of the NEA Ex-Gay Educators Caucus.[29][30][31] Some critics believe the NEA promotes a gay rights agenda, especially since the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals 2005 case Fields v. Palmdale School District.[citation needed] The court in that case ruled that parents' fundamental right to control the upbringing of their children "does not extend beyond the threshold of the school door," and that a public school has the right to provide its students with "whatever information it wishes to provide, sexual or otherwise."[32] NEA states that it does not “encourage schools to teach students to become gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered (GLBT),” but the Association does believe that schools should be safe for all students and advocates that schools should raise awareness of homophobia and intervene when GLBT students are harassed."[9]

NEA has come under fire for taking advantage of laws in some states that compel, under certain conditions, membership in the association. In a case brought before the U.S. Supreme Court (Davenport v. Washington Education Association) on behalf of 4,000 Washington State teachers who are not NEA members but are nonetheless forced to pay NEA dues, the Court partially addressed the issue of collection and use of dues by unions such as the NEA.[33]

The leading critic of NEA from the Marxist left is Dr Rich Gibson, whose article on the NEA-AFT merger convention in Cultural Logic outlines a radical critique of unionism itself.[34]

Controversy

Florida affiliate, FEA, has seen a number of scandals. In March 2001, a secretary in the Port Charlotte, Florida embezzled $66,000. In October of the same year, long-time Broward Teachers Union president Tony Gentile was arrested on child pornography charges. The local union paid him a golden parachute valued at $140,000. In February 2003, $40,000 was embezzled from the St. Lucie County Classroom Teachers Association. And in April 2003, the FBI and Miami police raided the headquarters of the United Teachers of Dade after receiving a tip that president Pat Tornillo had embezzled or misspent millions of dollars in union dues. Critics charge that the scandals are symbolic of deeper organizational biases and problems within NEA .[35]

The NEA was blasted by critics in August 2002 for the appearance of a link on the website that instructed teachers to remove all references to Muslim terrorists in lesson plans for September 11th Attacks. One plan previously on the site suggested that the teachers discuss "historical instances of American intolerance" and cites the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II as an example. Critics cited the controversy as another example of political spin and indoctrination by the NEA until it was ultimately removed from the website. [36]

On October 1, 2008 the Virginia NEA affiliate president Kitty Boitnott was caught emailing teachers encouraging them to dress up on "Obama Blue Day" and "to sway John McCain supporters."[37]. Residents criticized the move saying, "They should teach students how to think, not what to think."[38] while Virginian Republicans criticized the attempt to sway students of voting age saying, "[schools] are a completely inappropriate place for teachers or education staff to be politicking on behalf of any candidate. Parents send their kids to school to get a bipartisan education."[39] Boitnott later admitted the letter was inappropriate. [38]

Recently the New York branch of fellow teacher union organization, the American Federation of Teachers has been criticized by the Department of Education for similar actions.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c http://www.nea.org
  2. ^ a b http://www.unionfacts.com/unions/unionProfile.cfm?id=342
  3. ^ National Education Association (2007). "NEA Handbook 2006-2007". NEA Professional Library: p7. ISBN 0-8106-0975-4. Retrieved 2007-06-14. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ a b c NEA: About NEA
  5. ^ The Wall Street Journal Online - Leisure & Arts
  6. ^ Human Events
  7. ^ a b The Wall Street Journal Online - Featured Article
  8. ^ The Wall Street Journal Online - Featured Article
  9. ^ a b NEA: A Response to Critics
  10. ^ a b NEA (2007) p15
  11. ^ NEA (2007) p15-16
  12. ^ NEA: Gallery, NEA History, The Call
  13. ^ NEA: Timeline, 1857-1965, Historical Events in NEA's History
  14. ^ a b NEA: March 2006 NEA Today - Answering the Call Part 3
  15. ^ NEA: April 2006 NEA Today - Answering the Call: The History of the NEA
  16. ^ NEA: ATA's Story, Joint Committee
  17. ^ NEA: Timeline, ATA History
  18. ^ [1]
  19. ^ NEA: NEAFT Partnership
  20. ^ Gender, Race, and the National Education Association: Professionalism and Its Limitations. By Wayne J. Urban. New York: Routledge, 2000.
  21. ^ New York Times obit - http://www.nytimes.com/1989/01/08/us/elizabeth-koontz-69-dies-led-teachers-union.html
  22. ^ (for a full list from 1857 on, see https://sites.nea.org/aboutnea/neapres1.html)
  23. ^ Townhall.com::Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao – A Lady of Achievement::By Paul Weyrich
  24. ^ [2]
  25. ^ a b Frum, David (2000). How We Got Here: The '70s. New York, New York: Basic Books. pp. 140–141. ISBN 0465041957. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  26. ^ Apple’s Steve Jobs: Education Won’t Improve Until Bad Teachers Can Be Fired - Say Anything
  27. ^ a b Thousands of teachers cited for sex misconduct - USATODAY.com
  28. ^ News from Agape Press
  29. ^ NEA Ex-Gay Educators Caucus
  30. ^ http://www.365gay.com/Newscon06/07/070106teachers.htm
  31. ^ http://www.crisismagazine.com/february2005/desmond.htm
  32. ^ http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/966A73E8103317D888257170007C7F87/$file/0356499.pdf?openelement
  33. ^ http://www.nrtw.org/b/nr_648.php
  34. ^ Gibson: "NEA-AFT-AFL-CIO?..."
  35. ^ Tornillo was eventually convicted, forced to sell most of his homes, and reimburse his local union. He is now serving a prison term. The financial problems stemming from his actions nearly bankrupted UTD. Bell, "Union Chief Faces Battle," Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, May 19, 2003; Eckhart, "Lawsuit Accuses Ex-Worker of Theft," Sarasota Herald-Tribune, March 29, 2001; Hirschman, "Teachers Union President Resigns," Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, October 4, 2001; "Teachers' Union Missing $40,000," Vero Beach Press Journal, January 22, 2003.
  36. ^ http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,60807,00.html
  37. ^ http://www.veanea.org/press-room/images/nr-email-2008-10-02.pdf
  38. ^ a b http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/oct/02/teachers-union-e-mail-touting-obama-draws-backlash/
  39. ^ http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/10/02/virginia-teachers-union-sparks-outrage-obama-blue-day/

External links

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