On March 14, 2012, the Assembly and Senate passed the revised teacher and principal
evaluation law proposed by the Governor (S. 6732 / A.
Not exact matches
Cuomo's
proposed education measure focuses more on teacher
evaluation and has little to do with eliminating the so - called last in, first out state
law.
Then there are the efforts of ConnCAN, the state's leading reform outfit, to revive a
proposed overhaul of the state's teacher
evaluation system; the
law had failed to gain passage last year.
Meanwhile, the nine California districts seeking flexibility from the
law's requirements just resubmitted their waiver application after spending weeks revising it to address the department's questions related to their
proposed teacher and principal
evaluation plan and school improvement system.
Several legislators criticized the auditor for
proposing policy, but Mr. Persica says state
law allows audits to include «
evaluations of the economy, efficiency, and effectiveness.»
Instead of keeping the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory Common Core Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) as part of the state's flawed teacher
evaluation program, the
proposed law would have required Connecticut to adopt a system that is based on the real factors that determine whether a teacher is successfully doing their job in the classroom.
While Gov. Andrew Cuomo is threatening to both the Big Apple and the AFT to
propose a
law allowing the state education department unilaterally put the new
evaluations in place, the fact that the AFT's Big Apple and Empire State affiliates are among the most - influential donors to state legislators (including Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos) makes Cuomo's threat a rather empty one.
The
proposed law directs superintendents to file tenure charges against teachers who receive two consecutive negative ratings on annual
evaluations.
As the Christie administration's new regulations for teacher
evaluation near a critical juncture, the prime author of the landmark tenure reform
law behind the
proposed rules said the administration may be moving too aggressively in some places.
In synchronized statements, Democratic leaders of the State Assembly joined Republicans in the State Senate to
propose that the tests, which are aligned with the new curriculum standards known as the Common Core, be excluded, for now, from the state's new teacher
evaluation system, which Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed into
law in 2012.
In 2017, EPA will continue to implement the amended
law,
proposing rules on how to prioritize chemicals for risk
evaluation and how to conduct those
evaluations, among other initiatives.