ABSTRACT

Teachers’ unions have long been controversial and divisive organizations, but criticism and distrust of them may be at an all-time high. This volume considers the prevailing assumption that unions successfully block change in education because they are primarily motivated to protect members’ interests. It challenges the conceptualization of teacher union motivation and provides a more nuanced account of unions’ interests, power and impact.

Through a series of international cases from the United States, Finland and the Canton of Zürich, this volume examines the hot-button issue of performance-related pay reform and compensation. It argues that a better understanding of the union-management relationship may be the key to securing more meaningful change and reform. It will be of use to scholars, policy-makers, union leaders, teachers and citizens who are interested in the possibilities for the union-management relationship, rather than the limitations.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part |72 pages

Research Design

chapter |34 pages

Teachers' Unions and Education Reform

A Review of the Literature

chapter |13 pages

Beyond Narrow Assumptions of Interest and Power

A Conceptual Framework

part |118 pages

International Cases

chapter |18 pages

Finland

History and Context

chapter |31 pages

Quiet Compromises

Finland's New Salary System

chapter |17 pages

The Canton of Zürich

History and Context

chapter |29 pages

Eventually Overcoming Resistance

The MAB System

chapter |21 pages

Finland and Zürich

Multiple Pathways to Reform

part |48 pages

School District Cases

chapter |21 pages

Teachers' Unions in the United States

A Sub-National Test

chapter |25 pages

School District Analysis

A Series of Congruence Tests

part |17 pages

Conclusion

chapter |15 pages

Useful Conflict?

Finding the Path to Progress