NCTQ and TNTP Call on the Minnesota Court to Allow Trial on Rights of Schoolchildren to Quality Teachers

Washington, D.C. — The National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) and TNTP submitted an amicus brief today in support of four Minnesota parents challenging the state’s laws on teacher tenure, dismissal, and layoffs. In the case, Forslund v. Minnesota, the parents argue that the state violated their children’s constitutional rights when they were assigned to chronically ineffective teachers because of these laws.

The amicus brief urges the Minnesota Court of Appeals to reverse a lower court’s dismissal of the case and let the four parents make their argument at trial. It explains how Minnesota’s students are harmed by laws enabling ineffective teachers to remain in the classroom indefinitely, and cites examples of alternative approaches to tenure, dismissal, and layoff policies — approaches that prioritize teacher effectiveness instead of seniority alone — that have contributed to stronger teaching and increased student achievement in several school systems across the country.

NCTQ’s Elizabeth Ross explains, “This case concerns Minnesota students’ fundamental right to an education. Great teachers help ensure that every student has an opportunity for educational success and Minnesota students are ill-served by statutory requirements that fail to require appropriate consideration of teacher effectiveness in decisions about teacher tenure, dismissal, and layoffs. This brief provides evidence that the status quo in Minnesota need not be maintained; many states are implementing substantially stronger policies and Minnesota can and should follow suit.”

“Debates about teacher tenure, dismissal and layoff rules often play out as a false choice between two extremes: keep today’s broken policies exactly as they are, or eliminate job protections for teachers entirely,” said Daniel Weisberg, CEO of TNTP.

“Our brief shows that it’s possible to create laws and policies that achieve a better balance between the due process rights of teachers and the educational rights of students. We hope the Court of Appeals will let parents make their case that Minnesota’s kids deserve better than outdated laws keeping ineffective teachers on the job for life.”

About the National Council on Teacher Quality
The National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) is a nonpartisan research and policy group, committed to modernizing the teaching profession and based on the belief that all children deserve effective teachers. NCTQ is the nation’s expert on the quality of teacher preparation programs and evaluates national teacher education against evidence-based criteria. More information about NCTQ can be found on our website, www.nctq.org.

Featured

  • 5 Tips for New Teachers and Their Administrators on Classroom Design

    Recently, several school visits early in the academic year highlighted how many first-year teachers struggle to set up their classrooms effectively. It's evident that more can be done to better support them from the start, particularly in the area of classroom design.

  • Texas School District Opens New Elementary School

    The Boerne Independent School District (Boerne ISD) near San Antonio, Texas, recently opened a new elementary school that serves almost 500 students, according to a news release. The district partnered with Pfluger Architects to build the 97,151-square-foot Viola Wilson Elementary School, which opened in August.

  • Call for Opinions: Spaces4Learning 2025 Predictions for Educational Facilities

    The K–12 and higher education facilities landscapes are always evolving. Schools are constantly adapting to technology advances, pedagogy changes, sustainability initiatives, and more.

  • OpenStax Celebrates 25th Anniversary of Providing Open Educational Resources

    OpenStax, which expands access of K–12 and higher-education resources and research-informed educational tools, is celebrating its 25th anniversary as 2024 comes to a close, according to a news release. The educational initiative from Rice University has served almost 37 million students in 153 countries and saved students nearly $3 billion in educational costs since its launch in 1999.

Digital Edition