Fashion

'Fighting for Incredible List of Educational Reforms,' Seattle Teachers Go on Historic Strike

For the first time in 30 years, Seattle teachers are hitting the picket lines on Wednesday after the teachers union and the school board failed to negotiate a tentative agreement.

The Tuesday decision to strike—made with what the union describes as “an unprecedented, thunderous unanimous vote,” closes schools on what would have been the first day of school for roughly 50,000 students.

The problems the public school teachers say are driving the strike include those teachers across the nation have also cited, including an over-reliance on standardized testing and  flawed methods for evaluating educators. The Seattle Education Association (SEA) outlines the issues summer-long negotiations have failed to resolve:

Seventh-grade language arts teacher Theo Moriarty told the Associated Press, “We didn’t want to strike, and it seems to be the only way to have a dialogue with our senior administration.”

“We all know it’s an inconvenience but ultimately it’s far better for the future of students and families to get what we’re asking for,” he said.

Click Here: Golf special

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT