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Steve Jobs Has Guts

By JAY GREENE | February 21, 2007

Steve Jobs has guts — enough guts to speak his mind about what he thinks is wrong with public education even at the risk of harming his business interests.

In a speech on Friday, the chief executive officer of Apple and Disney honcho declared: "I believe that what's wrong with our schools in this nation is that they have become unionized in the worst possible way."

The problem with unionization, Mr. Jobs argued, is that it has constrained schools from attracting and retaining the best teachers and from dismissing the less effective ones. This, in turn, deters quality people from seeking to become principals and superintendents. "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? Not really great ones because if you're really smart you go, ‘I can't win,'" Mr. Jobs said. He concluded by saying, "This unionization and lifetime employment of K-12 teachers is off-the-charts crazy."

There is a price to be paid for this kind of frank analysis and Steve Jobs knows it. "Apple just lost some business in this state, I'm sure," Mr. Jobs said. Of course, Apple sells a large portion of its computers to public school systems. By taking a stance against school unionization, Mr. Jobs may lose some school sales for Apple.

Sharing the stage with Mr. Jobs was Michael Dell, the chief executive officer of Dell, a competing computer manufacturer. By comparison, according to the description of the event, Mr. Dell "sat quietly with his hands folded in his lap," during Mr. Jobs' speech while the audience at an education reform conference "applauded enthusiastically."

Mr. Dell followed Mr. Jobs by defending the rise of unions in education: "the employer was treating his employees unfairly and that was not good. … So now you have these enterprises where they take good care of their people. The employees won, they do really well and succeed."

Whether Mr. Jobs or Mr. Dell is right about the role unions have played in public education, one thing is perfectly clear — attacking the unions is a controversial and potentially costly choice for corporate CEOs.

The safe thing is to make bland declarations about the need to improve the quality of education without getting into any of the messy particulars that might be necessary to produce a better education. Changing the status quo in education almost certainly requires ruffling someone's feathers, but doing that is almost certainly bad for business.

In part this is why we see highly successful entrepreneurs who survive in a world of ruthless competition abandon these business principles when they turn to education philanthropy. People who would never endorse the idea that businesses should be granted local monopolies, offer workers lifetime tenure, or pay employees based solely on seniority, embrace a status quo public system that has all of these features.

While some CEOs may sincerely believe that education is somehow different from the rest of the world in which they live, others have been cowed into submission. Teachers are a very large, well-organized, and relatively affluent consumer and political bloc.

Of the 300 million people living in America, including children, there are more than 3 million teachers currently employed in public schools. Among households with college-educated adults, a very large proportion has a current or former public school teacher residing there. And almost every college-educated person has a relative or close friend who is a current or former public school teacher. Teachers are powerful.

But there is hope for reform and a reason for Mr. Jobs to think he was not foolish in challenging unions. Not all teachers share the agenda of the unions that claim to represent them. In particular, the most effective teachers have little to gain from union protection since their skills are likely to be more recognized and more richly rewarded without the unions.

The single salary schedule, which is the very heart of unionization in education, arguably harms those teachers with excellent skills by requiring that they be paid the same as less effective teachers.

Moreover, teachers are also taxpayers and parents who want to improve the quality of education. Like the rest of us, self-interest and union dogma may cloud teachers' perception of how to best reform education.

If they are presented with solid evidence and persuasive arguments, teachers can be a powerful force for education reform — not for the status quo.

Steve Jobs has embarked on a perilous path, but with solid evidence and persuasive arguments, he can move all of us toward higher quality schools. He should be applauded for having the courage to say out loud what scores of other business leaders are too sheepish to say.

Mr. Greene is the endowed chair of education reform at the University of Arkansas and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.


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Finally someone had the courage to say what we in education have known for years. Unions are killing public education.... [MORE]

Peter 

Feb 21, 2007 08:37

Unions are the best thing to happen to teaching. The teachers who don't perform well have to be protected. If... [MORE]

ron 

Feb 21, 2007 09:30

Teachers who don't perform well need to be fired, not protected. Public education exists for the benfit of the children... [MORE]

Matt 

Feb 21, 2007 23:15

Wow - here's a perfect example of what's wrong with the "union attitude"...let's see... "The teachers who don't perform well have... [MORE]

barry 

Feb 22, 2007 14:20

Michael Dell has a lot of gall to talk about employees being treated unfairly, considering how HIS company treats most... [MORE]

Gary Akins 

Feb 21, 2007 10:23

Jobs spoke the truth. Our nations' public schools are fraught with incompetent bums! Truthfully, teachers do have a tough job. No... [MORE]

Scott 

Feb 21, 2007 11:24

Steve Jobs is courageous and astute for identifying one of the two largest institutional barriers to significantly improving public schools;... [MORE]

Dr. Anne Marie Vickers Quin 

Feb 21, 2007 12:08

Blame the teacher, blame the teacher, blame the teacher. Teachers work under supervisors who DO have the authority to guide... [MORE]

ex-teacher 

Feb 21, 2007 18:12

Thank you, Dr. Vickers Quin, for saying it so well. Would that the entire political and governmental establishments hear and... [MORE]

Perry Clark 

Feb 22, 2007 00:19

Few if any of the many concerned individuals are "blaming the teacher". The entire point of Jobs' comments, and most... [MORE]

Perry Clark 

Feb 22, 2007 00:35

I've heard the exact same comment made by Dr. Quin from numerous people within the education community, and the correctness... [MORE]

William Bowen 

Feb 22, 2007 02:02

Has anyone mentioned that the building administrators are responsible for observing, evaluating, and retaining or removing teachers? The building principal... [MORE]

Sally 

Feb 19, 2008 22:35

When was the last time he stepped into a public school classroom in Florida or an urban school system. Teachers... [MORE]

Joanne Reid 

Feb 21, 2007 13:32

With all due respect to Ms. Reid, to whom I wish no ill, I, a parent of two children in... [MORE]

Perry Clark 

Feb 21, 2007 18:48

Ron, you sound somewhat mixed up. Teachers have to be protected if they don't do a good job and the... [MORE]

Alan 

Feb 21, 2007 20:36

Blame the Union, Blame the Union, Blame the Union. Yes, Perry, I read carefully the comments. It was a combination... [MORE]

ex-teacher 

Feb 22, 2007 06:51

In football cheap shots are penalized. In real life, super wealthy people, like Steve Jobs, get to dump their garbage... [MORE]

Mark 

Feb 22, 2007 08:33

which have nothing to do with Jobs' comments. But you are wrong about administrations living in fear of unions. In... [MORE]

paul 

Feb 22, 2007 17:23

Thank you Steve Jobs! Now if we can just get some fellow industry leaders and others of influence to see... [MORE]

Wes Parry 

Feb 21, 2007 15:04

amen to steve jobs jmb [MORE]

john brodnan 

Feb 21, 2007 16:00

Without competition who strives to get better? Most Americans are starting to realize this now. Tax the rich to give... [MORE]

Ted Runnels 

Feb 21, 2007 17:24

Steve Jobs has done the nation a valuable service by pointing out the negative impact that teachers have had on... [MORE]

Chris 

Feb 21, 2007 16:45

that is the proplem what is the solution? [MORE]

wayne rients 

Feb 21, 2007 17:03

Unions are a farce. They allow legalized extortion. The unions are killing form and many other once great firms. Collective... [MORE]

honorable one 

Feb 22, 2007 02:18

Kudos to Jobs! Kudos! The only thing I would add is that lazy, borderline-apathetic parents don't help, either. [MORE]

Chris Baecker 

Feb 21, 2007 17:50