题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
提问人:网友f******g 发布时间:2022年3月20日 02:14
[单项选择题]

《民事诉讼法》第10条规定,人民法院审理民事案件,依照法律规定实行()制度。

A.一审终审

B.二审终审

C.四级三审

D.审判监督

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Teacher Grades: Pass or Be FiredEmily Strzelecki, a first-year science teacher here, was about as eager for a classroom visit by one of the city"s roving teacher evaluators as she would be to get a tooth drilled(钻孔). "It really stressed me out because, oh my gosh, I could lose my job," Ms. Strzelecki said.Her fears were not unfounded: 165 Washington teachers were fired last year based on a pioneering evaluation system that places significant emphasis on classroom observations; next month, 200 to 600 of the city"s 4,200 educators are expected to get similar bad news, in the nation"s highest rate of dismissal for poor performance.The evaluation system, known as Impact, is disliked by many unionized teachers but has become a model for many educators.Spurred(激励) by President Obama and his $5 billion Race to the Top grant competition, some 20 states, including New York, and thousands of school districts areoverhauling(改革) the way they grade teachers, and many have sent people to study Impact.Its admirers say the system, a centerpiece of thetempestuous(动乱的,狂暴的) three-year tenure of Washington"s former schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee, has brought clear teaching standards to a district that lacked them and is setting a new standard by establishing dismissal as a consequence of ineffective teaching.But some educators say it is better at sorting and firing teachers than at helping struggling ones; they note that the system does not consider socioeconomic factors in most cases and that last year 35 percent of the teachers in the city"s wealthiest area, Ward 3, were rated highly effective, compared with 5 percent in Ward 8, the poorest."Teachers have to be parents, priests, lawyers, clothes washers, babysitters and a bunch of other things" if they work with low-income children, said Nathan Saunders, president of the Washington Teachers Union. 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Ratings for the rest of the city"s 3,600 teachers are determined mostly by five classroom observations annually, three by their principal and two by so-called master educators, most recruited from outside Washington.For classroom observations, nine criteria—"explain content clearly," "maximize instructional time" and "check for student understanding," for example—are used to rate the lesson as highly effective, effective, minimally effective or ineffective.These five observations combine to form 75 percent of these teachers" overall ratings; the rest is based on achievement data and the teachers" commitment to their school communities. Ineffective teachers face dismissal. Minimally effective ones get a year to improve.Impact costs the city $7 million a year, including pay for 41 master educators, who earn about $ 90,000 a year and conduct about 170 observations each. The program also asks more of principals. Carolyne Albert-Garvey, the principal of Maury Elementary School on Capitol Hill, has 22 teachers—she must conduct 66 observations, about one every three school days."I"ve really gotten to know my staff, and I"m giving teachers more specific feedback," Ms. Albert-Garvey said. "It"s empowered me to have the difficult conversations, and that gives everyone the opportunity to improve."Several teachers, however, said they considered their ratings unfair.A veteran teacher who said he did not want to criticize the school system openly, said that a month after he inherited a chaotic world history class from a long-term substitute, the visiting evaluatorcut him no slack(绝不放过他) for taking on the assignment and penalized him because a student was texting during the lesson.Another teacher who expects to lose her job next month because of low ratings said at a public hearing that evaluators picked apart her seventh-grade geography lessons, making criticisms she consideredtrivial(微不足道的). 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