1. Teacher tenure creates complacency because teachers know they are unlikely to lose their jobs.
2. Tenure makes it difficult to remove under-performing teachers because the process involves months of
legal wrangling by the principal, the school board, the union, and the courts.
3. Tenure makes seniority the main factor in dismissal decisions instead of teacher performance and quality.
4. Tenure is not needed to recruit teachers.
5. With job protections granted through court rulings, collective bargaining, and state and federal laws,
teachers today no longer need tenure to protect them from dismissal.
6. Tenure makes it costly for schools to remove a teacher with poor performance or who is guilty of wrongdoing.
7. With most states granting tenure after three years, teachers have not had the opportunity to "show their worth,
or their ineptitude."