New York TeacherFebruary 13, 2025
The UFT makes an all-out push for more money for paraprofessionals in a fight for fairness, equity and respect.
Latest News
Pension choice for BERS members
More than 20,000 UFT members now have their choice of pension systems after a campaign led by members of the UFT Occupational and Physical Therapists Chapter.
Fired nurses get their jobs back
Nine Federation of Nurses/UFT members who were unfairly stripped of their livelihoods have won back their jobs at NYU Langone Hospital-Brooklyn in one of the biggest arbitration victories that the UFT has ever achieved for unlawful terminations
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Member Spotlight
Adrianna DeAngelis, special education teacher
Kudos to Nicole Keaster, IS 5, Queens
Around the UFT
Clinicians Appreciation Day
The most-attended Clinicians Appreciation Day in the UFT Social Workers and Psychologists Chapter’s history felt "like a family reunion," said Dr. Raul Garcia, bilingual school psychologist and the group’s chapter leader. About a thousand members gathered online and another 380 in person on Jan. 27 for a day of professional development, networking and bonding. The workshops focused on time and stress management, a relevant topic for a group feeling overwhelmed by administrative work, high caseloads and looming…
UFT workshop on supporting undocumented students and families
Manhattan new member event
Your Rights and Benefits
Know Your Benefits
Member Assistance Program
Know Your Rights
Programs and professional activities
The provisions in the DOE-UFT contract regarding program preferences and professional activity assignments give teachers a voice about which classes they will teach the following year and which professional activities they are assigned.
Your Well-being
Fostering healthy ties
You Should Know
Grants, Awards & Freebies
Grants, Awards & Freebies
See our list of current opportunities for educators to receive funds and recognition for their hard work and dedication.
For Your Information
Increased death benefit provides more protection for families
The UFT Welfare Fund has increased the dollar amount of its death benefit for UFT members who die while still working for the DOE or the city to a flat payment of $50,000 regardless of age.
For Your Information
Union’s big tent
For Your Information
April 1 deadline for new child abuse workshop
New York State law was recently amended to require that all DOE employees who are mandated reporters, including all classroom teachers, take additional training in the area of identifying and reporting child abuse and maltreatment/neglect.
For Your Information
Educators can deduct $300 on their taxes
Q&A on the Issues
UFT parental leave
Secure Your Future
Retiring soon?
Opinions
VPerspective
Keep the pipeline of CTE teachers flowing
UFT Vice President for Career and Technical Education High Schools Leo Gordon writes that as the Success Via Apprenticeship program celebrates its 40th year, it is imperative that this unique pathway for new CTE teachers receive the support and funding it needs.
Editorials
Our undocumented students
Editorials
Our trans youth
President Trump's executive order to end "radical indoctrination" is devoid of any compassion for the struggles of young people who are living or considering living as a person of the opposite gender. Nor does it acknowledge our role as educators in respecting students’ dignity as we help them develop self-confidence and independence.
Editorial Cartoons
Teaching Resources
Learning Curve
Don’t count out summer learning options
Linking to Learning
Tech tools to bring the arts to class
Teacher to Teacher
Map out key concepts
Building Your Career
Inside My Classroom
Brooklyn teacher dresses up like historical figures
During Black History Month and Women's History Month, this 2nd-grade teacher dresses up each day as a historical figure and teaches her students about that person.
New Teacher Articles
Your health benefits as a new educator
New Teacher Diaries
How I overcame a ‘frightful’ day
Retired Teachers News
Don’t be fooled by financial fraudsters
People of any age can become prey to scam artists, but those over 60 are more often targeted because they are more likely to have financial savings, good credit and less experience with technology.
In fact, people 80 and older are more likely than younger adults to lose money to scams, according to a Federal Trade Commission report released in October. The FBI’s Criminal Complaint Center received reports of $3.4 billion in elder fraud losses overall in 2023, the most recent year for which data is available.
Common schemes involve phony offers of tech support, bogus investment opportunities and scams involving prizes, sweepstakes and lottery winnings, authorities say. Scammers may impersonate family, friends or government agencies seeking money or personal information.
The explosion of artificial intelligence has fueled the work of scam artists, who use it to generate text, images and video…
The state of our chapter