New Jersey State Federation of Teachers  
Home Calendar Directory Constitution Local Links About Us Recent News Member Benefits Political Action Press Center Resources President's Message Audit Field Rep Reports AFT.org Contact Us

About Us

1.   Promote statewide organization and unionization of teachers and all other personnel engaged in education in order to carry out the program and policies of the NJSFT and the AFT.

2.   Obtain for teachers and all other educational workers all the rights to which they are entitled as citizens and workers in a democracy and to protect these rights at all times.

3.   Raise the standards of the teaching profession by securing conditions essential to the best professional service.

4.   Secure for teachers and other educational workers a determining voice in the establishment and implementation of professional standards.

5.   Promote the welfare of children by providing progressively better education opportunities for all, regardless of race, color, creed, gender and social, political, economic status, handicap or disability.

6.   Fight all forms of bias in education due to race, gender, creed, and social, political, or economic status, or national origin.

7.   Support and cooperate with organized labor and to promote within the autonomous locals of the NJSFT policies and procedures consistent with the aims of organized labor.

8.   Organize all teaching and educational personnel into the NJSFT, both in private schools, public schools, charter schools, and in institutions of higher learning in the State of New Jersey.

Learn more about the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), which was founded in 1916 to represent the economic, social and professional interests of classroom teachers and is an affiliated international union of the AFL-CIO.
Learn the history of the AFT, including the union's founding in Chicago in 1916, its affiliation with the AFL-CIO, its battles for workers and human rights and its continued work to uphold the proud traditions on which the union was created.
AFT Mission Statement
The mission of the American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, is to improve the lives of our members and their families, to give voice to their legitimate professional, economic and social aspirations, to strengthen the institutions in which we work, to improve the quality of the services we provide, to bring together all members to assist and support one another and to promote democracy, human rights and freedom in our union, in our nation and throughout the world.
 --From the Futures II report adopted at the AFT Convention, July 5, 2000.
Throughout this century, the AFT has been a major force for preserving and strengthening America's democratic commitment to public education and public service. Desegregating public schools, passing the landmark Elementary and Secondary Education Act, establishing collective bargaining for teachers and other public employees, and addressing the needs of disadvantaged children are just a few of the causes the AFT has championed.

The Paraprofessional and School-Related Personnel (PSRP) division of the American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, represents more than 350,000 school support staff in K-12 districts, colleges and universities. Our jobs include office employees, custodians, maintenance workers, bus drivers, instructional paraprofessionals, food service workers, school nurses and health aides, technicians, groundskeepers, secretaries, bookkeepers, mechanics, special education assistants and hundreds of other job titles.

AFT is the largest higher education union in the country, representing over 130,000 higher education faculty, professional staff and graduate employees. The AFT higher education department mission is to help our affiliates and their members prosper in the face of political, economic and technological forces challenging the most basic assumptions about the union's role on campus.
Registered users
log in here
Email:
Password:
Remember me
 


© American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO. All rights reserved.
Photographs and illustrations, as well as text, cannot be used without permission from the AFT.