Instead of welcoming some 53,000 students to the start of the school year, teachers in Seattle are marching in picket lines Wednesday, going on strike over issues that range from pay to testing.

From member station KUOW, Ann Dornfeld reports for our Newscast unit:

"The district said it was offering the teachers a generous pay raise, but teachers said they deserve more, after waiting through the great recession for higher pay.

"The district had asked teachers to work a longer day; the union says the district didn't plan to compensate teachers for the extra time. Teachers also want a say in which standardized tests students take."

The school district had offered raises of "2 percent this year, 3.2 percent next year and 3.75 percent the year after that," as member station KPLU reports. But the 5,000 members of the Seattle Education Association proposed "5 percent in the first year and 5.5 percent in the second year of a new deal."

Lily Eskelsen Garcia, president of the National Education Association, tells the AP that the issues being contested in Seattle are "issues that every educator in the country is grappling with right now."

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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