Johnnie Cliff taught mathematics and chemistry in the Indianapolis public school system for approximately twenty-eight years before the Board of School Commissioners of the City of Indianapolis (“IPS” or the “Board”) voted not to renew her contract for the 1988-89 school year. IPS maintains that its decision was prompted by a series of unsatisfactory performance reviews which indicated that Cliffs effectiveness in the classroom had been compromised by her inability to control her students. Yet Cliff contends that the Board’s decisions can be linked to unlawful race, sex, and/or age discrimination. 1 She also charges that IPS engaged in a series of retaliatory acts against speech protected by the First Amendment. The district court granted IPS’ motion for summary judgment, finding on the retaliation claims that Cliffs statements did not constitute speech on a matter of public concern, and on the discrimination claims, that Cliff had not shown IPS’ legitimate, non-discriminatory reasons for its employment decisions to be pretextual. Cliff challenges those conclusions in this appeal, but we agree with the district court and thus affirm its judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
IPS hired Cliff in 1960 to teach mathematics and science, and in 1972, she began exclusively to teach math at Broad Ripple High School (“BRHS”). Between 1972 and 1984, Cliffs immediate supervisor was Clyde Hoehstedler, the Math Department Head at BRHS. Although Hoehstedler generally had given Cliff satisfactory performance reviews in the past, during the 1984-85 school year, he noted that Cliff had difficulty maintaining control of her classroom. Hoehstedler recommended avenues for improvement and indicated that he would recommend Cliffs dismissal unless she improved.’ Cliff objected to Hochstedler’s conclusions and maintained in a statement attached to the review that she should not be held responsible for the rude and disrespectful behavior of her students. Cliff also filed a grievance under the collective bargaining agreement between IPS and the teacher’s union (the “CBA”) protesting this evaluation. Cliffs grievance asserted that any problems resulted from the overly large classes she had been assigned and not from any deficiencies in her teaching. By way of relief, the grievance requested that the size of Cliffs classes be reduced and that she receive help with classroom discipline. The grievance also indicated that Cliff should not be re-evaluated during the 1985-86 school year, as IPS had proposed, because she was a tenured teacher who had not requested a second evaluation. Although IPS determined to proceed with the proposed evaluation, Cliff voluntarily withdrew her grievance on November 6, 1985.
Karen Shepard replaced Hoehstedler as Math Department Head at the close of the 1984-85 school year. Shepard observed Cliffs math classes a number of times the following year and summarized her findings in an April 28, 1986 evaluation. Shepard found Cliff unsatisfactory in her ability to motivate students and to maintain discipline and control over the classroom. Rather than recommending Cliffs dismissal, however, Shepard suggested that IPS renew Cliffs contract subject to a Performance Improvement Plan (“PIP”). 2 Cliff subsequently filed a grievance addreséed to this review, contending that Shepard’s evaluation and recommendation violated the CBA. After this grievance was set for arbitration, it too was voluntarily withdrawn by Cliffs representatives.
On February 28, 1986, Cliff applied for the position of seience/math technical applications teacher at Crispus Attacks High School (“CAHS”). IPS decided, however, that she was not the most qualified applicant and denied Cliff this transfer.
*407 In January 1987, Cliff and the teacher’s union complained that Cliff was not receiving sufficient support in meeting the goals of her PIP. In response to these complaints, BRHS’ principal, Donald A. Glenn, asked Dr. Thomas Clark, IPS’ mathematics supervisor, to observe and to critique Cliffs teaching strategies. 3 Clark noted many of the same deficiencies that had been identified by Hoehstedler and Shepard, and he too offered oral and written recommendations for improvement. Yet in her discussions with Clark, Cliff again blamed any discipline problems on the size of her classes and on the lack of support from the BRHS administration. She also told Clark that Glenn and Shepard were discriminating against her in the evaluation process due to her age and race.
At the same time that Clark was offering his assistance, Shepard was observing and evaluating Cliff for purposes of her 1986-87 performance review. During the first semester of that school year, Shepard perceived little or no improvement in Cliffs performance. Yet by the second semester, Shepard noted that Cliff had become more receptive to outside advice and that her teaching strategies and command over the classroom had improved accordingly. Although Shepard still assigned Cliff unsatisfactory grades in a number of areas, she did not advocate termination but again recommended that Cliffs contract be renewed subject to a PIP. Cliff then exercised her right under the CBA to request a second evaluation, and Madora Walker, an African-American female and Math Department Head at another Indianapolis high school, was chosen as the evaluator. After observing Cliffs classes on several occasions, Walker found deficiencies in a number of areas and echoed many of Shepard’s concerns with classroom discipline.
Cliff grieved these evaluations on May 22, 1987, again complaining that the evaluation process violated the CBA. The matter was submitted to arbitration, and on October 28, 1987, a hearing was held before a jointly-selected arbitrator, who subsequently made the following findings:
It would serve, no useful purpose to repeat the plentiful details of the proof presented at the Hearing concerning the deficiencies in [Cliffs] teaching performance since 1985. It is undenied that the General Mathematics classes assigned to Ms. Cliff consist of many indolent pupils who constitute a severe challenge to the professional skills and emotional stability of any teacher. The other teachers at BRHS have these same recalcitrant students and meet the challenge. The overwhelming weight of credible evidence presented by IPS requires a finding of fact that it has proved that the evaluations were not flawed by being arbitrary, capricious or discriminatory. Two evaluators with different racial origins and both Heads of Mathematics Departments at different IPS High Schools reached substantially similar conclusions from their classroom observations of [Cliff]. In eight or more specific requirements, Ms. Cliff had failed to perform competently. The School Board exercised its right to determine that Grievant’s performance as a teacher was unsatisfactory and the evidence of record in this case strongly supports that judgment and cannot be altered.
(R. 530, Ex. 0 at 6-7.)
While Cliffs grievance was proceeding and before the arbitrator had rendered a decision, Shepard resigned as BRHS’ Math Department Head. Moreover, the position of Math Department Head at Emmerich Manual High School (“EMHS”) also became vacant. Cliff applied for both positions in August 1987, but of the ten applicants, she received the lowest rating from the placement committee. 4 Lana Cardwell, a forty-three-year-old Caucasian female ultimately replaced Shepard at BRHS, and a forty-six-year-old Caucasian male became EMHS’ Math Department Head.
Cardwell then observed and evaluated Cliff during the 1987-88 school year. In her summary evaluation, Cardwell cited the same deficiencies noted by the previous evaluators and also found that Cliff had failed to meet *408 the goals of her second-year PIP. Cardwell noted, moreover, that Cliff continued to absolve herself of any responsibility for the disciplinary problems in her classroom. As a result of this evaluation, Cardwell recommended that Cliffs contract not be renewed.
Cliff requested a second evaluation under the CBA, and Clark was appointed to perform this task. After again observing her classes, Clark found Cliff “to be primarily ineffective in the classroom.” (R. 530, Ex. S.) He indicated that students have little or no respect for Cliff and that they often are openly defiant. Clark found Cliffs attempts at discipline to be tentative, inconsistent, and generally ineffective. Like Cardwell, then, Clark recommended that Cliffs contract not be renewed.
As Cliff was being re-evaluated, she requested a transfer to the chemistry department at Arsenal Technical High School (“ATHS”). Cliff maintained that she would be a more effective teacher in the ATHS science magnet program. IPS denied this request, citing Cliffs substandard evaluations and the fact that she had last taught chemistry in 1972.
By letter dated March 25, 1988, the Board notified Cliff that it would consider the cancellation of her contract at its April 26, 1988 meeting. The letter explained:
You have a right to a hearing before the Board of School Commissioners on the reason for the proposed cancellation of your contract. If you desire such a hearing, you must file a written request for a hearing with me within fifteen (15) days after receipt of this letter, and thereafter you will be notified of the time and place of such hearing.
(R. 529, Ex. A.) Cliff requested a hearing and also filed another grievance under the CBA. The Board scheduled a hearing for May 16 and postponed its consideration of Cliffs contract until May 24. Yet, in an April 14, 1988 letter to the Board, Cliff withdrew her request for a hearing and asked that the Board defer any hearing as well as its decision until the arbitrator ruled on her latest grievance. The Board refused to defer its decision, but it canceled the May 16 hearing at Cliffs request. The Board proceeded to consider the status of Cliffs contract at its May 24 meeting, and approximately three weeks later, it voted not to renew that contract. The arbitrator subsequently conducted a hearing on Cliffs grievance, and on November 21,1988, concluded that the Board had not violated the CBA and that Cliff had produced no evidence linking her negative evaluations to either race or age discrimination.
After exhausting her administrative remedies, Cliff filed the instant action in federal court, alleging a variety of race, sex, and age discrimination claims. She also charged that IPS had retaliated against speech that was protected by the First Amendment. The district court granted IPS’ motion for summary judgment as to all of Cliffs claims, finding that IPS had refused to promote Cliff and had ultimately terminated her employment not for any discriminatory reason, but because Cliffs classroom performance had failed to meet the Board’s reasonable expectations. The court also found that because Cliffs speech had not addressed a matter of public concern, it was not protected by the First Amendment.
II. DISCUSSION
We review de novo the grant of summary judgment in IPS’ favor, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to Cliff and according her the benefit of all reasonable inferences.
Flaherty v. Gas Research Inst.,
A.
We first consider Cliffs 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim, which alleges that IPS violated her First Amendment rights by retaliating once Cliff complained about the large math classes she had been assigned and about the general disorder at BRHS. The district court found that Cliffs speech did not warrant First Amendment protection , because she had spoken on a matter of private rather than public concern. Cliff argues on appeal that because issues of class size and student discipline in a public high school are inherently matters of public concern, the district court erred in finding otherwise. Although we can agree that Cliffs complaints addressed a subject of general interest to the public, her claim still fails as a matter of law because her expression was addressed only to the personal impact of those issues on Cliff. Her speech was thus intended to benefit only her personal interests in a private dispute with her employer.
Not all speech by public employees is protected by the First Amendment such that constitutional concerns are raised if a public employer retaliates in response to that speech.
Smith v. Fruin,
We must therefore determine whether Cliffs complaints about the size of her math classes and the general disorder at BRHS addressed a matter of public concern.
Connick
requires that we consider “the content, form, and context” of Cliffs statements as revealed by the record as a whole (
Cliff contends that her statements about class size and the lack of student discipline at BRHS are inherently matters of public concern. According to Cliff, her complaints were designed to call attention to these problems and to thereby improve the efficiency and integrity of the high school’s operations. We have no doubt that the problems Cliff addressed are of widespread interest to members of the community, and particularly so to parents whose children attend BRHS. In a society increasingly concerned with the quality of public education, unusually large classes and general disorder in a public high school may be perceived as fostering an atmosphere that is less than conducive to the accomplishment of the school’s educational mission. In that sense, the community would no doubt be interested in the comments of an experienced teacher like Cliff on such matters. As we recently reiterated, however, “the fact that an employee speaks up on a topic that may be deemed one of public import does not automatically render [her] remarks on that subject protected.”
Smith,
Consideration of the Connick factors here convinces us that the district court correctly characterized Cliffs speech as merely of private rather than public concern. The record as a whole belies Cliffs assertion that she spoke in order to call public attention to the problems addressed. It establishes instead that Cliff complained only in response to *411 criticism directed at her classroom performance in her annual reviews — criticism primarily relating to Cliffs inability to control her students and to maintain order in her classroom. Indeed, Cliff filed her initial grievance only after receiving a number of unsatisfactory marks on her 1984-85 review. That grievance addressed the class size and disciplinary problems not in general terms, but in the context of Cliffs own circumstances. For example, Cliff personally found it “very hard to maintain discipline effectively in these overcrowded classroom situations,” and she asked “to have [her] class sizes reduced” and for “help with classroom discipline.” (R. 530 Ex. D.) Furthermore, in discussing her review with Hochstedler, Cliff maintained that she was being treated differently from the other math teachers in that only she was being assigned such an abundance of large classes. (See Cliff Dep., R. 531 at 23-24.) According to Cliff, therefore, the size of her math classes was contributing to the lack of order in her classroom. 6
Cliff’s complaints were therefore on her own behalf and in her own interest.
See Smith,
We also think it clear that Cliff was not, as she maintains, attempting to call public attention to these matters, as she limited her complaints to private conversations and to the CBA grievance procedure without taking the issue to the public in any way. Although we recognize that employee speech does not go unprotected when made only in a private rather than a public setting
(see Givhan v. Western Line Consol. Sch. Dist.,
B.
Cliff next alleges under a variety of federal statutes and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment that IPS discriminated against her on the basis of race, age, and sex when it terminated her employment. The district court granted summary judgment, finding that Cliff had failed to rebut IPS’ legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for its employment decision— that Cliff was an ineffective teacher who could not control her classroom. Indeed, IPS established that it had evaluated Cliff a number of times over approximately a three-year period, that it had utilized a variety of *412 different evaluators, and that the evaluators had reached remarkably consistent conclusions, in that they had identified the same or similar deficiencies in Cliffs classroom performance. Moreover, IPS showed considerable patience with Cliff between 1985 and 1988, despite the fact that her reviews were consistently unsatisfactory. Indeed, Shepard and Clark both attempted to facilitate Cliffs improvement by critiquing her performance and recommending alternative teaching strategies. It was only in 1988, after two evaluators found that Cliff had failed to live up to her second year PIP, that the Superintendent recommended cancellation of her contract.
In order to expose IPS’ proffered reason as pretextual, Cliff was required to point to evidence suggesting either that the stated reason was unworthy of credence or that a discriminatory reason more likely motivated IPS’ decision.
Robinson v. PPG Indus., Inc.,
C.
Cliff also contends that IPS violated 42 U.S.C. § 1981 when it failed to promote her to the position of Math Department Head at BRHS or EMHS, when it refused her transfer requests, and when it ultimately terminated her employment. The district court found that Cliff could not maintain a claim for unlawful termination under section 1981 and, to the extent that her other claims were actionable under that statute, that Cliff had not presented evidence linking the challenged decisions to her race. On appeal, Cliff pursues under section 1981 only the Board’s failure to make her a Math Department Head.
Cliffs section 1981 claims are governed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
Whether Cliff’s “failure to promote” claims are actionable depends upon whether the sought-after promotions would have resulted in a “new and distinct relation between the employee and the employer.”
Patterson,
D.
Cliff finally contends that IPS violated her due process rights when it terminated her employment without providing a meaningful pre-termination hearing. The district court found that IPS had offered the required hearing but that Cliff had voluntarily waived her rights in that regard. Cliff contends on appeal that the offered hearing would not have been “meaningful” because the Board already had decided to terminate her employment. We agree with the district court that IPS was entitled to summary judgment on this claim.
IPS conceded below that Cliff had a property interest in her tenured teaching position so that she could not be terminated without due process of law.
Cf. Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
We agree that in these circumstances, Cliff waived her right to a pretermination hearing. As we observed in
Fern v. Thorp Public School,
III. CONCLUSION
Because the record reveals that Cliff complained about the size of her mathematics classes and the lack of order at Broad Ripple High School only to advance her personal interests and not to bring before the community an issue of public concern, her speech was not protected by the First Amendment. There also is no evidence to suggest that race, sex, or age discrimination was behind the Board’s refusal to name Cliff a Math Department Head or its decision to cancel her contract. Finally, IPS satisfied its obligations under the Due Process Clause when it notified Cliff of the reasons for her discharge and offered to conduct a pre-termi-nation hearing. For all of these reasons, we AffiRM the judgment below.
Notes
. Cliff is an African-American female who was over fifty years of age when IPS failed to renew her contract.
. Under the CBA, if a teacher receives more than a designated number of unsatisfactory grades on her evaluation, "the evaluator is to recommend Renewal of the Contract with Performance Improvement Plan.” The teacher then has "the following school year to implement the strategies recommended on the Performance Improvement Plan and to meet proficiency.” (R. 530, Ex. E, App. D at 7.)
. Clark, like Cliff, is African-American.
. Three of the ten applicants were African-American, and three were women.
*410
. Our concern with motive derives from the following passage in Connick:
We hold only that when a public employee speaks not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but instead as an employee upon matters only of personal interest, absent the most unusual circumstances, a federal court is not the appropriate forum in which to review the wisdom of a personnel decision taken by a public agency allegedly in reaction to the employee’s behavior.
. Moreover, in her later grievances, Cliff contended that, as a tenured teacher, she was being evaluated more frequently than the CBA would allow. This complaint also addressed only Cliff's personal situation.
