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#1
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riverman wrote:
That's true. As a teacher, I am clearly aware that being away from the desk for 8 weeks a year is one aspect of the job that most other professions do not get. Teaching has it shortcomings, of course, but so does every occupation. I like my job, and I like having some time in the summer to go fishing! And likewise, its not as much vacation as most think. Those of you in the profession know what I am talking about, and most of those not in the profession generally aren't convinced unless they had parents who were teachers. --riverman i am frequently surprised by how few people really grasp or care about the horrible inequity in the work environment and pay structure for our public elementary and secondary school teachers. for any teacher who cares about his/her profession, the workdays are unending and obligations extend throughout the summer; too few folks appreciate the devotion of those teaching the public's community of children; the available classroom resources are always lean; course design and management are often controlled by some bureaucrat in a central office, bowing to political pressure; the kids are frequently hostile and behave poorly, with little motivation for learning or to be taught; and the pay is terrible. i'm ashamed to say that a 1st year teacher with a masters degree and all proper teaching credentials in my city's schools has a starting pay of a little over 29k...and it takes 20 years before he/she can expect to earn over 40k. it's shameful and ridiculous. jeff (and none of my family were/are teachers) |
#2
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![]() "Jeff Miller" wrote i'm ashamed to say that a 1st year teacher with a masters degree and all proper teaching credentials in my city's schools has a starting pay of a little over 29k...and it takes 20 years before he/she can expect to earn over 40k. it's shameful and ridiculous. what, you mean to tell me that ron artest isn't worth, like, 40k a ****ing week? yfitp wayno (i mean, just think of the role model aspect!) |
#3
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Wayne Harrison wrote:
"Jeff Miller" wrote i'm ashamed to say that a 1st year teacher with a masters degree and all proper teaching credentials in my city's schools has a starting pay of a little over 29k...and it takes 20 years before he/she can expect to earn over 40k. it's shameful and ridiculous. what, you mean to tell me that ron artest isn't worth, like, 40k a ****ing week? yfitp wayno (i mean, just think of the role model aspect!) not to mention mcCant$... ![]() jeff |
#4
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![]() Jeff Miller wrote: i'm ashamed to say that a 1st year teacher with a masters degree and all proper teaching credentials in my city's schools has a starting pay of a little over 29k...and it takes 20 years before he/she can expect to earn over 40k. Working 10 months out of the year, 29K would equate to 35K for the rest of us. Not a bad start, when you consider how relatively easy it is to obtain an education degree and the lack of real knowledge on a subject needed to *teach* it in some states, it is not unrealistic to expect lowered salaries. (Please note i did not say teachers did not *know* their subjects in all cases) Elementary and Secondary education is not the noble profession many folks make it out to be. Can some teachers make a difference in some kid's life, of course. it still does not the whole profession noble. You want to raise teacher salaries? Raise the bar to get in. Wayne I might have left this alone if I wasn't writing checks to the IRS and state today after receiving my property tax bill yesterday. ![]() |
#5
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In article .com,
"Wayne Knight" wrote: Jeff Miller wrote: i'm ashamed to say that a 1st year teacher with a masters degree and all proper teaching credentials in my city's schools has a starting pay of a little over 29k...and it takes 20 years before he/she can expect to earn over 40k. Working 10 months out of the year, 29K would equate to 35K for the rest of us. Not a bad start, when you consider how relatively easy it is to obtain an education degree and the lack of real knowledge on a subject needed to *teach* it in some states, it is not unrealistic to expect lowered salaries. (Please note i did not say teachers did not *know* their subjects in all cases) Elementary and Secondary education is not the noble profession many folks make it out to be. Can some teachers make a difference in some kid's life, of course. it still does not the whole profession noble. You want to raise teacher salaries? Raise the bar to get in. Wayne I might have left this alone if I wasn't writing checks to the IRS and state today after receiving my property tax bill yesterday. ![]() You should have. Let's look at some other things about teaching... Out of that "not a bad start", you are required to take continuing education courses... of course, you don't get PAID to take them, like in most other professions... they're out of your own pocket. And of course they're only available during the summertime. So much for that "10 months of the year" job. You spend several hours a night grading papers, recording grades, writing lesson plans, creating classroom materials, reading background material, correcting textbooks, reading professional journals, contacting parents, other teachers, administrators... So much for that "8 to 3" job... You buy extra supplies (just little things like classroom materials for 30 kids, extra reading material for the kids, all those little extras that make a classroom more than an empty box with students in it) out of your own pocket, to the tune of several thousand dollars a year (We have the receipts to prove it...) So much for that "not a bad start"... Any attempt to maintain classroom discipline is met with angry calls from parents denying that their little darlings would EVER do anything disruptive (despite the fact the the little "darling" has spent more time suspended than in the classroom), and the fact that due to a few bad apples, a teacher can't even hug a crying student on the playground anymore. Of course, the parents are completely ignorant of the fact that if you let the TV raise the kids for the first 6 years, there's almost nothing that a school can do to rescue them. Not to mention the fact that anytime a school levy comes up, you have to act like a beggar, pleading for the community to pass it so you will have a job the next year. Then you've got the school board that keeps the number of teachers as low as possible, so that you're constantly at a load that is ONE student short of the number that would require them to assign you an aide... and you're working with special ed students that all have different needs, and writing 12 highly detailed individual lesson plans a week (over the course of a year, over 1000 pages worth!). On top of all that, after years and years of teaching in the highest stress field, you're thrown out without even a gold watch when the strain gets to be too much, with completely inadequate counselling and assistance available. I was a substitute teacher for 2 years, and taught music for 7 years. I was a profesional musician for over 30 years, and have 2 recordings to my credit. I bacame a Mr. Mom after my son was born because it was clear there was no future in teaching, and have made more money in retail hell than I ever did in education. My wife taught "special needs" students (ages to 13, highest functioning at about 2-3 grade)for 25 years. You clearly have NO idea what teaching is really like. You probably wouldn't survive a week in an elementary classroom, and a high school basic math or English class would eat you alive in an hour. Think about this - those taxes you pay aren't for the kids you may or may not have in school any more, they're payments on the credit you were extended for the education YOU received, and still use. So go ahead and **** and moan about your taxes. Poor baby. -- "What it all comes to is that the whole structure of space flight as it stands now is creaking, obsolecent, over-elaborate, decaying. The field is static; no, worse than that, it's losing ground. By this time, our ships ought to be sleeker and faster, and able to carry bigger payloads. We ought to have done away with this dichotomy between ships that can land on a planet, and ships that can fly from one planet to another." - Senator Bliss Wagoner James Blish - _They Shall Have Stars_ |
#6
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![]() Joe Ellis wrote: You should have. Let's look at some other things about teaching... Out of that "not a bad start", you are required to take continuing education courses... of course, you don't get PAID to take them, like in most other professions... they're out of your own pocket. And of course they're only available during the summertime. So much for that "10 months of the year" job. Not what my sister endures. She manages to get hers in during the school year. You buy extra supplies (just little things like classroom materials for 30 kids, extra reading material for the kids, all those little extras that make a classroom more than an empty box with students in it) out of your own pocket, to the tune of several thousand dollars a year (We have the receipts to prove it...) So much for that "not a bad start"... Seen the extra checks I used to write for supplies big guy? Seen the tax treatment for teachers? Probably not. On top of all that, after years and years of teaching in the highest stress field, you're thrown out without even a gold watch when the strain gets to be too much, with completely inadequate counselling and assistance available. Defined benefit pensions too. The private sector has been losing them for years. You probably wouldn't survive a week in an elementary classroom, and a high school basic math or English class would eat you alive in an hour. I subbed too. Math and Chemistry. Got quite a bit of work in too at the time as I was employed in a clinical laboratory. Even considered doing it for a living but my undergrad Chemistry degree and post graduate work was not good enough for them, they wanted an education degree. At that point the salary was comparable to my private sector income and the benefits were definitely better. My employer at one point *loaned* me to a school system. I taught calculus and general chemistry for two hours each day for one year. I enjoyed it. Even enjoyed doing lesson plans and grading tests. I take work home now in the evening, I'm sure others do too. So what? Think about this - those taxes you pay aren't for the kids you may or may not have in school any more, they're payments on the credit you were extended for the education YOU received, and still use. My taxes are a civic duty to support vital government functions. As far as I know, most citizens generally don't mind paying our fair share for a community benefit. I do object to the education system not having to live like the rest of us and tighten our belts peridocially. My fellow citizens and I just got a levy increase for administrative and athletic facilities. I'm all for high school sports, but seven million for a football stadium is a little out of hand. So go ahead and **** and moan about your taxes. Poor baby. I would not go around calling those you feed you baby. Read the post again, I said the education requirements were not tough. And I said it was not the noble profession folks made it out to be. I never said it was an easy job. I knew someone would sputter bull**** rather than offer an intellectual argument, speaks highly for some abilitiy to teach. Wayne |
#7
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![]() "Wayne Knight" wrote in message ups.com... SNIP I knew someone would sputter bull**** rather than offer an intellectual argument, speaks highly for some abilitiy to teach. Wayne So the bottom line was that you couldn't cut it, you couldn't or wouldn't make a career in teaching? Yet, you get to trash it and beauregard as if you actually knew what the hell you were talking about? As a retiree out of the human services I do not have to smile and be quiet anymore when someone talks trash. Two of the things that account for allot of what's wrong with this country is that most MEN do not know **** about the health care system, or the education system. That makes them dangerous in the voting booth, and total whiners for the most part in the nursing homes and hospitals. Teaching is possibly the most noble of the professions. My children were well served by teachers, and most people can name teachers who had considerable influence on their lives. My daughter is now a professor. Most of the retired teachers I know are balanced and happy people, and most take comfort that their pensions are not in the hands of corrupt corporations and slimy politicians. And that is about as much justice as one should expect in this sad-assed country. Dave |
#8
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![]() "David Snedeker" wrote in message ... "Wayne Knight" wrote in message ups.com... SNIP I knew someone would sputter bull**** rather than offer an intellectual argument, speaks highly for some abilitiy to teach. Wayne So the bottom line was that you couldn't cut it, you couldn't or wouldn't make a career in teaching? Yet, you get to trash it and beauregard as if you actually knew what the hell you were talking about? As a retiree out of the human services I do not have to smile and be quiet anymore when someone talks trash. Two of the things that account for allot of what's wrong with this country is that most MEN do not know **** about the health care system, or the education system. That makes them dangerous in the voting booth, and total whiners for the most part in the nursing homes and hospitals. Teaching is possibly the most noble of the professions. My children were well served by teachers, and most people can name teachers who had considerable influence on their lives. My daughter is now a professor. Most of the retired teachers I know are balanced and happy people, and most take comfort that their pensions are not in the hands of corrupt corporations and slimy politicians. And that is about as much justice as one should expect in this sad-assed country. Yet another load of unmitigated (as well as unsubstantiated) horse**** from our resident psychopath in the great northwest. Wolfgang who knows that have offspring, knowing a teacher or two, and being retired from the public tit does not an authority make. |
#9
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Yet another load of unmitigated (as well as unsubstantiated) horse**** from our resident psychopath in the great northwest. Wolfgang who knows that have offspring, knowing a teacher or two, and being retired from the public tit does not an authority make. Well you don't know much. 1. Most of my working life I owned and or managed private firms, so your public tit comment is gratuitous. 2. As a part of my work Ive visited, observed, evaluated, consulted, trained, advised etc in more schools, educational programs and classrooms and shops than you or Knight will ever see or drive by, including urban systems where you would most likely wet yourself within a half hour. 3. Ive spent a bit of time in hospitals, worked in one for a short time in college, and hung out for about 6 months at a nursing home while my father died. Turns out I seem to have a pretty high pain threshold. Doesn't make me an expert, but I observed that men were bigger whiners and complainers when sick than women. Why don't you ask some of the nurses, or maybe a few mothers. Most men get queasy if they see their own blood, or even have to clean up a little ****. And if you don't know that I know you have not been around little kids much, and apparently don't like to get out of the lab much. 4. Ive also worked with more than a few Older worker employment programs and on a few class actions. In my personal experience, two occupational groups stand out as being noticeably more well adjusted and "happy" in retirement: Teachers, and surprising to me, highway patrol men. For someone who works in the 5% difference drug realm, you sure play fast and loose with the word "unsubstantiated." Dave |
#10
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![]() "David Snedeker" wrote in message ... So the bottom line was that you couldn't cut it, you couldn't or wouldn't make a career in teaching? Yet, you get to trash it and beauregard as if you actually knew what the hell you were talking about? I said I considered it, they wanted an education degree in that particular school system. At the time I was doing post grad work in chemistry, and yes I made a choice not to seek the edu degree. Two of the things that account for allot of what's wrong with this country is that most MEN do not know **** about the health care system, I have forgotten more about the health care system than you ever learned. Teaching is possibly the most noble of the professions. My children were well served by teachers, and most people can name teachers who had considerable influence on their lives. Oh bull****, if you're bleeding out from a chest wound, I'm sure you would consider the trauma surgeon to be the most noble profession at the time, or if your house was on fire....you get the idea. There are good teachers that *inspire* kids but I'm sure your children were exposed to bad and medicore teachers too, most of which they can't remember. No different than everyday life and other people you come in contact with on a daily basis. of the retired teachers I know are balanced and happy people, and most take comfort that their pensions are not in the hands of corrupt corporations and slimy politicians. And that is about as much justice as one should expect in this sad-assed country. Oh come on, the country has issues, always has had issues We'll find a way to survive Georgie and the sun will continue to rise in the east and set in the west. As to your friends pensions, get a grip son, they were government employees, and who do the governement employees actually work for? , hint, it ain't the taxpayer. |
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