Kingfish Wrote:
Elvis Fu Wrote:
huskerpunk Wrote:
The comments that "teachers only work 9 months a year" are bullshit. They lesson-plan, attend seminars, take classes, are required to maintain their teaching certificates through continuing education, etc.
And I've also heard comments about how they only work from 8 AM - 3 PM. That's even more bullshit. The good ones are grading papers, taking phone calls from parents, lesson-planning, etc. usually around 10-12 hours per day.
I don't disagree with you, but this "teachers don't work" argument used to justify shitting on teachers is irrelevant anyway. Teaching has a schedule and job requirements. In exchange for performing those duties, you get compensated in cash and benefits. I knew guys that worked on offshore oil rigs back in college, two weeks on and two weeks off. Nobody said, "yeah, but they only work half the time."
My mom and step-father are both educators. They realistically only work about 10 months of the year and they were both home by at least 4 every day. All that lesson-planning, etc. can be accomplished during their breaks/off-periods. High school teachers are a little bit different because they're are lots of extra-curricular activities that take place at night that they must attend. But they're not working 10-12 hours a day. Sorry, it's not true. Some might but that's by choice and a rarity (as it is in almost every field).
I should clarify:
Wife is a special ed teacher. In middle school
So she lesson plans not only for her classes, but for each individual student in those classes
She also modifies tests created by other teachers that teach the classes that her students take with other teachers. Has frequent phone conversations with parents regarding the behavior issues of some of her more troublesome students. Attends seminars. Continuing education. Certification renewal. Grading. Etc. Etc.
It's 10-12 hrs. a day, easy. Usually more.
Yeah, I know that not all teachers (even special ed) are as dedicated as all that. But a lot of them are. And a lot of the better ones get burnt out pretty quickly. It doesn't help that they're not paid all that well, so the solid benefits are the best things that they have as a reminder that they are appreciated.
But even those benefits are not as cushy as they're painted out to be.
My wife pays 15% of each and every paycheck into that pension. It's overseen by the state, but that's pretty much it.
And the only person that is covered for free under her medical insurance is herself. It jumps to more than $500 a month out of her check if she were to add anybody from the family. So we're all on my insurance.
Year-round school? It would have to be done right, or you risk burning out all of your most-dedicated teachers even more quickly.
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Paul Caporino of M.O.T.O. Wrote:
I've recently noticed that all the unfortunate events in the lives of blues singers all seem to rhyme... I think all these tragedies could be avoided with a good rhyming dictionary.