SO much this!! |
+ a million-teachers are DONE. this has finished a lot of SPED teachers. Good luck next year with your resident teachers. |
Rubbish. It’s contrary. The parents of these learning-challenged kids were providing their own tutoring while also juggling their jobs. The virtual setting with 67 page PowerPoint decks was not stimulating for 7-8 year olds. Their attention was lost and it was hard for them to stay engaged. It was a very trying time for the families and the special Ed services were non-existent. |
RUBBISH! |
If you have 15 kids on your caseload and you've already held annual IEP meetings for half of them this year, guess what? You have to meet with those parents again. If the parents don't want to meet, you still have to do all the data digging and figure out which, if any, services their child may be entitled to. If the parents do want services or have receipts and want reimbursement from past services, you have to schedule yet another meeting where Central Office does get involved before anyone cuts a check. Oh, and you also have to make sub plans for the times when you won't be in your classroom teaching your regular students because you're in a meeting. I don't have enough planning time to do all of that in addition to regular lesson plans, grading, data collection, and meetings, so it gets done off the clock. I have my own family and kids and am not interested in missing any more time with them to make a couple extra bucks. That doesn't include the kids who have left your school. You also have to run their numbers and offer their parents a meeting. |
Sorry to post again so soon. A big part of the time suck is just gathering and inputting all the information from various data sources. You have to get test scores from all over the place, get attendance records, get TLPs, look at progress reports, and then put those numbers onto a spreadsheet. Then you have to figure out how much time from school the student missed and how many hours of services they didn't receive when they were virtual. It's not hard but it takes a ton of time. I don't see a reason why Central Office couldn't do this part. I'm being asked to do it for students who I've never met because I wasn't at the same school during Covid. I also think Central Office could make a lot of the clear cut yes or no decisions based on the data. If a student attended virtual school regularly, passed grade level tests since returning, shows no regression and the parents don't want compensatory services, note the file and be done with it. If a student is visually impaired and has Level 3 autism and the parents had to hire someone to come sit 1:1 with them to access virtual instruction and want reimbursement, Central Office is going to be getting involved anyway. |
One night of extra work (even if it’s 6 hours) will hardly “decimate” anyone, let alone an entire system. |
Okay. I’m still waiting for the resignations that we’ve been hearing about since 2020 to actually occur. After a while this kind of shrill argument loses its effectiveness. Lol. |
You must not have a kid in school….? |
They’ve been happening. You’re either not listening or don’t care. |
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I just looked at the 2023-24 budget and FCPS only has +$2 million budgeted for compensatory services next year. They have almost 50,000 students who are supposed to be getting a review for services.
They are making teachers do all of this work and almost no services will be provided. What a waste. |
Look at the data. There has been no mass exodus of teachers. Period. And with a recession looming, I don’t see them starting to leave now. |
By October 2022, more than a quarter of public schools had multiple teaching vacancies, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Nearly half, or 45%, of public schools had at least one teaching vacancy as of October, according to data released Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics. 7% of SPED positions are unfilled. https://www.k12dive.com/news/public-schools-teaching-vacancies/638029/ These numbers aren’t normal, but you do you without any information or links to back you up! I agree that a recession would bring some back…. Careful what you wish for though. |
INCORRECT. You do not have to offer them a meeting. If they reach out to you for a meeting, you have it. But you are not supposed to contact them. FCPS already did that. |
What you’re not seeing in the budget is all the unspent ESSER money sitting in school budgets. The rules are so tight on what the school could spend it on that there is A LOT of money unspent. That will be scooped up at the end of the school year and go towards this. There is plenty of money. |