Cushy? Lol. Have you been in a school? And if it is so cushy, there would be no vacancies and each open position would have a long line of applicants. My school has at least six unfilled vacancies. Most of them are taught by daily subs because they can’t even find long term subs. |
The person who said that teaching is cushy is ridiculous. However, discussions about salary and time off are rarely productive because people tend to focus on one aspect of the job without considering the others. Talking about salaries and then comparing what workers who work year-round in the private sector (not in government employment) is apples and oranges. Private industry is an entirely different ballgame. The same is true of leave. I have a government job, and if I could have taken a pay cut to have summers off, I would have done it in a heartbeat. So would plenty of others. In fact, I had a government job that required me to work plenty of extra hours with no extra pay throughout the year, including the summer. That doesn't mean that there aren't a host of other reasons why teaching has become unworkable, but it also doesn't mean that summers off aren't something of a perk that others don't have. Let's talk about what needs to be fixed to make that perk worth something. My problem with salary and leave discussions is that, from what I can tell, we could pay teachers $300,000 a year, and they would still be miserable. I don't know any teachers who actually work 60+ hours every week (my sister is a teacher and works nowhere near those hours), but I will take teachers at their word that they are doing that. If teacher salaries were $300,000 a year, wouldn't we hear the same complaints about hours, administration, lack of respect, etc.? There's no amount of money that would make their complaints worth it. So why do we focus on salaries so much? Paying teachers more while everything else remains the same will further erode respect for the profession because teachers will still be miserable, constantly complaining, and in short supply, and parents will remain frustrated and concerned about issues like delays in communication, absences, and late grading. |
| Someone at school told me that MCPS is considering closing on Monday now or at least might make it a half day. Is this true? |
I was fine with your post until I got to “constantly complaining”. Perhaps if people would actually listen to us as we explain WHY the job is miserable, we’d be able to get somewhere. But what happens instead, as seen often on DCUM, is that a simple explanation is called “complaining”. Then someone who doesn’t teach diminishes our real experiences by telling us how good we have it. $300K would go a long way to making me feel appreciated for the absurd amount of work I do. It would also acknowledge the importance of a teacher’s job; it’s one of the most valuable professions and should be compensated as such. But I agree with you about one thing: it’s not about the money. I would trade that higher salary for respect. Let’s start with not telling teachers how we should feel about our jobs and how we should do our jobs. |
A year in the private sector might help you better understand the world today. |
Steps ahead of you. I transferred from the private sector to teaching. I’m very familiar with both environments and can easily compare. I regret switching to teaching. |
OK, so maybe "constantly complaining" was a poor choice of words. Is pointing out why the burdens of teaching have become unworkable complaining? Maybe it isn't. I apologize. But I never said how good you have it. I just wish the discussion wasn't always framed as teaching versus every other profession. That pits parents against teachers. Quite a few of us are overworked, underpaid, and underappreciated in our jobs, AND we have to structure our lives around school demands and a schedule that hasn't changed much since most families had stay-at-home parents. What do you want people to do to help make teaching better for you? If the only answer is paying teachers $300,000 because your job is much more difficult and important than ours, I'm not sure how much support you will get. |
Student rights are limited within school buildings. Plenty of public schools ban cell phones and “seize” them for pick-up by parents. |
Teachers in Maryland aren’t allowed to strike. |
I don’t need $300K. Heck, I even wrote above that I would take respect over money. I’m tired of seeing my colleagues walk around as zombies because they are regularly grading past midnight, just to be told we aren’t providing prompt feedback. I’m tired of seeing my colleagues cry because they have a disruptive class of 35 and no help, just to be told the disruptions are caused because we aren’t making strong enough connections with students. And on and on. So, respect is worth more than $300K. I don’t even need all these problems fixed right away. Just acknowledging these problems exist without dismissing teachers’ experiences is enough. |
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$300k doesn't matter if I still have to wear a poise pad everyday because my one bathroom break isn’t always guaranteed. So much of my day is spent reacting to all these little supposed emergencies instead of actually getting to plan be be proactive to avoid said “emergencies”.
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I keep seeing posts about teachers working super long hours, grading past midnight (as seen above) etc., One of my very good friends in an elementary teacher in MCPS and she doesn't work those kinds of hours at all. These long hours after school or on weekends, is this mostly middle and high school teachers who have lots of grading of papers like English and history teachers? |
I don't think you have to be a rocket scientist to recognize that grading elementary school work is probably going to be quicker and less time consuming than middle and high school work.... |
It's mostly written stuff that takes forever to grade - if kids (and parents) want any sort of detailed critique. |
High school teacher here. I have 3 sections of AP and I grade 25-30 hours a week. |