This--teachers only get paid for the months they work and most schools have done away with tuition remission. |
Not defending how very little the $60k/yr school communities pay their teachers, but most people get paid for the months they work. Don’t know why the PP thinks teachers can’t figure out how to budget for the two months they don’t get a paycheck. They may get paid peanuts but they aren’t stupid. |
I posted earlier in the thread. I was continually annoyed by administrative decisions where my kids were in school. Realistically though, a sustaining endowment needs to be significant. Say a school has a $5,000,000 endowment that is partly kept for emergency repairs, collateral for capital expense loans, and financial aid. To maintain that endowment, and only spend earnings (not addressing the unknown future) the old rule of thumb was to only spend 4% annually. $200,000 a year is a small amount given the costs of running the school, offering financial aid and maintaining buildings and grounds. Spending down a small endowment offers no long term sustainability. Arguably, schools don’t need a pretty campus to teach basics. Also arguably, most families who want an attractive, child-friendly environment would not opt for a school in a strip mall. A place like Episcopal High School, with an endowment in the hundreds of millions plus some specified funds, is an outlier. Most of the area small schools are balancing tight budgets. We don’t always agree with their spending choices, but that’s usually different from surviving beyond the next couple of years. |
| because they will close. they need to build their endowments. the gap between a public teacher and private school teacher is growing right now, inflation is driving up repair costs and maintaining buildings, and schools are big enough that they need to provide an option for health insurance. the choice to donate or not is yours, but schools can't stop asking. When they do run into financial trouble and need to close, people act surprised. |
What you should ask is why teachers at Private Schools will put up with being paid a fraction of what they could earn at public schools. Answer: they are often less qualified and don't have a teaching certificate. |
| Rich people are ruining the world in the name of Jesus. |
Wrong answer most of the time. They prefer the private school work environment to that in the public schools. “Teacher certification” always makes me laugh. The huge mess that public education is now in is staffed by “certified” teachers. |
| Many private school teachers have Bachelor and Masters degrees as well as their teaching certificate. Many are also engaged in continued professional development. Of course, private schools can hire who they want but it’s not true they are all unqualified. There are a lot of reasons why teachers choose to work at a private school. |
No. The Q is why do schools say they value their teachers and parents demand the teachers bend over backwards for their kids but no one cares how little they make. |
This post makes me laugh but is also disturbing in its ignorance. You realize much of the “mess” in public education is from students living in poverty, right? |