It's a shame you have to state this, but if you don't non-teachers will look at your clarification and say it's a complaint. BTW OP, it's 194 days not 180. Just a correction, not a complaint. |
+1 First and foremost, excluding a few bad apples, thank you to all teachers for educating the children. I used to work for FCPS Dept. of IT in 1996 and my salary was 60k/yr with 3 years of IT experience, grade US-24 I think. I am quite sure that a teacher with 3 years of teaching experience would have made 60k/yr in 1996. I couldn't understand why IT people in FCPS made more than teachers. Go figure. |
I teach at a school with block scheduling, and this is not the way my schedule works at all. Our "constant" period is 3rd period, so I see that class every day. Therefore, on "A" days, I teach 1st, 3rd, 5th, and remediation block. I have planning and meetings during 7th block. On "B" days, I teach 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and remediation block. I have planning and meetings during 6th block. If we didn't have block, that would mean I'd teach periods 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, with planning/meetings during periods 6 and 7. It is not the number of class periods taught that is challenging; it is the number of hours of instruction. Planning for 90-minute blocks isn't easier than planning for two 45-minute periods, so it is a ridiculous argument to say teachers "only" teach three periods per day. I have students in my classroom for all but 110 minutes of the day. Of those 110 minutes, I generally have meetings for 60-90 minutes. That leaves me 20-50 minutes of planning/lunch/bathroom time per day. |
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I have taught high school in FCPS for 25 years. I make $95K.
I like my job. I like working with teenagers. I am good at it -- they let me know. BUT it took 25 years to get to this salary. I'm "old" now. I don't complain what I make now, but I sure did 15 years ago when I could barely make ends meet. I certainly don't blame the 50% of teachers who leave the classroom within the first five years. You have *no idea* what kind of stress teachers have to deal with. It isn't for everyone. And to be good at it is *truly* harder than it looks. Be grateful. I am. |
They teach 5 periods- 150 students. |
Maybe that’s it. This is my 20th year teaching and I’ve never been the type of person that is bothered if others do not respect what I do. I’ve heard disrespectful comments about lawyers, cleaners, people who work in restaurants, doctors, the military, cleaning crews, etc. You will always hear people thinking that some profession is overpaid, has it easy or is for people who could not find employment elsewhere. I do not need to be validated by anyone else. I like my students and like my coworkers and most parents. |
How do you keep a straight face when a 4/5 year old swears at you? Or take it seriously for that matter, I would be way more concerned about an older child, one who actually knows what the words mean cursing at me. Maybe the problem is expectations placed upon 4/5 years olds. Ready to learn??? Gone are the days when kindergarten was actually fun for 4/5 year olds, what ever happened to singing ABCs and 123, creative movement, story time, snack time and nap time. |
lol. |
PP- I think you left out the word NOT, as in I am quite sure that teacher with 3 years of teaching experience would NOT have made 60K/yr in 1996. In 1999, I had been teaching 7 years in FCPS and had a master's degree. I was making $42K. If you were a US-24, you were probably working a 219-day contract, if not longer. It definitely wasn't the 194 day that teachers had. |
I agree that the expectations are very out of line with normal child development. The expectations are fear based instead of based in the reality of what is normal childhood development. When teachers have to evacuate their classroom because a kindergartener has gone crazy and is throwing stuff everywhere while telling you “Don’t effing come closer or I’ll rip your effing head off” I most certainly try to keep my poker face while pushing students out the door. I have at least two students similar to this every year in my kindergarten classroom. |
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I'm a first year middle school English teacher making around $50k a year. I do leave within 30 minutes of the end of school, but I take a bag of grading home with me and I'll generally spend at least an additional hour or two planning or catching up on emails. I have around 90 students and give detailed feedback to their writing assignments, but even the boring grammar worksheets take time to grade.
My school has a block schedule with 75 minute classes and I teach the same 3 blocks everyday with one block for planning. 4 of the 5 days a week, my planning is taken up by meetings. I don't think non-teachers understand what we mean by planning and what exactly about it takes so long. My school provides me with a textbook, the state gives me the Standards of Learning that I need to teach, but it is up to me to figure out what I'm do every day. I make most of the resources that I use: worksheets, cloze note pages, PowerPoints, quizzes, tests, example paragraphs to show a skill we're learning, etc. Everything that the kids interact with, I generally have created myself, outside of my work hours. If I only worked from 7:40-3:20, my contracted hours, my students would start on page 1 of the textbook the first day of school and work their way through it. Life would be great for me, but then I'd hear complaints from parents and administration. |
| ^^That is why we have schools like KilmerES and BurkeES- they are for kids with EBD. Peerhaps, you should contact the county in which you work and start processing the paperwork! |
| ^ Gatehouse pays good money to former teachers to create curriculum by subject, as I understand.. Why aren’t you using these? |
I’m not in northern VA. Some of these students eventually get moved to another school or program but it takes a loooiong time. The more run of the mill behavior issues barely even register with me anymore. Sad but there are so many lost kids out there without any parent available to be there for them. So many kids beg me to take them home. I got a Valentine’s Day card from a girl last year who said she would clean my house if she could live with me. She has just turned 7. Her parents never registered her for school until a neighbor asked them how old she was so she started kindergarten a year and a half later than she should’ve. |
PP you're replying to here. I don't work for FCPS. My county offers a framework of the SOLs for easy reading , but it's up to use to develop our yearly curriculum design. My department has created one that we're using so I have a rough idea of what unit we're doing when, but it's still up to me to make the resources for the units themselves. I have a large number of SPED students, ELLs, and very low level readers in my class, as well as numerous gifted students who are reading at a college lexile. Even if I used the worksheets and resources created by my department in the past, I still have to differentiate it to both my lower tier students and my upper tier students. That take times that I spend, outside of my paid contract hours, to do. |