I see a ton of assumptions in this post. You assume devoted teachers were in the minority. You assume the unions spoke for the majority of teachers. You assume that same majority told parents to teach their own children. (Seriously? Who really said that?) I taught throughout the entire pandemic, most of it in person. I know many teachers, both public and private, and they taught throughout the entire pandemic, too. Perhaps you didn’t like HOW, but guess what? Those teachers had little (if any) power to open schools up for you. Many spent weekends and evenings attending hastily put-together trainings to figure out everything at their disposal to make online learning work. Many teachers did very well, which is remarkable since each new day brought unprecedented challenges. I watched colleagues run drama classes online, producing full-length virtual plays. I watched colleagues run online clubs after school, creatively engaging kids in mystery dinner theater club, “where in the world” geography club, and a host of other quickly-produced ideas to give kids a sense of community. I watched colleagues drive supplies to students’ homes for upcoming units. I watched them host office hours to reteach math, or to go over essays. Where you see only negative, I see innovation and a determination to make the best out of a horrible situation. I guess you and I will never see eye-to-eye. I don’t assume people have bad intentions and I don’t blame the many for the actions of the few. I’ve had a dreadful doctor who messed up a procedure, but I don’t condemn the entire medical profession. I’ve interacted with a hateful and egotistical lawyer, but I don’t assume all lawyers are despicable humans. Sure, some teachers aren’t great, but most are. I just hope you give the teachers in your life a chance instead of assuming the worst. |
Are you forgetting about the threats and acts of (illegal) strikes by teacher’s unions? Who elected the leaders of those unions? How many union members publicly spoke out against the actions of their leaders? |
Nope, still not assuming the worst and not blaming the all for the few. That's not how I operate. Your everyday teacher is too busy planning, grading, teaching, attending meetings, and doing 50 other things simulataneously. I couldn't tell you who my union rep is, what they are doing, etc. I'm not even a huge fan of having a union. I performed admirably during the pandemic. I'm proud of what I accomplished. Your hate can't take that away from me. |
You should be more concerned about your colleagues making you look bad. You don’t honestly expect across-the-board pay raises given what we’ve seen in teaching over the last few years, do you? If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem. |
I'm not a teacher but I think focusing on doing a good job teaching is being part of the solution. No, PP can't control "coworkers making you look bad," please. |
You don’t seem to understand how unions work. |
I have, in fact, been a union rep, so I understand that a) not al teachers are represented by unions, e.g. in VA, and b) not all members of a bargaining unit are active in their union, nor should that be a requirement of any job, the first focus should always be doing the actual job well. |
Yes, that should be the first focus. But if your union is protecting bad teachers, blocking pay reform, and fighting attempts to reopen schools, then you should absolutely expect to get grouped together with them. Particularly if you let it happen through inaction. And you certainly shouldn't be complaining about pay or conditions. |
I’m the teacher to whom you were originally replying. No, I’m still going to focus on my job first. I’m paid to teach, not to get political. I suppose I won’t make you happy unless I drop my carefully-crafted lesson plans and pick up a pitchfork. That’s not going to happen. My decision will clearly anger you, but I’m comfortable in the fact that most people would prefer for me to focus on being a good teacher. You seem rigidly fixed on an “all teachers are horrible because unions are horrible” mindset, even though other posters have explained to you how unions work and how plenty of teachers aren’t even represented by them. |
You're absolutely right. Teachers lost all credibility with their actions and inactions over the last two years, at least in the districts that incredibly kept schools closed and kept saying "no big deal." |
| As one of the PPs already mentioned, teachers and their unions fought reopening schools tooth and nail during COVID, which cased a disastrous drop in student achievement. For better or worse, by refusing any reasonable proposal to go back to work for so long, teachers lost a lot of public goodwill. So Even if many factors were at play for that leaning loss, it's just not a good look right now for teachers to keep whining how they're npt tp blame and how they deserve ever higher pay increases. How abput teachers first bring up student test scores back to pre-pandemic levels, and then we can talk about more pay? |
I see it differently. I saw teachers bending backwards to provide for students in terrible circumstances *that the teachers did not create.* I know many teachers throughout the DMV (which tends to happen when you’ve been in the profession for so long). I can’t think of one… ONE… who vocally fought to keep schools virtual. They were all too busy making virtual learning WORK to waste time getting political. You are fighting the wrong people. Go after school boards and unions, the ones who actually have a voice and, no, don’t always represent the teachers. I have spoken many times over the years to both the BOE and the union about what I consider are their poor decisions. Again: *teachers* didn’t make these decisions. You’re giving us far more power than we actually have. You are also assuming we have time to drop our busy, overburdened jobs to pick up a political fight. |
But a majority of teachers elected those unions who brought about those disastrous results for our kids. Also, I was talking about public perception. Surely you and your close-knit circle of teacher friends may see it differently. But for better or worse, but many more parents (and the public at large) viewed teachers and their unions has having been blatantly selfish when refusing any reasonable solution to go reopen schools. Again, just thinking about the current public perception here: Now might not be an ideal time to loudly whine about wanting more money while paying no attention to how much our kids are still struggling with the fallout... |
First of all teachers should pay reparations to those children. What do you say, $20-30k per teacher? |
In VA it’s not even close. In Fairfax County it’s approximately a third. Very few have bargaining units since they only gained the possibility to enter into a bargaining agreement recently. Only a handful of school boards have agreed to opt-in to collective bargaining. |