Teachers have the right to decline the move. There’s a reason some of these schools have dozens of vacancies. |
What happens when they decline? In APS if you don’t take the placement they don’t have to give you a new one |
You’re delusional. 4 vacancies in my department alone. We never have subs. |
| RE: poverty, it is expanding. 1 in 3 children in Fairfax County is eligible for F/RMs. That's close to 60K students. |
We need collective bargaining. FCPS is dragging it's feet. |
Yeah, I don’t think so. |
| Special education is in big trouble around the nation. I think what will happen eventually is that the department of education is going to have to take over sped as a whole, staff these positions themselves, and pay sped teams more. You could not pay me all the money in the world to teach sped. |
I managed to get transferred out for next year. It’s my last ditch effort to try to stay in education. |
+1. Hilariously clueless. |
Yeah, good luck enforcing that when they’re already critically short staffed. In 2022, it’s an empty threat, just like “OMG if you quit and leave the baaaaabies mid year, you’ll be blackballed by all surrounding districts!!!” Nope. Not anymore. |
You “think” wrong. |
This school year 98% of FCPS teaching jobs were filled. The data is on school board documents online. That is not an industry in crisis. Now, the bulk of those 2% unfilled jobs are in fact in special ed, which may well be in crisis as PP suggests. But most FCPS teachers are happily hanging onto their jobs. Our elementary is losing a receptionist and one classroom teacher, who is in fact changing schools within FCPS, .....a far cry better than most other employers in the area. |
+1. Teachers or IAs can decline a transfer to a less desirable school and you'll have no problem getting hired at a better one. This isn't even a transfer/ de-staff, though. It's someone claiming the county will just move a teacher or staff member out of a school that is not overstaffed and place them elsewhere because another school doesn't have enough staff. There's no way a base school would agree to that. Maybe with an itinerant or central position, but otherwise, forget it. |
+1 those sped teachers are saints |
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I have been teaching for FCPS for almost 30 years. I've been considering retiring after my 30th year. One reason is because while at the top of the pay scale, my pay has been fairly stagnant the past few years and I figure any future raises will be small. With no more steps the only raise would be any market scale adjustment, which when we get them are typically small. The announcement that those at the top of the scale with get a step increase next year instead of continuing at the same step has the decision scale tipping a little bit more back towards staying beyond 30.
We'll see. |