Decorating classroom isnt part her contract and she doesn’t have to do it. But as far as preparing her classroom for lessons- yes, every professional has some amount of preparation they do before starting their job, sometimes outside of “paid hours” |
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I have a good friend that's a teacher and she posts pics of her classroom finished every year. She has massive themes and she changes it every year. One year neon, then Harry Potter, then white boho chic, complete with reading tents. I think the theming is the issue and what costs the most for teachers.
But yes, I personally work best in a bare bones room. I couldn't imagine being surrounded by all that every day and trying to focus. |
There’s nothing parents can do to avoid the one-upsmanship (other, apparently, than fueling it by fulfilling these wishlists…) but I think this is the right idea with basic supplies— if a kids classroom was truly dirty there would be a serious outcry from parents. |
| Social media has only made this worse. |
I can’t think of a job that has the same type of preparation as a teacher. You may have to set up a desk, but that’s not to the same scale as a classroom. You may have to set up email and other programs, but teachers do that as well as create class websites. It’s prep at a much larger scale. I spend about a week preparing in my classroom before pre-service week even begins. (No, I don’t have a Pinterest-worthy room, so I’m not going over the top.) |
Add to that the “mental load” teachers carry over the summer planning out and thinking of how they will afford to organize, supply and decorate their classrooms. Also, NO, they do not get paid over the summer months! |