This. They are also doing a job you will not do. Most couldn't even handle their kids in virtual for a year. |
This. I just finished a school year filled with 70 hour weeks. I couldn’t get any of my work done at work because I was always covering classes during my planning periods. (Why was I doing that? Staffing shortages.) I’m about to spend my entire summer in classes I paid for to maintain my certification. I’m also writing curriculum for free. I would LOVE to know where I can get this “off at 3:00 or 4:00 job.” It is EXACTLY attitudes like the one above that make good teachers want to leave. |
Teaching.. the job where everyone has an opinion… the public needs them (as evidenced from the pandemic) but at the same time, feel zero shame bashing them whenever they feel the need. It’s seriously a thankless job. |
| Administrators move around and received undeserved promotions while teachers can’t get a pay increase to keep up with inflation. Moral is real low right now so those who can go elsewhere are. That sometimes means leaving the profession altogether or going to another district. MCPS is being run into the ground by Central Office. |
Let me say - you're a total tool. No, you're worse than that. You're Central Office material. Yes, teachers are *very* special. Teachers are, for the most part, idealists. They believe in the future generations. They want to make a difference. Teachers teach because they care about kids. Period. Any schmuck can sit behind a desk and type, but try spending a year with 30 kids AND trying to teach each and every kid something new each and every day. Think a pay raise will make a difference when a teacher becomes demoralized and the spark is gone? Nope. Teacher's don't take a teaching job if their heart isn't in the work anymore. They teach to see eyes light up and smiles on kids faces. When that's not happening or it's too hard for them to do their jobs, it's just no fun anymore. Think you can fill those slots easily? Maybe with people with a pulse, but I'll bet that you'll hire a lot of people who shouldn't be teaching at all - and watch the stacks of parent complaints jump even higher than they are now. Real teachers are pros who know how to handle kids and their parents. Not something that's easy to do when you're on the front lines of a classroom wearing a smile everyday. If you don't get that, then if you work for MCPS, then YOU (not the teachers) should be quitting. |
Yawn. Yes, school will be virtual in the next pandemic (or another severe, vaccine-resistant spike of this one). Plan accordingly. |
Keep running your ignorant mouth this way. It’s going to go so very well for you and your kids. LOL. |
No, it will not, sadly. We'll just keep having surges like we did last year and ignore them. MCPS did a cr@p job with covid this year. I don't think in person during a surge is good for anyone. Thank goodness for virtual. It was stable, consistent and no worries of getting covid. |
It's like y'all didn't know what you were signing up for. |
They wouldn't be turning away so many top-notch applicants if there were a real shortage. This is just more sky is falling hype. |
You realize if there was no in person school or teachers, you'd actually have to take care of your kids more than a few hours a day at best. |
| We do now what we signed up for. The last 2+ years has been much, much harder. The lack of support/pay/respect makes the position makes the role less sustainable. |
Your post is total BS. MCPS is turning away top-notch applicants??? That’s why over 500 teacher positions were un-filled this school year??? |
They turned me away, in a sense. I was offered a position for far, far less than existing MCPS teachers with the same experience. |
The job is vastly different than it used to be. My mom was a teacher. She retired after 31 yrs. She used to teach from the various teacher's manuals. No lesson planning required. The grading was just a weekly spelling test and a math or science/social studies test every few weeks. She used to let me grade the spelling tests over the weekend. I went to her school and other than one faculty meeting each month, that was it for after school commitments. Poorly behaved students were dealt with at the office and sometimes sent home. The job was a cakewalk compared to when she retired. She used to leave her class alone to make copies down the hall or use the bathroom. They had an hour for lunch so she would sometimes go home to let our dog out and eat lunch. |