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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Retire/Rehire in Maryland for teachers?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Over my 20 years with MCPS, I’ve also heard many people mention the ability to do it, but never met anyone who actually has done it. It’s always “You know, you CAN…” and never “I did it.” or “My sister did it.”. This makes me suspect that it is either very difficult to accomplish or people realize during that 45 days that they don’t want to go back.[/quote] I think it is very rare and as someone else mentioned, the teacher needs to be in an area of high need where a replacement can't be found. There was a teacher at the Blair Magnet who retired last year but came back last fall. The classes he taught were unique, and as I understand it, MCPS truly wasn't able to find a replacement. I've heard that they now have a replacement, so he won't be returning this fall. [/quote] My understanding was he came back as a long term sub. He was thrilled to not have all the extra work of a full teacher.[/quote] What's the difference? What don't LTS's do that permanent teachers do?[/quote] Typically in a high functioning school, they'd be getting lessons from someone else or the teacher that left them behind. Depending on the timeframe, they may not have to do final grades. They don't attend all staff meetings. [/quote] I left Mcps in 2018. I switched careers for a bit, and now I'm trying to get back into another system. I'm long-term subbing in my content area and don't need anyone's plans. They are only required to give you about a week's worth of lessons if they're going on leave. It's not fair to expect a teacher to do the work on his or her own time so it's smart, if possible, to hire someone who was in that content area. Unfortunately, this is not always the case, as we had a wonderful sub who had to stay in a Spanish position for an entire term. And she does not know Spanish. But you can retire and be re-hired. My friend retired as an administrator from Montgomery County and is now teaching in Frederick County.[/quote]
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