Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents
Parenting leads to feral kids.
Anonymous wrote:As an employee of a school district, the number one complaint I hear from departing teachers is admin being out of touch. Another complaint I hear about is low pay. 95% of the departing teachers that I have met do not leave the profession. They just go to where they think the grass is greener.
Anonymous wrote:It would be interesting to see the breakdown by school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Syphax + feral kids
+1
APS poured resources into expanding Syphax, when those resources could've been used to directly impact teachers and kids. In other words, APS spent millions on things like a district-level virtual school and new chiefs of everything, instead of reducing class sizes or doing more to retain teachers and staff. I don't even remember if the virtual school will exist next year, but it was a fiasco that cost a great deal of money.
While the central office was mushrooming, demands on teachers and staff were increasing. So many kids were a mess emotionally and academically this year. Teachers were just told to work harder, be creative, and figure it out. APS is a well-resourced school district. Those resources just didn't get to teachers or to many students who needed them this past year. I'm guessing APS teachers who resigned either decided to go teach closer to home, as many live outside of Arlington, or to go into another field entirely.
No, it is the know-it-all parents who can’t stay in their lane.
Anonymous wrote:Parents
Anonymous wrote:Syphax + feral kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Syphax + feral kids
+1
APS poured resources into expanding Syphax, when those resources could've been used to directly impact teachers and kids. In other words, APS spent millions on things like a district-level virtual school and new chiefs of everything, instead of reducing class sizes or doing more to retain teachers and staff. I don't even remember if the virtual school will exist next year, but it was a fiasco that cost a great deal of money.
While the central office was mushrooming, demands on teachers and staff were increasing. So many kids were a mess emotionally and academically this year. Teachers were just told to work harder, be creative, and figure it out. APS is a well-resourced school district. Those resources just didn't get to teachers or to many students who needed them this past year. I'm guessing APS teachers who resigned either decided to go teach closer to home, as many live outside of Arlington, or to go into another field entirely.
Anonymous wrote:Syphax + feral kids