Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Current staffing shortages in FCPS
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2. A significant reduction in students entering pre-service education programs to become teachers (esp a completely barren landscape for special educators)
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3. Teacher attrition at an all-time high post-COVID (reasons are many - money, seeing/seeking telework flexibility of other professions, never ending mandates and work requirements, etc.)
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4. Fairfax County budgetary outlook looking like no raises for staff this year in an 8% inflationary environment (= pay cut)
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5. Adjacent counties passing FCPS in the area of teacher/administrator salaries, housing cost of living, and work/life balance
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6. ESSER grant money expiring, meaning many of the personnel perks that have kept schools operating (classroom monitors, extra support teachers, increased pay for Sped teachers, substitute raises, etc.) are gone, and will increase teacher workload even more to offset this
I'm interested in hearing perspectives from K-12 staff as well as the public on how this might look next year, and what solutions might be available. I am not interested in hearing about vouchers for private schools, as we all know that's a zero sum game that will benefit a tiny few and that privates have the same hiring issues as FCPS. I am also not interested in hearing about central office waste, because there really aren't that many extraneous staff there to "fill" schools unless cuts are made to things like AAP, the arts, etc.
This is exactly what the GOP wants, to start the public schools, and start screaming for vouchers and private school education, with private school being a dog whistle for Christian.
Don't want that to happen, vote blue.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. I think things will get worse before they get better. With that being said, there are so many things FCPS could be doing now to help retain teachers. I am concerned about the budget and not giving raises. If surrounding counties give raises but not FCPS, many will jump ship.
Anonymous wrote:1. Current staffing shortages in FCPS
+
2. A significant reduction in students entering pre-service education programs to become teachers (esp a completely barren landscape for special educators)
+
3. Teacher attrition at an all-time high post-COVID (reasons are many - money, seeing/seeking telework flexibility of other professions, never ending mandates and work requirements, etc.)
+
4. Fairfax County budgetary outlook looking like no raises for staff this year in an 8% inflationary environment (= pay cut)
+
5. Adjacent counties passing FCPS in the area of teacher/administrator salaries, housing cost of living, and work/life balance
+
6. ESSER grant money expiring, meaning many of the personnel perks that have kept schools operating (classroom monitors, extra support teachers, increased pay for Sped teachers, substitute raises, etc.) are gone, and will increase teacher workload even more to offset this
I'm interested in hearing perspectives from K-12 staff as well as the public on how this might look next year, and what solutions might be available. I am not interested in hearing about vouchers for private schools, as we all know that's a zero sum game that will benefit a tiny few and that privates have the same hiring issues as FCPS. I am also not interested in hearing about central office waste, because there really aren't that many extraneous staff there to "fill" schools unless cuts are made to things like AAP, the arts, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I wish the federal government would step in and allocate public education its due funding. Unfunded mandates (especially special education - which continues to be expanded through the legal system) need to be pulled back or funded.
This is what happens when you live in the military-industrial complex capital of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Raises are under consideration. ESSER money doesn’t expire for a couple of years yet.
Teacher pipeline and retention issues are nationwide.
"Status quo" raises have not kept a huge chunk of the workforce around, nor will they (likely) in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Raises are under consideration. ESSER money doesn’t expire for a couple of years yet.
Teacher pipeline and retention issues are nationwide.