Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)
If you think it would be hard for schools to recruit and retain staff capable of teaching AP English, then you should like the idea of floating pay scales. Again, it isn’t a matter of how much society values the job. It’s a matter of how rare capable teachers are.
How does one identify a “capable teacher”? What if the AP European History teacher is phenomenal and the Biology teacher is subpar? Should the Bio teacher still get higher pay simply for falling under STEM? The AP Euro teacher would be the one who is actually much harder to replace, even if Social Studies is an “easier” position to fill. Perhaps, then, pay should be based on competency and effectiveness instead of STEM or SpEd designation. But how would we do that? Plenty of school systems have tried, but then you get to the high FARMS vs. wealthy schools issue. How do you determine the effectiveness of a teacher? Simply put, there is no easy way to designate higher pay based on either discipline or effectiveness. Counties simply have to commit to raising pay across the board and treating teaching like a respected profession.
Actually you can measure and pay effectively. You would review teachers student growth data over the course of their term in a teachers class w/multipliers and variable to account for Farms and FARMs %. Take into account extra hours logged for things like tutoring or extra curricular activities. There would be individual performance goals for mentoring, team teaching, instructional innovation, etc. There would be parental surveys about teacher performance. There would be WAAY more focus on school improvement plans and explaining data to parents. Adherence to IEPs and 504 plans and collaboration w/ colleagues to enforce. There would also be market forces applied.
I agree that teachers should be respected more, but I also agree the bar to entry and content knowledge requirements should be higher. There’s no reason that every K-3(and potentially K-5) teacher shouldn’t be a Phonics professional and certified Reading Specialist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)
If you think it would be hard for schools to recruit and retain staff capable of teaching AP English, then you should like the idea of floating pay scales. Again, it isn’t a matter of how much society values the job. It’s a matter of how rare capable teachers are.
How does one identify a “capable teacher”? What if the AP European History teacher is phenomenal and the Biology teacher is subpar? Should the Bio teacher still get higher pay simply for falling under STEM? The AP Euro teacher would be the one who is actually much harder to replace, even if Social Studies is an “easier” position to fill. Perhaps, then, pay should be based on competency and effectiveness instead of STEM or SpEd designation. But how would we do that? Plenty of school systems have tried, but then you get to the high FARMS vs. wealthy schools issue. How do you determine the effectiveness of a teacher? Simply put, there is no easy way to designate higher pay based on either discipline or effectiveness. Counties simply have to commit to raising pay across the board and treating teaching like a respected profession.
Actually you can measure and pay effectively. You would review teachers student growth data over the course of their term in a teachers class w/multipliers and variable to account for Farms and FARMs %. Take into account extra hours logged for things like tutoring or extra curricular activities. There would be individual performance goals for mentoring, team teaching, instructional innovation, etc. There would be parental surveys about teacher performance. There would be WAAY more focus on school improvement plans and explaining data to parents. Adherence to IEPs and 504 plans and collaboration w/ colleagues to enforce. There would also be market forces applied.
I agree that teachers should be respected more, but I also agree the bar to entry and content knowledge requirements should be higher. There’s no reason that every K-3(and potentially K-5) teacher shouldn’t be a Phonics professional and certified Reading Specialist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)
If you think it would be hard for schools to recruit and retain staff capable of teaching AP English, then you should like the idea of floating pay scales. Again, it isn’t a matter of how much society values the job. It’s a matter of how rare capable teachers are.
How does one identify a “capable teacher”? What if the AP European History teacher is phenomenal and the Biology teacher is subpar? Should the Bio teacher still get higher pay simply for falling under STEM? The AP Euro teacher would be the one who is actually much harder to replace, even if Social Studies is an “easier” position to fill. Perhaps, then, pay should be based on competency and effectiveness instead of STEM or SpEd designation. But how would we do that? Plenty of school systems have tried, but then you get to the high FARMS vs. wealthy schools issue. How do you determine the effectiveness of a teacher? Simply put, there is no easy way to designate higher pay based on either discipline or effectiveness. Counties simply have to commit to raising pay across the board and treating teaching like a respected profession.
Anonymous wrote:I think one thing people need to hear is that "bad" teachers don't hear the noise.
They don't hear the calls to quit or the relentless onslaught of vitriol that is slung at teachers. The "bad" teachers either don't know or don't care that they are "bad." If they know, they are too tired or too stuck to improve or they have life circumstances that are out of their control. But either way, they aren't seeking feedback and they are not hearing the noise.
Who hears the noise? The good teachers.
The good teachers know what's going on in their classrooms and communities. They are putting in time going above and beyond with their students. They are sacrificing their happiness, their back accounts, and their own families to tutor, coach, enrich, and otherwise go above and beyond. And when they hear the noise, the cacophony of disrespect reverberates through their core until they realize they have so many other options and that life is more than mere service to others.
So you can go ahead and make all the noise you want but it's bouncing off the teachers you want gone and sticking to those teachers who excel so much at their craft that it is part of their self concept. And it's mobilizing them.
Make the noise. You are breaking the profession.
But, let's be clear, that's what you want anyways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just wanna give a shout-out to the parents in this community who did this. (You know their names.. the re-opening group from hell.. the same old, but never ending BOE testimony parents, the “this is my chance to get famous on Fox News and get my name in the post” parents…) this is all on you. Not admin. Not MCPS. You can deny it all you want. We quit because of you. You said we should, so we did. Good luck. You’re all probably happy because now you can still be angry about something and write endless op-Eds for your CVs, or beg Fox 5 for more airtime. Look in the mirror.
What are you even talking about? You're blaming the teacher shortage on people who wanted schools open for their children? You realize we were one of the last to open right?
The blame goes to the attitude of the loud, screaming tantruming, entitled parents who demanded that patents get in there and be their pandemic babysitters. Yes. That is correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)
If you think it would be hard for schools to recruit and retain staff capable of teaching AP English, then you should like the idea of floating pay scales. Again, it isn’t a matter of how much society values the job. It’s a matter of how rare capable teachers are.
How does one identify a “capable teacher”? What if the AP European History teacher is phenomenal and the Biology teacher is subpar? Should the Bio teacher still get higher pay simply for falling under STEM? The AP Euro teacher would be the one who is actually much harder to replace, even if Social Studies is an “easier” position to fill. Perhaps, then, pay should be based on competency and effectiveness instead of STEM or SpEd designation. But how would we do that? Plenty of school systems have tried, but then you get to the high FARMS vs. wealthy schools issue. How do you determine the effectiveness of a teacher? Simply put, there is no easy way to designate higher pay based on either discipline or effectiveness. Counties simply have to commit to raising pay across the board and treating teaching like a respected profession.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
I know you’re wedded to your tired, stupid “teachers can’t get other well-paying jobs, so they’re forced to stay and do my bidding” line, but just FYI, it’s total BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just wanna give a shout-out to the parents in this community who did this. (You know their names.. the re-opening group from hell.. the same old, but never ending BOE testimony parents, the “this is my chance to get famous on Fox News and get my name in the post” parents…) this is all on you. Not admin. Not MCPS. You can deny it all you want. We quit because of you. You said we should, so we did. Good luck. You’re all probably happy because now you can still be angry about something and write endless op-Eds for your CVs, or beg Fox 5 for more airtime. Look in the mirror.
What are you even talking about? You're blaming the teacher shortage on people who wanted schools open for their children? You realize we were one of the last to open right?
Anonymous wrote:I think one thing people need to hear is that "bad" teachers don't hear the noise.
They don't hear the calls to quit or the relentless onslaught of vitriol that is slung at teachers. The "bad" teachers either don't know or don't care that they are "bad." If they know, they are too tired or too stuck to improve or they have life circumstances that are out of their control. But either way, they aren't seeking feedback and they are not hearing the noise.
Who hears the noise? The good teachers.
The good teachers know what's going on in their classrooms and communities. They are putting in time going above and beyond with their students. They are sacrificing their happiness, their back accounts, and their own families to tutor, coach, enrich, and otherwise go above and beyond. And when they hear the noise, the cacophony of disrespect reverberates through their core until they realize they have so many other options and that life is more than mere service to others.
So you can go ahead and make all the noise you want but it's bouncing off the teachers you want gone and sticking to those teachers who excel so much at their craft that it is part of their self concept. And it's mobilizing them.
Make the noise. You are breaking the profession.
But, let's be clear, that's what you want anyways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)
If you think it would be hard for schools to recruit and retain staff capable of teaching AP English, then you should like the idea of floating pay scales. Again, it isn’t a matter of how much society values the job. It’s a matter of how rare capable teachers are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What good are teachers that aren't willing to do their jobs? If MCEA keeps up with its behavior, MCPS will contract out more and more positions. In the short run that could be more expensive, but the district will be better off in the long run.
Are you joking? Teachers are doing their jobs! It's just that the jobs are getting harder and harder with less overall respect/job satisfaction.
For many people teaching is no longer a good work/life balance compared to other careers that offer more pay, work from home, respect, etc.
And you are somehow assuming the contracted positions are somehow better than MCPS employees. That may be true in some personal situations, but overall I highly doubt it.
Most teachers have to even work 180 days (not including sick days) and even get a pension after something like 20 years.
Closer to 30 to 35 years in order to retire with a pension equal to 40% of final salary. Maryland follows the age plus work years equal 90 formula. So, most retire around age 60 with at least 30 years of MD state service. Theoretically, the earliest they can retire would be hired at age 22 and then working until 56 with 33 years of continuous service.
Teachers work 192 days plus two required days in the middle of summer. In order to keep out certs we also have to take grad school courses, so lets say on average that is one or two weeks a summer at minimum. Then we basically get furloughed without pay for 5 to 6 weeks every summer.
Just curious what this means?
Not much- just that she doesn’t understand her retirement benefits. She’s probably a social studies or english teacher.
English teacher here. I understand my benefits and I understand the PP’s explanation of the 90 formula. I’m not sure you do?
Keep the nastiness coming. I’m one ridiculous parent away from quitting. I know I can walk into other professions with my skills and make twice what I make now. I stay because I like teaching, but this type of horrendous behavior is old and tiresome. I suppose the current teacher shortage isn’t enough for the PP to grasp that you can’t treat teachers like we’re inept anymore.
Sure… Education majors are obviously highly in-demand outside of education...
I’m able to manage 130 people a day. I can collect and analyze a tremendous amount of ever-changing data. I can create and deliver engaging presentations, and I can be prepared to do it again the following day. I can determine how to change delivery of content based on audience. I can communicate effectively in person and online. I can lead teams. I can access and interpret information quickly and accurately, then clearly communicate its meaning to others. I write well. I come prepared, but I’m able to shift course immediately. I’m also able to work 8 hours with few breaks.
I know plenty of teachers who have left the profession in the past 3-4 years. All have gone on to higher pay and less stress. Trust me when I say teachers aren’t thinking that they are trapped in the classroom.
No, they’re not trapped. But the vast majority wouldn’t be able to get the same pay and benefits in another field.
I see at least 3 different posters whose experience states otherwise.
I’m the PP. I know my worth and I’m able to articulate it. The nice thing about teaching is that it requires continuing education. I now have two advanced degrees and a ton of proven success managing data and people.
Don’t bother telling teachers that we won’t find a better deal elsewhere. We have former coworkers who have already done it. Instead of talking down to teachers, perhaps it’s time to respect us for what we provide. A good teacher is worth far more than society thinks, in pay but also in respect.
A masters in education isn’t a meaningful “advanced degree” outside of teaching. But go ahead and figure that out for yourself.
Don’t underestimate the long-term impact your unions had on the reputation of teachers by trying to keep schools closed.
You can’t even read because I said my degrees had nothing to do with teaching aka nothing to do with education. You’re just so sad. Pathetic.
Then go ahead and find out what life outside of MCPS is like. Again, no one is begging you to stay.
DP but it’s absolutely insane you keep doubling down in the middle of an actual teacher shortage. You sound like you have some real issues. No wonder teachers are quitting.
There’s not a shortage. There’s a market failure because teachers unions won’t allow pay scales to float based on supply and demand for particular positions.
I’m just a fellow mcps parent and I’m infuriated with parents like you. You just give MoCo parents the worst rep while representing the bottom of the barrel. None of us think this way but we are unfortunately repped by the Re-Opening Fox News parents… Just stop. You aren’t helping anything. Your phd doesn’t mean anything to us. We think you’re awful human beings.
Yes, how horrible it would be to pay SpEd and STEM teachers more…
Slippery slope. I teach AP English and spend 60-70 hours a week grading the frequent essays students write. I provide a ton of feedback to help advance students’ skills. If you introduce a tiered pay system, I’m going to be pretty upset if I am not fairly compensated.
“Fair compensation” isn’t based on how hard you work. It’s based on how hard it is to find someone willing and able to do the job.
Do you think a lot of people can just walk in and teach AP or IB English? You have to be a very strong communicator and a brilliant writer. You also have to be able to transfer those skills and that knowledge to others. The fact you think I’m that easily replaceable is a huge part of the problem.
I have a valuable skill set. If I make less simply because society values effective communication so poorly, then I will also leave this profession. There are plenty of companies desperate for effective communicators and they will pay me more than teaching does.
(Scoring essays vs. grading Algebra 1 worksheets?)