Anonymous wrote:It is so misleading to say we are fully staffed. At our school, we are down 4 teachers. They combined classes so class size is just south of 30 kids and there is a patchwork of coverage. We are talking 4-5 people taking shifts to cover the day. It’s a disaster. I don’t know if Reid understands how bad it is in schools or if she just doesn’t care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is fully staffed!
Ours too...four teacher trainees
How do you know this?
I'm not the PP but our school has a few and they are listed are on the school website-this is how SPED is filling many vacancies.
Oh, good. What could *possibly* go wrong?![]()
Anonymous wrote:It makes me sad to read these stories about how mismanaged FCPS is now. It did not used to be like that when I was a student.
Would you increase the budget and hope that improves working conditions or just throw in the towel and give people vouchers?
I personally don’t have a lot of confidence in FCPS any longer but am willing to defer to those with current roles in the system - up to a point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are not that many vacancies. My (highly regarded) ES has 0. And the MS and HS we are zoned for have 2-3 each, mostly in autism SPED. So, not relevant for us.
If this comment doesn’t sum up one segment of our county (and country) perfectly, I don’t know what does.
PP states as fact that there are NOT that many vacancies.
And how does she “know” this fact?
Because there are no vacancies in her little utopia, therefore, vacancies do not exist.
Priceless.
Well, Miss Utopia, my neighborhood elementary school is short 2 K teachers, 1 2nd grade teacher, 1 3rd grade teacher, and 4 special ed teachers. So stick that in your pipe and smoke it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers here are also paid disproportionately low compared to other teachers in high COL areas. My sister makes 6 figures in a seattle suburb with 8 years of experience. If I were a brand new baby teacher, I'd be headed elsewhere.
Even areas that are not high COL. I have 30 years with FCPS. A friend teaches an ES grade outside of Pittsburgh and is making over $115k.
The average teacher pay in the Pittsburgh metro area is 56k. Not sure how your friend is managing this salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is fully staffed!
Ours too...four teacher trainees
How do you know this?
I'm not the PP but our school has a few and they are listed are on the school website-this is how SPED is filling many vacancies.
it isn’t new.Anonymous wrote:It makes me sad to read these stories about how mismanaged FCPS is now. It did not used to be like that when I was a student.
Would you increase the budget and hope that improves working conditions or just throw in the towel and give people vouchers?
I personally don’t have a lot of confidence in FCPS any longer but am willing to defer to those with current roles in the system - up to a point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our school, when a teacher left right before school started, they just had two classes of 34/35 instead of three. They did not add a class when more kids came during the year. It was a disaster.
This can also be a factor of the principal not wanting to shift teachers from other grades.
I taught first with 30+ when the sixth grades were 20. Principal said the sixth grade teachers could not teach first. Sadly, it was likely true.
6th grade teachers are PK-6 certified. They could teach it but they probably don’t want to.
Now I think they have to choose in college between pK-2 or 4-6 (8?). I am old so PK-6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our school, when a teacher left right before school started, they just had two classes of 34/35 instead of three. They did not add a class when more kids came during the year. It was a disaster.
This can also be a factor of the principal not wanting to shift teachers from other grades.
I taught first with 30+ when the sixth grades were 20. Principal said the sixth grade teachers could not teach first. Sadly, it was likely true.
6th grade teachers are PK-6 certified. They could teach it but they probably don’t want to.
Now I think they have to choose in college between pK-2 or 4-6 (8?). I am old so PK-6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our school, when a teacher left right before school started, they just had two classes of 34/35 instead of three. They did not add a class when more kids came during the year. It was a disaster.
This can also be a factor of the principal not wanting to shift teachers from other grades.
I taught first with 30+ when the sixth grades were 20. Principal said the sixth grade teachers could not teach first. Sadly, it was likely true.
6th grade teachers are PK-6 certified. They could teach it but they probably don’t want to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At our school, when a teacher left right before school started, they just had two classes of 34/35 instead of three. They did not add a class when more kids came during the year. It was a disaster.
This can also be a factor of the principal not wanting to shift teachers from other grades.
I taught first with 30+ when the sixth grades were 20. Principal said the sixth grade teachers could not teach first. Sadly, it was likely true.
6th grade teachers are PK-6 certified. They could teach it but they probably don’t want to.
Anonymous wrote:At our school, when a teacher left right before school started, they just had two classes of 34/35 instead of three. They did not add a class when more kids came during the year. It was a disaster.