Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And then you have the issue of widening gaps between "good schools" and "mediocre/bad schools."
From the article:
Stacy Ganz Kahn, president of the Winston Churchill High School PTSA, says special education programs are dealing with the brunt of the teacher shortage in MCPS. Offering bonuses in high-need areas and pathways to teacher certification for paraprofessionals could help remedy the situation, she said.
Still, Ganz Kahn says the Potomac school is pretty well-staffed, unlike other schools in the county, because people want to teach there.
I read that quote in the article and thought it was in poor taste. And then just now I looked at the available jobs on the MCPS Careers site, and it turns out it's not true at all. Churchill actually has 6 open teacher positions posted, more than any other HS!
6: Churchill
5: Whitman
4: Blair, Blake, Einstein, Springbrook
3: Gaithersburg, Magruder, Richard Montgomery, Rockville, Sherwood
2: BCC, Kennedy, Northwood, Paint Branch, Watkins Mill
1: Damascus, Northwest, Walter Johnson
0: Clarksburg, Poolesville, Quince Orchard, Seneca Valley, Wheaton, Wootton
Couple potential takeaways:
Working in W schools might be much less attractive than DCUM wants to believe. Possibly because teachers don’t want to deal with DCUM parents.
Working in non-W schools might be much more attractive than DCUM wants to believe. Possibly because there’s better work life balance there. Or because working with those students is more rewarding to teachers who see their career as a vocation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The bureaucracy of special education is so confusing that I don’t know who is dropping the ball? Are school principals supposed to be hiring the Special Education Teachers or is Central Office supposed to fill the vacancies to fill the required staffing hours based on IEPs at a school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is not a good company to work for. I'm not talking about principals or teachers -- I'm talking about the MCPS machine.
In addition, they haven't adjusted at all to the change in circumstances the entire country finds itself in regarding teachers. They continue acting like they can afford to be choosy when they should be giving anyone who wants to be a teacher and passes a background check a chance. Of course a qualified teacher and a seasoned teacher would be better, but we simply don't have enough of them. And yet MCPS refuses to budge while other systems all around us are hiring.
The benefits are amazing though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And then you have the issue of widening gaps between "good schools" and "mediocre/bad schools."
From the article:
Stacy Ganz Kahn, president of the Winston Churchill High School PTSA, says special education programs are dealing with the brunt of the teacher shortage in MCPS. Offering bonuses in high-need areas and pathways to teacher certification for paraprofessionals could help remedy the situation, she said.
Still, Ganz Kahn says the Potomac school is pretty well-staffed, unlike other schools in the county, because people want to teach there.
I read that quote in the article and thought it was in poor taste. And then just now I looked at the available jobs on the MCPS Careers site, and it turns out it's not true at all. Churchill actually has 6 open teacher positions posted, more than any other HS!
6: Churchill
5: Whitman
4: Blair, Blake, Einstein, Springbrook
3: Gaithersburg, Magruder, Richard Montgomery, Rockville, Sherwood
2: BCC, Kennedy, Northwood, Paint Branch, Watkins Mill
1: Damascus, Northwest, Walter Johnson
0: Clarksburg, Poolesville, Quince Orchard, Seneca Valley, Wheaton, Wootton
Anonymous wrote:MCPS is not a good company to work for. I'm not talking about principals or teachers -- I'm talking about the MCPS machine.
In addition, they haven't adjusted at all to the change in circumstances the entire country finds itself in regarding teachers. They continue acting like they can afford to be choosy when they should be giving anyone who wants to be a teacher and passes a background check a chance. Of course a qualified teacher and a seasoned teacher would be better, but we simply don't have enough of them. And yet MCPS refuses to budge while other systems all around us are hiring.
Anonymous wrote:It's not a lack of funding, it's a lack of qualified/interested applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And then you have the issue of widening gaps between "good schools" and "mediocre/bad schools."
From the article:
Stacy Ganz Kahn, president of the Winston Churchill High School PTSA, says special education programs are dealing with the brunt of the teacher shortage in MCPS. Offering bonuses in high-need areas and pathways to teacher certification for paraprofessionals could help remedy the situation, she said.
Still, Ganz Kahn says the Potomac school is pretty well-staffed, unlike other schools in the county, because people want to teach there.
I read that quote in the article and thought it was in poor taste. And then just now I looked at the available jobs on the MCPS Careers site, and it turns out it's not true at all. Churchill actually has 6 open teacher positions posted, more than any other HS!
6: Churchill
5: Whitman
4: Blair, Blake, Einstein, Springbrook
3: Gaithersburg, Magruder, Richard Montgomery, Rockville, Sherwood
2: BCC, Kennedy, Northwood, Paint Branch, Watkins Mill
1: Damascus, Northwest, Walter Johnson
0: Clarksburg, Poolesville, Quince Orchard, Seneca Valley, Wheaton, Wootton
Anonymous wrote:Although there is a national teacher shortage, you wouldn't know it at my school. Seems like any other year.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS is not a good company to work for. I'm not talking about principals or teachers -- I'm talking about the MCPS machine.
In addition, they haven't adjusted at all to the change in circumstances the entire country finds itself in regarding teachers. They continue acting like they can afford to be choosy when they should be giving anyone who wants to be a teacher and passes a background check a chance. Of course a qualified teacher and a seasoned teacher would be better, but we simply don't have enough of them. And yet MCPS refuses to budge while other systems all around us are hiring.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS is not a good company to work for. I'm not talking about principals or teachers -- I'm talking about the MCPS machine.
In addition, they haven't adjusted at all to the change in circumstances the entire country finds itself in regarding teachers. They continue acting like they can afford to be choosy when they should be giving anyone who wants to be a teacher and passes a background check a chance. Of course a qualified teacher and a seasoned teacher would be better, but we simply don't have enough of them. And yet MCPS refuses to budge while other systems all around us are hiring.
Anonymous wrote:And then you have the issue of widening gaps between "good schools" and "mediocre/bad schools."
From the article:
Stacy Ganz Kahn, president of the Winston Churchill High School PTSA, says special education programs are dealing with the brunt of the teacher shortage in MCPS. Offering bonuses in high-need areas and pathways to teacher certification for paraprofessionals could help remedy the situation, she said.
Still, Ganz Kahn says the Potomac school is pretty well-staffed, unlike other schools in the county, because people want to teach there.