Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If teachers in private, religious, and or boarding schools are so important why are they paid low and treated like min wage workers. Even the greedy scumbag fundraisers make more than teachers. I recommend teachers leave until respect comes back.
I am a private school teacher. I make less than I did when I worked in the public system, but I am treated FAR better. I was belittled and demeaned in public. I am supported and appreciated in my current private school.
I work hard, and now I feel like that hard work is valued. I’ll ride out the rest of my career here, and I’ll do it happily.
Anonymous wrote:If teachers in private, religious, and or boarding schools are so important why are they paid low and treated like min wage workers. Even the greedy scumbag fundraisers make more than teachers. I recommend teachers leave until respect comes back.
Anonymous wrote:If teachers in private, religious, and or boarding schools are so important why are they paid low and treated like min wage workers. Even the greedy scumbag fundraisers make more than teachers. I recommend teachers leave until respect comes back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 14 years of private schools - I have only had one of my child's teachers leave in the middle of the year. It was very unprofessional.
Others in our schools - but not our teachers:
Of course, there are pregnancy/birth related leave of absences that occur mid year.
I know of approximately three teachers who left (forever) midyear due to health and two others who had a health event midyear but were able to return the following year.
Why is that unprofessional? They are an at will employee who is free to quit whenever they please, just as the school can fire them at a moment’s notice.
Anonymous wrote:In 14 years of private schools - I have only had one of my child's teachers leave in the middle of the year. It was very unprofessional.
Others in our schools - but not our teachers:
Of course, there are pregnancy/birth related leave of absences that occur mid year.
I know of approximately three teachers who left (forever) midyear due to health and two others who had a health event midyear but were able to return the following year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One was fired right before school started. One fired around winter. 2 left because they were relocating. 1 left because of some conflict with admin.
So 5 that I know of.
That seems high. Is this the Bullis lower school turnover that others on this post have commented on?
Only one of those were lower school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One was fired right before school started. One fired around winter. 2 left because they were relocating. 1 left because of some conflict with admin.
So 5 that I know of.
That seems high. Is this the Bullis lower school turnover that others on this post have commented on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One was fired right before school started. One fired around winter. 2 left because they were relocating. 1 left because of some conflict with admin.
So 5 that I know of.
That seems high. Is this the Bullis lower school turnover that others on this post have commented on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is going to start being a new normal. Teachers (yes even private school teachers) are overworked and underpaid. Little support from admin and picked apart from enough parents that it’s not worth it to stay.
Start normalizing it. Your children will be fine.
There’s a problem with the “start normalizing it” part.
People generally leave bad bosses and stay for good ones. We should be telling administrators to shape up.
Part of running a school is supporting your teachers, creating an environment where they have resources, feel safe and have a voice, one where they can continue to grow professionally. This puts teachers in the best position to serve the students.
But in certain schools, teachers have no voice, they are left to defend themselves against unfair accusations from people who have not taught before or have a hidden agenda (like a higher grade).
Yes, it is too much. No, it is not normal and school leaders can absolutely do more, but who is going to make them do that?
You are leaving out an entire group of people who regularly make teachers’ lives miserable: parents. What do you propose to do about that?
- No, not an admin