Anonymous wrote:Well, some of you hate teachers soooo much, keep your brats home and YOU put in the effort to raise and educate your own kids. See how you like THAT!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
It would have been nice if they did some work-at-home for MCPS teachers. Most of the real world puts in extra hours.
Do you really think teachers only work 6 hour days? Many are there well before school starts and there well after the last bell rings. Their "breaks" are often filled with team meetings, administrative meetings, IEP meetings. So they do put many many hours after they clock out...planning and grading, then planning some more. All teachers I know go above and beyond their pay scale for the good of the students.
I don't help teachers, I help my children. So far (in 9 years)I did not meet any teacher who goes beyond her pay scale for the good of my children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
It would have been nice if they did some work-at-home for MCPS teachers. Most of the real world puts in extra hours.
Do you really think teachers only work 6 hour days? Many are there well before school starts and there well after the last bell rings. Their "breaks" are often filled with team meetings, administrative meetings, IEP meetings. So they do put many many hours after they clock out...planning and grading, then planning some more. All teachers I know go above and beyond their pay scale for the good of the students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
My father was in construction - made himself a millionaire in that field. But . . . he always had time for family. When I became a teacher, he was astonished at the work I did just to keep up. And he always told me to make time for myself. When I got married and had kids of my own, he again warned me that work could wait.
I don't know what your problem is, but you need to chill out and learn how to be more of a human being and less of a bitch.
I agree with your final statement, that poster was a class A bitch-er-roo. But your story is nonsense. Your dad was the boss, as teacher you're not the boss, and you don't have the same luxuries.
Yes, I do. Boundaries are boundaries. I do my job; I do it well. If I feel the need to work extra, I will, and in most cases, I am working more than my required hours b/c that's the nature of the job. But if parents are demanding, and it's MY time with family, I won't jump like a dog when someone whistles.
boundaries, people
Please understand that.
Good, dedicated teachers do more than enough from August through June.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
It would have been nice if they did some work-at-home for MCPS teachers. Most of the real world puts in extra hours.
Do you really think teachers only work 6 hour days? Many are there well before school starts and there well after the last bell rings. Their "breaks" are often filled with team meetings, administrative meetings, IEP meetings. So they do put many many hours after they clock out...planning and grading, then planning some more. All teachers I know go above and beyond their pay scale for the good of the students.
I don't help teachers, I help my children. So far (in 9 years)I did not meet any teacher who goes beyond her pay scale for the good of my children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
It would have been nice if they did some work-at-home for MCPS teachers. Most of the real world puts in extra hours.
Do you really think teachers only work 6 hour days? Many are there well before school starts and there well after the last bell rings. Their "breaks" are often filled with team meetings, administrative meetings, IEP meetings. So they do put many many hours after they clock out...planning and grading, then planning some more. All teachers I know go above and beyond their pay scale for the good of the students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
My father was in construction - made himself a millionaire in that field. But . . . he always had time for family. When I became a teacher, he was astonished at the work I did just to keep up. And he always told me to make time for myself. When I got married and had kids of my own, he again warned me that work could wait.
I don't know what your problem is, but you need to chill out and learn how to be more of a human being and less of a bitch.
I agree with your final statement, that poster was a class A bitch-er-roo. But your story is nonsense. Your dad was the boss, as teacher you're not the boss, and you don't have the same luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
My father was in construction - made himself a millionaire in that field. But . . . he always had time for family. When I became a teacher, he was astonished at the work I did just to keep up. And he always told me to make time for myself. When I got married and had kids of my own, he again warned me that work could wait.
I don't know what your problem is, but you need to chill out and learn how to be more of a human being and less of a bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, all you teachers are lazy as fuck. You have been off a week and consider yourself off the clock or it is a slippery slope to answer a few emails written by parents? My husband works construction and takes emails, calls, and texts as needed to help the jobs. Sometimes as early as 5am and as late as 11pm. I am a physician's assistant and feel the same way. I check my emails often for patients. Most people in the real world don't work 6hr days and get off weekends, 10+ holidays, winter break, spring break, summers and snow days. How shameful of any of you who can't put in any effort to email a parent back so you can enjoy your free paid days off.