Most parents and I suspect tadmins can agree who the outstanding teachers are and they deserve way more pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Agree, we were supposed to have the best teacher and if she's the best, I am missing something. I don't want popular, I want someone who understands my child and can teach well.
Stay in your lane. Do what you need to do at home to support education and all teachers will look like rock stars.
I am not trying to make a marginal teacher look like a rock star. That is their job, not mine. Mine is to make sure my child is getting a good education and treated decently. Ours will not work with us on what she is doing in the classroom when we asked as we do heavily supplement at home. She even told us to stop supplementing. She barely spends time with our child or she'd know his reading and math skills were much higher than she gives him credit for. Except for socialization, school the past few years has been a joke. I'd love just once for a teacher who teachers and has regular group communication with parents to let them know what's going on.
Yup! THAT'S your job. Not regulating teacher pay.
I don't care what my child's teacher makes, in less she were grossly underpaid compared to other teachers and she was planning to leave (but we'd have no issue with her leaving). Its not my job to homeschool my child for what they are not getting in school. Its not my job to teach things that should be taught in class. Its my job to reinforce what the teacher does but I have no idea what the teacher does as she's completely unresponsive. Should we financially reward a teacher who does the bare minimum? Should we financially reward a teacher who skips out on her parent/teacher conferences? It would be nice if bonus pay was tied to teacher performance as seen by parents as teachers might put more effort working together as a team.
Whoa! to the bolded. As seen by parents????Your sense of entitlement is ridiculous. Leave teacher management to the schools.
2ndly, I think you're in the minority. Most teachers ARE responsive and seek to build that community with parents.
Can't help but wonder if you're "THAT" parent the teachers avoid as much as possible. It is very possible she is VERY responsive to other parents. The ones who are not overbearing.
And just as it's not your job to homeschool, it's not your job to worry about teacher pay. Also, an earned salary is NOT "financially rewarding" someone. She earns her pay like every other professional. You're doing her no favors by having less than 1% of your tax dollars go towards her salary. A salary from which she also pays taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Most parents and I suspect tadmins can agree who the outstanding teachers are and they deserve way more pay. We also need to find a way to provide better remediation for struggling teachers and if the remediation fails there needs to be a way to encourage them exit door left.
I have proposed on DCUM before a multimodal assessment from a variety of levels. You factor in subjective and objective and you get feedback from peers, subordinates (e.g. aides who come into the classroom where applicable), parents and the administrator. Test scores would be a small part of the assessment, maybe 5% of what goes into the equation. Anytime this discussion comes up a raise to all teachers when there are some teachers who clearly deserve to go up 5 steps and some who don't belong in the field. How do we retain the talented teachers and remediate and if needed let go the problematic ones?
To be clear, I am not looking to justify my suggestion for assessment. I have already learned a slew of people find it outrageous. I am looking from solutions from those who are in the system. I would gladly pay more taxes if we could keep and reward talented teachers and have more in place to ensure poor teachers get the help they need so it isn't the same story year after year.
What do you propose?
Are you Crazy Mom who's submitted an FOIA to find out the salary of your child's teacher?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Do teachers that coach sports get paid for the coaching? I thought they did so I don't understand why team leads and curriculum leads don't.
There are supplemental contracts for coaching positions. Curriculum and team leads do a lot of extra work for no extra pay and I find people avoid those positions.
In the district where I work middle and high school coaches get stipends. In elementary, there are five stipended team leader positions ($1000/year) but principals expect non-stipended teachers to serve as team leaders as well (special ed, ESOL, specialists etc). If you refuse you're seen as "not doing what's in the best interest of kids".
Anonymous wrote: Most parents and I suspect tadmins can agree who the outstanding teachers are and they deserve way more pay. We also need to find a way to provide better remediation for struggling teachers and if the remediation fails there needs to be a way to encourage them exit door left.
I have proposed on DCUM before a multimodal assessment from a variety of levels. You factor in subjective and objective and you get feedback from peers, subordinates (e.g. aides who come into the classroom where applicable), parents and the administrator. Test scores would be a small part of the assessment, maybe 5% of what goes into the equation. Anytime this discussion comes up a raise to all teachers when there are some teachers who clearly deserve to go up 5 steps and some who don't belong in the field. How do we retain the talented teachers and remediate and if needed let go the problematic ones?
To be clear, I am not looking to justify my suggestion for assessment. I have already learned a slew of people find it outrageous. I am looking from solutions from those who are in the system. I would gladly pay more taxes if we could keep and reward talented teachers and have more in place to ensure poor teachers get the help they need so it isn't the same story year after year.
What do you propose?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Do teachers that coach sports get paid for the coaching? I thought they did so I don't understand why team leads and curriculum leads don't.
There are supplemental contracts for coaching positions. Curriculum and team leads do a lot of extra work for no extra pay and I find people avoid those positions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Agree, we were supposed to have the best teacher and if she's the best, I am missing something. I don't want popular, I want someone who understands my child and can teach well.
Stay in your lane. Do what you need to do at home to support education and all teachers will look like rock stars.
I am not trying to make a marginal teacher look like a rock star. That is their job, not mine. Mine is to make sure my child is getting a good education and treated decently. Ours will not work with us on what she is doing in the classroom when we asked as we do heavily supplement at home. She even told us to stop supplementing. She barely spends time with our child or she'd know his reading and math skills were much higher than she gives him credit for. Except for socialization, school the past few years has been a joke. I'd love just once for a teacher who teachers and has regular group communication with parents to let them know what's going on.
Yup! THAT'S your job. Not regulating teacher pay.
I don't care what my child's teacher makes, in less she were grossly underpaid compared to other teachers and she was planning to leave (but we'd have no issue with her leaving). Its not my job to homeschool my child for what they are not getting in school. Its not my job to teach things that should be taught in class. Its my job to reinforce what the teacher does but I have no idea what the teacher does as she's completely unresponsive. Should we financially reward a teacher who does the bare minimum? Should we financially reward a teacher who skips out on her parent/teacher conferences? It would be nice if bonus pay was tied to teacher performance as seen by parents as teachers might put more effort working together as a team.
Your sense of entitlement is ridiculous. Leave teacher management to the schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Agree, we were supposed to have the best teacher and if she's the best, I am missing something. I don't want popular, I want someone who understands my child and can teach well.
Stay in your lane. Do what you need to do at home to support education and all teachers will look like rock stars.
I am not trying to make a marginal teacher look like a rock star. That is their job, not mine. Mine is to make sure my child is getting a good education and treated decently. Ours will not work with us on what she is doing in the classroom when we asked as we do heavily supplement at home. She even told us to stop supplementing. She barely spends time with our child or she'd know his reading and math skills were much higher than she gives him credit for. Except for socialization, school the past few years has been a joke. I'd love just once for a teacher who teachers and has regular group communication with parents to let them know what's going on.
Yup! THAT'S your job. Not regulating teacher pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm, I left the public school system for private. Throwing more money at me wouldn't have kept me there. I would have liked more autonomy, less overall acceptance of mediocrity, and less infighting among my colleagues. Much happier (but not richer) now.
Exactly! DC teachers are the highest paid in the DMV. Every DC teacher will tell you they make LOTS of money-relative to the profession. But teachers leave every that system every single day. The money is not what keeps them, as they don't go into the profession for that in the first place.
It's the politics, student behavior, lack of autonomy, and adult shenanigans--not money--that makes them leave. All of which is the result of poor leadership. Frankly, I think more attention needs to be paid to who's being put in these positions of leadership. Good leaders can hire, retain, groom and grow good teachers--AND other leaders.
Anonymous wrote: Most parents and I suspect tadmins can agree who the outstanding teachers are and they deserve way more pay. We also need to find a way to provide better remediation for struggling teachers and if the remediation fails there needs to be a way to encourage them exit door left.
I have proposed on DCUM before a multimodal assessment from a variety of levels. You factor in subjective and objective and you get feedback from peers, subordinates (e.g. aides who come into the classroom where applicable), parents and the administrator. Test scores would be a small part of the assessment, maybe 5% of what goes into the equation. Anytime this discussion comes up a raise to all teachers when there are some teachers who clearly deserve to go up 5 steps and some who don't belong in the field. How do we retain the talented teachers and remediate and if needed let go the problematic ones?
To be clear, I am not looking to justify my suggestion for assessment. I have already learned a slew of people find it outrageous. I am looking from solutions from those who are in the system. I would gladly pay more taxes if we could keep and reward talented teachers and have more in place to ensure poor teachers get the help they need so it isn't the same story year after year.
What do you propose?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife and I teach in elementary schools. Some of the most popular teachers are not necessarily the best in our eyes, so we would have to examine the suggestion of input from peers and parents.
Pay a stipend to those who take on extra duties such as team lead or curriculum lead positions.
Do teachers that coach sports get paid for the coaching? I thought they did so I don't understand why team leads and curriculum leads don't.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm, I left the public school system for private. Throwing more money at me wouldn't have kept me there. I would have liked more autonomy, less overall acceptance of mediocrity, and less infighting among my colleagues. Much happier (but not richer) now.