Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.
Sure, but if you can cut out the agency, the teacher can pocket much more of those higher fees.
It will be harder to find a match, but it’s worth a shot for a bit given the difference in total pay.
People using agencies won’t pay less because of agency fees. I have worked for HNW families as a nanny before. The parents would leave cash for me each week to take the kids to lunch, see a movie, etc. I remember buying myself a box of overpriced candy at a movie I took took the kids to. It was easier to use the cash the parents gave me than to pay separately. I told the dad this and handed him the $7 or whatever I owed them. He laughed and waved it away. I thought $7 was a crazy amount to spend on a box of candy but I splurged. I later found out when he retired a few years later, that his retirement package was $200 million.
Do you think people who have been in public and are now scrambling for a private option (but haven’t gone fully private, possibly for cost reasons) given the cluster that is public DL have the unlimited funds you describe?
Anonymous wrote:I tutor in the late afternoons early evenings for young readers. I advertised word of mouth and Facebook. I will teach all day this fall and continue to tutor after. Hope to pay off my mortgage sooner than planned. Fwiw, after taxes, I'll have made about 8k this summer and plan on making an additional 20k this school year on top of my salary.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, just post on NextDoor in the Tenleytown, Chevychase, AUPark, Spring Valley and surrounding neighborhoods. You will have a ton of parents in a bidding war for you. There is also a Facebook group called Washington DC Area Homeschool/Playgroup Pods. Post there and you will also receive a high volume of responses
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.
Sure, but if you can cut out the agency, the teacher can pocket much more of those higher fees.
It will be harder to find a match, but it’s worth a shot for a bit given the difference in total pay.
Anonymous wrote:It’s her cowardice that keeps schools closed and exacerbates inequality
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.
Sure, but if you can cut out the agency, the teacher can pocket much more of those higher fees.
It will be harder to find a match, but it’s worth a shot for a bit given the difference in total pay.
People using agencies won’t pay less because of agency fees. I have worked for HNW families as a nanny before. The parents would leave cash for me each week to take the kids to lunch, see a movie, etc. I remember buying myself a box of overpriced candy at a movie I took took the kids to. It was easier to use the cash the parents gave me than to pay separately. I told the dad this and handed him the $7 or whatever I owed them. He laughed and waved it away. I thought $7 was a crazy amount to spend on a box of candy but I splurged. I later found out when he retired a few years later, that his retirement package was $200 million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.
Sure, but if you can cut out the agency, the teacher can pocket much more of those higher fees.
It will be harder to find a match, but it’s worth a shot for a bit given the difference in total pay.
People using agencies won’t pay less because of agency fees. I have worked for HNW families as a nanny before. The parents would leave cash for me each week to take the kids to lunch, see a movie, etc. I remember buying myself a box of overpriced candy at a movie I took took the kids to. It was easier to use the cash the parents gave me than to pay separately. I told the dad this and handed him the $7 or whatever I owed them. He laughed and waved it away. I thought $7 was a crazy amount to spend on a box of candy but I splurged. I later found out when he retired a few years later, that his retirement package was $200 million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.
Sure, but if you can cut out the agency, the teacher can pocket much more of those higher fees.
It will be harder to find a match, but it’s worth a shot for a bit given the difference in total pay.
Anonymous wrote:Go to a high-end agency. Parents who are willing to pay high fees to the agency are generally willing to pay higher wages.