Anonymous wrote:Many many individual schools are not going to have staffing issues. Those schools should be allowed to proceed with hybrid. Punishing an entire county full of kids because of a few schools is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A beloved 6th grade teacher at the school my child attended last year put in her retirement papers a year early this month. An FCPS ES. They are not rehiring for her position...all the kids are getting broken out into all the other teachers’ classes.
At the same school, another teacher just resigned because she would have to return in the first cohort and it was too risky for her family.
She quit a year into the school year? How unprofessional.
Just so I understand, DCUM posters have been clamoring for teachers to retire or take LOA if they didn't feel safe returning to school; one of those teachers actually did that and you're calling it unprofessional?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If residential colleges are opening (most in VA are) I don’t see how K-12 stays closed.
Could it be that colleges are businesses that need to stay open for economic reasons? K-12 it's not a business.
Its even more important than a regular business! Its an essential service! It should be LESS likely to close than a business, not more likely!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Legitimately curious where people get their information who claim there is a teacher shortage in FCPS.
I am sure there are shortages in specialized subject areas, especially special ed, but not buying it re general ed classroom teachers.
I understand there are no substitutes since their daily pay is like $100 pre-tax and our school sent an email to parents begging them to get certified, put names on sublist. Just havent seen any sign the county has widespread difficulty filling normal classroom positions.
Teacher at FCPS. There are many schools who had long term subs all year in gen ed classrooms. There is a teacher shortage. I also think once schools decide on a plan there will be a lot of teachers resigning if they are scared to go back or if there are child care issues. We were hiring at my school and the amount of resumed coming in the past few years have gone down drastically.
I think you are overestimating the amount of teachers who can afford to forgo their pay. There are not that many teaching out of the goodness of their hearts - most actually need the salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Not true for elementary education. That is its own major and has been.
Correct. All teachers I know in ES majored in Elementary Education.
Not all states allow this. It was either a minor or added endorsement when I was in college
Well VA does and has since forever, and this is the VA Schools forum sooooo......
Most teachers I know did not go to college in Virginia sooooo...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Not true for elementary education. That is its own major and has been.
Correct. All teachers I know in ES majored in Elementary Education.
Not all states allow this. It was either a minor or added endorsement when I was in college
Well VA does and has since forever, and this is the VA Schools forum sooooo......
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Not true for elementary education. That is its own major and has been.
Correct. All teachers I know in ES majored in Elementary Education.
Not all states allow this. It was either a minor or added endorsement when I was in college
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Not true for elementary education. That is its own major and has been.
Correct. All teachers I know in ES majored in Elementary Education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Not true for elementary education. That is its own major and has been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone think the new CDC guidance is a big deal? Its now 15 minutes cumulative over 24 hours, instead of 15 minutes consecutive. Its not that different.
Your post is telling. Thankfully you’re not in charge of calling the shots, only those in your basement.
If they're in school all day (or even a half day), they're in school all day. Whether the 15 minutes of exposure is consecutive or not, this doesn't apply to schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone think the new CDC guidance is a big deal? Its now 15 minutes cumulative over 24 hours, instead of 15 minutes consecutive. Its not that different.
Your post is telling. Thankfully you’re not in charge of calling the shots, only those in your basement.
Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone think the new CDC guidance is a big deal? Its now 15 minutes cumulative over 24 hours, instead of 15 minutes consecutive. Its not that different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.
Teachers don't typically major in education--they major in a subject (e.g., literature, biology, math, history) and then get their licenses through an education program. This is required in VA. Only in the past couple years have undergraduate education programs even been allowed (the state did this to address the teacher shortage which is definitely real). But in VA you don't major in education, you major in whatever your academic subject is and enroll in an education licensure program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn’t a shortage. There are enough certified teachers to work but they are choosing not to. Of course, the school districts don’t care about why teachers leave.
This is false. Less people are majoring in education. There is data to support it.