Anonymous wrote:Have other districts released their numbers? I know APS has at least 800 requests
Again, this is APS HR's own fault. They didn't communicate to teachers that the criteria for 2021 was different from the fall criteria. As an example, I applied and was approved for the fall because I have a high-risk family member in my home which qualified under the CARES CDC criteria. I simply reapplied as APS directed for the spring, and there was a checkbox for this criteria.
If APS had told me it was no longer an option, I wouldn't have applied this time because I would have known it didn't qualify. APS has brought extra work of sorting through applications that they knew wouldn't qualify this time because they didn't tell teachers or staff that the conditions for telework or accommodations had changed from the first round in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
I don't think it's in the water. It's in the job. I was a teacher in fcps, and most of the older teachers are incredibly unhealthy. They are all overweight, a lot have diabetes, and even the younger ones seem to have a lot of medical problems. I think it's because they work 60+ hours a week, don't have time to eat anything good during the day, are showered with "appreciation" from PTA's which almost always takes the form of junk food (our school actually asked them to stop putting cupcakes in the teacher's lounge, and they still did it), and are under constant stress from administrators and high stakes testing. It's a recipe for disease.
Sure... cupcakes lmao
I worked in SE DC before landing a job in NOVA. Keep talking about cupcakes. 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
I don't think it's in the water. It's in the job. I was a teacher in fcps, and most of the older teachers are incredibly unhealthy. They are all overweight, a lot have diabetes, and even the younger ones seem to have a lot of medical problems. I think it's because they work 60+ hours a week, don't have time to eat anything good during the day, are showered with "appreciation" from PTA's which almost always takes the form of junk food (our school actually asked them to stop putting cupcakes in the teacher's lounge, and they still did it), and are under constant stress from administrators and high stakes testing. It's a recipe for disease.
Have other districts released their numbers? I know APS has at least 800 requests
Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
No. There are just way more teachers than the surrounding counties.
Did you learn math in distance learning as a child? We have a much higher percentage of teachers claiming ADAs than surrounding counties. That has nothing to do with the overall size of the workforce.
Have other districts released their numbers? I know APS has at least 800 requests
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
No. There are just way more teachers than the surrounding counties.
Did you learn math in distance learning as a child? We have a much higher percentage of teachers claiming ADAs than surrounding counties. That has nothing to do with the overall size of the workforce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
No. There are just way more teachers than the surrounding counties.
Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
Anonymous wrote:So there’s something in the water in Fairfax that makes our teachers ten times more likely to have a certain discrete set of serious medical conditions than other districts? We need to get Erin Brockovich up here to investigate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reported to be said at yesterday's SB meeting:
"We have an overwhelming number of ADA requests, even for our size (10x more than a district 1/3 our size, for example) that is slowing EVERYTHING down."
-> This degree of a disproportionately large number of ADA requests in FCPS is a disgrace. Hence the parents' fury at some teachers.
How on earth is it a "disgrace" that immunocompromised people or those with immunocompromised loved ones might want to avoid hospitalization?! What the f* is wrong with you people?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just go to the Employment section of the FCPS website. You will see the pages and pages of jobs. They are in all areas and at all grade levels.
I paid attention for the first time this school year and noticed that there were pages of jobs available all year long. Usually positions are filled by Sept 1 or August at the latest. That wasn’t the case this year.
I spoke with someone in leadership about it once during casual conversation and they confirmed that yes the shortage is real.
There are 113 openings advertised. https://careers.fcps.edu/vl/vacancy.htm ...and that includes all full and part time teacher scale positions.
That's a vacency rate of .0061
That's really, really low.
Nope, there is no shortage.
It doesn't seem like a shortage until there's 25 to 35 kids in your class. Then it definitely is!
Correct. A shortage doesn’t mean “zero teachers .” It means “every teacher have has 40 students instead of 20.”
Exactly. I can manage 35-40 per class doing DL. There is no way I can manage in person with the current class sizes because my classroom just isn't big enough to handle close to 40. Forget about hybrid - two classes of 20 per half day isn't going to work because there is no social distancing.
Parents need to get real. Your refusal to adapt to DL is the biggest problem we have right now because the logistics of hybrid and f2f for all just don't work. We don't have enough teachers!
Okay, I will just tell my 1st grader to “adapt” to learning by watching a screen all day.
You're missing the point. YOU need to adapt and be flexible. YOU need to adopt a better attitude. YOU need to do a better job modeling for your child. I'm not a teacher telling you this, I am a fellow parent telling you this. YOU need to up your game as a parent.