Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes life means you can’t wait. It does suck for the kids but nobody has to choose a job over their own personal life. Your kid will manage the last quarter which is eaten up with testing and activities just fine.
What a strange attitude. And new, too.
Maybe the pandemic has broken all of us.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes life means you can’t wait. It does suck for the kids but nobody has to choose a job over their own personal life. Your kid will manage the last quarter which is eaten up with testing and activities just fine.
Anonymous wrote:If you quit your teaching job doing spring break you’re selfish. My DD 8th grade ELS resigned over break and she isn’t coming back some days other teachers have to fill in because of her actions. Just FYI if you quit wait till June please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you leave mid year you can certainly teach again. You can’t leave mid contract to go to another teaching job but the following year you can be hired by someone else. “Never teach again”?. That’s completely untrue.
You just have to wait one year. You claim you had long covid and boom you’re back in the classroom in the county next door.
Anonymous wrote:If you leave mid year you can certainly teach again. You can’t leave mid contract to go to another teaching job but the following year you can be hired by someone else. “Never teach again”?. That’s completely untrue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He or she left the field. We’re all under contact- this person will never teach again.
What nonsense. I don’t believe for a second you are actually a teacher.
I am a teacher, and I actually have personal experience with this. School systems see this as a very black-and-white thing. You simply cannot break contract.
How current is your experience? Things are very desperate right now[/quote
Have you seen anyone whose broken contract get re-hired?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He or she left the field. We’re all under contact- this person will never teach again.
What nonsense. I don’t believe for a second you are actually a teacher.
I am a teacher, and I actually have personal experience with this. School systems see this as a very black-and-white thing. You simply cannot break contract.
It happened to two of my kids, and both times, I knew the reason for the teacher leaving. They honestly had no other choice. However, the dynamic of education, where parents are supposed to be partners with the school and the teachers in educating their child, is undermined when teachers leave without explanation mid-year. Teaching really isn't like any other profession. Parents help teachers out in the classroom at school, send in supplies, have special appreciation events, but then are shut out completely from knowing anything about extended absences or abrupt departures. I understand these things are confidential, but it's a tough pill to swallow. In fact, it feels like a slap in the face. If confidentiality prohibits saying anything, then the departure could be for something trivial. There is no way of knowing. And kids, especially younger kids, which mine were when their teacher left during winter break, tend to feel abandoned and even responsible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He or she left the field. We’re all under contact- this person will never teach again.
What nonsense. I don’t believe for a second you are actually a teacher.
Anonymous wrote:He or she left the field. We’re all under contact- this person will never teach again.