Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s still a shortage of teachers and nurses
Teachers aren’t being paid enough to live in areas with strong public schools. My sister and her husband both work as teachers for FCPS, but their salaries aren’t sufficient to afford a home in a neighborhood with a good school pyramid. As a result, they use my address so their children can attend schools in the Langley pyramid.
So they are liars and you facilitate lying and cheating. How is this a good thing. I hope you get caught.
The only way to raise teacher salary is through supply and demand. When schools cannot get teachers, they will get paid more. A perk in some areas is that teachers can put their kids in the school where they teach, similar to private school. I'm ok with that perk.
You get paid more to teach in certain inner city schools. However lots of teachers choose not to teach in those environments.
Where is this? I teach in Baltimore City and teachers aren't paid more to work in certain schools.
Anonymous wrote:If you get out of DC and east coast it's not that competitive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s still a shortage of teachers and nurses
Teachers aren’t being paid enough to live in areas with strong public schools. My sister and her husband both work as teachers for FCPS, but their salaries aren’t sufficient to afford a home in a neighborhood with a good school pyramid. As a result, they use my address so their children can attend schools in the Langley pyramid.
So they are liars and you facilitate lying and cheating. How is this a good thing. I hope you get caught.
The only way to raise teacher salary is through supply and demand. When schools cannot get teachers, they will get paid more. A perk in some areas is that teachers can put their kids in the school where they teach, similar to private school. I'm ok with that perk.
You get paid more to teach in certain inner city schools. However lots of teachers choose not to teach in those environments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be no competitive at anything. Mediocrity is non competitive.
If you want to excel at or be admitted to the top 10% of anything of course it is competitive.
How do you explain politics then? I thought they were all competing to be the most mediocre possible.
Don’t be stupid. The Alaric’s are low in politics but the perks like lifetime healthcare and lucrative post-office contracts and influence peddling, are priceless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be no competitive at anything. Mediocrity is non competitive.
If you want to excel at or be admitted to the top 10% of anything of course it is competitive.
How do you explain politics then? I thought they were all competing to be the most mediocre possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you get out of DC and east coast it's not that competitive.
WRONG. It is just as competitive, if not more, on the West Coast, where there is a large segment of Asians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is just your lens. We are not a country of scarcity mindset and there are tons of ways to hustle and just live here in a non-competitive (though can be precarious) way.
Wrong.
We are a country of scarcity mindset. Are you new here? So many people fear being poor. When you lose your job you lose your insurance. There is basically zero social safety net. A country that lack scarcity mindset might exist amongst the Scandinavian countries - Norway, Finland, Sweden- maybe Denmark and Netherlands too. Although I know plenty of Dutch who want their shiny things and nice vacations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s still a shortage of teachers and nurses
Teachers aren’t being paid enough to live in areas with strong public schools. My sister and her husband both work as teachers for FCPS, but their salaries aren’t sufficient to afford a home in a neighborhood with a good school pyramid. As a result, they use my address so their children can attend schools in the Langley pyramid.
So they are liars and you facilitate lying and cheating. How is this a good thing. I hope you get caught.
The only way to raise teacher salary is through supply and demand. When schools cannot get teachers, they will get paid more. A perk in some areas is that teachers can put their kids in the school where they teach, similar to private school. I'm ok with that perk.
You get paid more to teach in certain inner city schools. However lots of teachers choose not to teach in those environments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s still a shortage of teachers and nurses
Teachers aren’t being paid enough to live in areas with strong public schools. My sister and her husband both work as teachers for FCPS, but their salaries aren’t sufficient to afford a home in a neighborhood with a good school pyramid. As a result, they use my address so their children can attend schools in the Langley pyramid.
So they are liars and you facilitate lying and cheating. How is this a good thing. I hope you get caught.
The only way to raise teacher salary is through supply and demand. When schools cannot get teachers, they will get paid more. A perk in some areas is that teachers can put their kids in the school where they teach, similar to private school. I'm ok with that perk.
Why do teachers create "good school districts" and "bad school districts" in the first place? Maybe teachers don't deserve a good salary. My daughter told me a funny joke the other day, "How do you get straight A's? With a ruler." I laughed, what is a crooked A anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be no competitive at anything. Mediocrity is non competitive.
If you want to excel at or be admitted to the top 10% of anything of course it is competitive.
How do you explain politics then? I thought they were all competing to be the most mediocre possible.
Politics attract power-hungry people, not brilliant ones.