Anonymous wrote:The SLPs I know of do early intervention with preschoolers onsite at their preschools and also in elementary schools. They are employed by our local school district which is on a nice area that is solidly middle class with 2/6 elementary schools being Title 1.
They like their jobs. I agree with trying an onsite school job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some kids are fine, others are terrible brats. They get too much screen time and this impacts their behaviors, concentration, and so much more. I have to manage behaviors a lot more than I would like or just try so hard to get them to focus and pay attention for 2-3 minutes during a task. It is exhausting. I also have to bribe them to do what I need them to do... which is annoying and exhausting. I worked so hard for this degree and the clinical fellowship and it feels completely thankless. I have had a few really great experiences. I'd say 20% good and 80% bad. I have not worked for a school system yet. I'd probably only take a remote school position for various reasons. The problem with those is they try to pay less for the SAME work just because it is remote.
Remote jobs often pay less because a lot of applicants prefer them. It's a perk. And frankly for this field it sounds a lot less effective.
You sound extremely entitled. I've worked with 3 different SLPs for my kids who were all great. Like other PPs we did have to pay if we cancelled on short notice. It feels like you are just railing against everything.
Anonymous wrote:Some kids are fine, others are terrible brats. They get too much screen time and this impacts their behaviors, concentration, and so much more. I have to manage behaviors a lot more than I would like or just try so hard to get them to focus and pay attention for 2-3 minutes during a task. It is exhausting. I also have to bribe them to do what I need them to do... which is annoying and exhausting. I worked so hard for this degree and the clinical fellowship and it feels completely thankless. I have had a few really great experiences. I'd say 20% good and 80% bad. I have not worked for a school system yet. I'd probably only take a remote school position for various reasons. The problem with those is they try to pay less for the SAME work just because it is remote.
Anonymous wrote:Some kids are fine, others are terrible brats. They get too much screen time and this impacts their behaviors, concentration, and so much more. I have to manage behaviors a lot more than I would like or just try so hard to get them to focus and pay attention for 2-3 minutes during a task. It is exhausting. I also have to bribe them to do what I need them to do... which is annoying and exhausting. I worked so hard for this degree and the clinical fellowship and it feels completely thankless. I have had a few really great experiences. I'd say 20% good and 80% bad. I have not worked for a school system yet. I'd probably only take a remote school position for various reasons. The problem with those is they try to pay less for the SAME work just because it is remote.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you do internships along the way? You don't sound like you like kids, but how did you not know this before? Why only remote at schools? You sound chaotic/manic.
Fear of school shootings
Anonymous wrote:Did you do internships along the way? You don't sound like you like kids, but how did you not know this before? Why only remote at schools? You sound chaotic/manic.
Anonymous wrote:Why aren't you paid for no-shows or late cancellations? Every appointment-based professional we've worked with for our kids charges us unless we reschedule at least 24 hours in advance (or more). It sounds like you didn't set up your contracts correctly.
Either way, I'm sure it's a frustrating job, but it sounds like you're lacking empathy for both the kids and the parents. Think about it. You're 6 to 10 years old. You're told you need to spend 45 minutes twice a week with some random person practicing how to pronounce your Rs. You'd rather be building legos or watching a show or playing with friends. Are you going to be happy making that tradeoff for a future abstract benefit that you may not even understand that you need?
Parents should be pleasant, agreed, but they too are probably exhausted and kid schedules are hard to manage on top of just general life, especially if both parents are working, let alone if you're dealing with a single parent or another life complication.
Either way, your "that's why I put mentioned my credentials" line - as if CCC-SLP is explains more to a layperson than SLP - indicates to me that you struggle to see or anticipate the perspective of others. If you want to continue in this field, I'd recommend working on that aspect of yourself.