Anonymous wrote:It’s beginning of summer but our principal emailed vacancies for the school with his last day of school email send off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guess we all just have to hope our kids don’t have long terms subs next year.
We couldn't even find long term subs. We had a mix of daily subs until Christmas, one long term sub until March and then daily subs until the end of the year.
Are you at a bad school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guess we all just have to hope our kids don’t have long terms subs next year.
We couldn't even find long term subs. We had a mix of daily subs until Christmas, one long term sub until March and then daily subs until the end of the year.
Anonymous wrote:Guess we all just have to hope our kids don’t have long terms subs next year.
Anonymous wrote:Guess we all just have to hope our kids don’t have long terms subs next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents should be very concerned. Just counted vacancies for teachers. Did not include SPED instructional assistants or staff not working directly with kids. 604 teaching positions open. Some may not be listed so this number could be higher. 😫
Okay, I'm a parent and I'm concerned. I'll bite my nails until they bleed this summer. This fall you can point and laugh and say I told you so.
Then what?
Check your school’s vacancies- they aren’t evenly spread
Do you think FCPS isn't listing all the vacancies accurately. I know someone who says they don't want to put up too many vacancies up at once. This seems weird though since they need to fill these vacancies.
My school has one position listing for a teacher grades 4-6. There are 6 unfilled positions 4-6. One listing, 6 vacancies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of turnover at a Title I school in Falls Church. 22 vacancies and counting. Lots of turnover within the administration in the past few years or so.
Which school is that?!
Anonymous wrote:Lots of turnover at a Title I school in Falls Church. 22 vacancies and counting. Lots of turnover within the administration in the past few years or so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents should be very concerned. Just counted vacancies for teachers. Did not include SPED instructional assistants or staff not working directly with kids. 604 teaching positions open. Some may not be listed so this number could be higher. 😫
Okay, I'm a parent and I'm concerned. I'll bite my nails until they bleed this summer. This fall you can point and laugh and say I told you so.
Then what?
Check your school’s vacancies- they aren’t evenly spread
Do you think FCPS isn't listing all the vacancies accurately. I know someone who says they don't want to put up too many vacancies up at once. This seems weird though since they need to fill these vacancies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think stipends should happen for SPED and Gen Ed teachers. SPED teachers with more than 5 IEPS should get a stipend per extra kid. Classroom teachers should get a stipend per kid when class size goes above 25.
That would be quite nice, but that would mean essentially all teachers would receive that stipend.
When I was a special education teacher, I had 50-60 IEPs (10-12 per class). Almost all of those had 3-5 goals for which I was responsible (reading comprehension, basic reading, written expression, organization, and/or behavior), so I was responsible for tracking between 120-300`goals.
I switched to general education several years ago. I now have between 135-150 students each year. It is rare to have classes smaller than 25, and most classes have 28-32 students. As a general education teacher, I usually have 5-8 students with IEPs (usually for speech, writing, organization, and/or behavior) on my roster, another 10-12 who are on my coteacher's roster, and at least a dozen 504 plans.
Ok
LOL. I thought the same thing. There is no way that she had 50 IEPs.
NP. Why don’t you believe this? If she was a high school teacher and team taught 5 different classes 50+ is easily possible. I’m a general ed teacher, I didn’t have any team taught classes and I had over 20 students in my classes this year with IEPs or 504s. It could have been closer to 30.
+1000
correct but I think people are thinking caseloads which would not happen.