Anonymous wrote:Teachers have become master complainers. There are numerous professions that can’t afford this area but they don’t get articles written for them.
Teachers get pensions, good benefits and more leave than any other profession (I knows, I know- you only care paid for 39 weeks).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what? Neither can I. It took me an hour and 44 mins to get to work this morning. And I have significantly more education than most teachers.
71% of FCPS teachers hold at least a Masters degree. Many have more than one advanced degree.
I’m curious… what’s your education background?
Anonymous wrote:When I was a young, brand new teacher, I had a roommate. And, yes, it took a large portion of my income. This was decades ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what? Neither can I. It took me an hour and 44 mins to get to work this morning. And I have significantly more education than most teachers.
71% of FCPS teachers hold at least a Masters degree. Many have more than one advanced degree.
I’m curious… what’s your education background?
Np. They don't need it. I'm all for paying teachers more, but they should be paid more because it's a hard job, not because they have an unnecessary masters degree.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers have become master complainers. There are numerous professions that can’t afford this area but they don’t get articles written for them.
Teachers get pensions, good benefits and more leave than any other profession (I knows, I know- you only care paid for 39 weeks).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what? Neither can I. It took me an hour and 44 mins to get to work this morning. And I have significantly more education than most teachers.
71% of FCPS teachers hold at least a Masters degree. Many have more than one advanced degree.
I’m curious… what’s your education background?
Anonymous wrote:So this may be an unpopular opinion and I have many family members who are teachers and agree with me so this is in no way meant to not show support for teachers, but it is a reality.
Teacher contracts are based on a 195-day contract which is 39 weeks. This is 75% of a full year.
Conversely, I am a small govt worker and my contract is based off a 52 week calendar. With more than 25 years of experience, I make about 2/3 of what a teacher with the same level of experience/education makes and receive about 1/2 of the market rate adjustment raises that teachers in FCPS receive each year.
So as a fellow government employee working in the same jurisdiction, I work more weeks, more hours (my job also requires me to work some nights and weekends) and get paid less and receive lower raises than teachers.
Teaching has become a very thankless job and many people like myself acknowledge the challenges and frustrations of being a teacher, but let's stop pretending that teachers are on an island when it comes to being underpaid and underappreciated.
Anonymous wrote:So what? Neither can I. It took me an hour and 44 mins to get to work this morning. And I have significantly more education than most teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was a young, brand new teacher, I had a roommate. And, yes, it took a large portion of my income. This was decades ago.
When I moved to DC after law school to work at DOJ I had a roommate. In an apartment. That is all I could afford for years. And we lawyers didn't cry about it.
Who is crying about it? WTOP?
Teachers. They complain about their income All.The.Time. Even when they make more than people with more education and responsibility who don't have months of time off every year.
Anonymous wrote:Life is about choices. Get another career if the one you’re in isn’t lucrative enough to support where you live.
Fairfax County should have subsidized housing for teachers, this is one group that deserves the benefit of subsidized housing. I live in McLean and if they were to propose affordable housing for teachers in my neighborhood, that I would wholeheartedly support.
Anonymous wrote:I am an engineer. Paid well above a teacher. I could not afford to live alone when fresh out of school. I split a 2 BR apartment with someone else, not big, not fancy, while in my initial job out of school.
Anonymous wrote:So this may be an unpopular opinion and I have many family members who are teachers and agree with me so this is in no way meant to not show support for teachers, but it is a reality.
Teacher contracts are based on a 195-day contract which is 39 weeks. This is 75% of a full year.
Conversely, I am a small govt worker and my contract is based off a 52 week calendar. With more than 25 years of experience, I make about 2/3 of what a teacher with the same level of experience/education makes and receive about 1/2 of the market rate adjustment raises that teachers in FCPS receive each year.
So as a fellow government employee working in the same jurisdiction, I work more weeks, more hours (my job also requires me to work some nights and weekends) and get paid less and receive lower raises than teachers.
Teaching has become a very thankless job and many people like myself acknowledge the challenges and frustrations of being a teacher, but let's stop pretending that teachers are on an island when it comes to being underpaid and underappreciated.