Anonymous wrote:I am a teacher in MCPS and I haven't heard 8%. That seems excessive and high. I have never heard of getting a raise greater than 3%.
Is the 8% over a certain number of years? The article doesn't say. I wish it included more information about that "average 8%"
And I love how the article mentions fire and police. The Post LOVES to pit fire and police against the teachers. Well done, Post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have better health and retirement benefits than most people on dcum.
Quick show of hands: who got an 8% raise last year?
Anyone?
8% is a lot.
While my employer is legendarily stingy on salary increases, I got a 2% raise the last several years. However no raise in 2016 due to reorganization and related expenses.
Next raise opportunity is March, 2017. I'm not holding my breath.
8% is pretty large.
As a Fed, we got zero raises for three years, then 1% for the last two years.
We didn't get raises during the recession (like many orgs). We got 3% increases last year, and we are hoping to get 3% raises this year.
I'm sorry, but 8% is crazy.
What was their increase last year? And what about step increases?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an MCPS teacher who is leaving the public school system. I am sick of performing at a very high level while others coast and make the system look terrible. I believe there should be incentives and rewards for teachers who do good work, as opposed to uniform raises for all. I wish it were easier to get rid of bad teachers. Instead, the good ones flee, because the system is stuck in mediocrity and the wonderful teachers resent that the system equally rewards the great and the awful teachers. I also think the county should start tracking school retention numbers. If you want to see whether a school has decent leadership, evaluate the number of high-achieving professionals who are leaving. That will speak volumes.
While I don't necessarily disagree, how do you evaluate teacher competence? A great teacher could have a classroom full of idiots and only make a small gain despite a doing a fabulous job; a terrible teacher could have a classroom full of geniuses and make a large gain despite doing a terrible job. It's hard to measure what kids "should" learn since so much is tied up with the kids natural ability. I have friends who are teachers; apparently everybody "knows" who the bad teachers are. I'm just unaware of any way to rate teachers that's not heavily dependent on the luck if the draw in getting students.
This is true. I work in a high FARMS/ESOL school and am considered to be good at what I do, by subjective and objective measures. But if my pay starts being tied to student performance under the guise of "teacher competence", then I'm high-tailing it to a different part of the county. I can't undo the effects of poverty in 6.5 hours/day. Ultimately I would have to put my family's well-being first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the "hate" stems from jealousy.
We have a great gig. We make an actual difference in peoples' lives. If you ask anyone who has had the biggest impact on your life, I bet you more than 50% of people would say a teacher or coach is that person.
Add that, to the fact we have eight consecutive weeks off and snow days, and we are not liked. They think we should be paid minimum wage as glorified babysitters.
We all had career day - some of us were smart and chose to become teachers.
So which is it: it's a sweet gig, or it's such a demanding job that you deserve to paid a premium?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They don't get paid over the summer..
I know. They get paid for ten months and essentially work closer to nine months.
My friend earns over $90k...that's $10k a month.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm pretty sure we switched to 2.0 because not all of the kids were having their needs met. Glad to hear that problem has been resolved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an MCPS teacher who is leaving the public school system. I am sick of performing at a very high level while others coast and make the system look terrible. I believe there should be incentives and rewards for teachers who do good work, as opposed to uniform raises for all. I wish it were easier to get rid of bad teachers. Instead, the good ones flee, because the system is stuck in mediocrity and the wonderful teachers resent that the system equally rewards the great and the awful teachers. I also think the county should start tracking school retention numbers. If you want to see whether a school has decent leadership, evaluate the number of high-achieving professionals who are leaving. That will speak volumes.
While I don't necessarily disagree, how do you evaluate teacher competence? A great teacher could have a classroom full of idiots and only make a small gain despite a doing a fabulous job; a terrible teacher could have a classroom full of geniuses and make a large gain despite doing a terrible job. It's hard to measure what kids "should" learn since so much is tied up with the kids natural ability. I have friends who are teachers; apparently everybody "knows" who the bad teachers are. I'm just unaware of any way to rate teachers that's not heavily dependent on the luck if the draw in getting students.
Anonymous wrote:I am an MCPS teacher who is leaving the public school system. I am sick of performing at a very high level while others coast and make the system look terrible. I believe there should be incentives and rewards for teachers who do good work, as opposed to uniform raises for all. I wish it were easier to get rid of bad teachers. Instead, the good ones flee, because the system is stuck in mediocrity and the wonderful teachers resent that the system equally rewards the great and the awful teachers. I also think the county should start tracking school retention numbers. If you want to see whether a school has decent leadership, evaluate the number of high-achieving professionals who are leaving. That will speak volumes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:8% raises would be insane...especially for a teacher who has summers off and a tremendous amount of vacation days (winter and spring break, holidays).
I would love to see you teach for one year and see if you felt the same way. I hope you don't have kids too. Wouldn't you want your children having a highly qualified teacher teaching your children getting paid what they deserve?
Teaching is one of many professions that are extremely underpaid for their work.