Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's the pay. I think it's that teachers have no autonomy, have to teach to the test and can't kick disruptive students out of their classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blame the administration who send teachers to mostly BS training/PDs during the school year. My district won't approve time off before or after a holiday so no 3 day weekends for us. I work in a Title 1 school and I occasionally take mental health days in addition to actual sick days. I'm sure my friends who aren't teachers do too. Nobody thinks it is their business to comment about their time off.
Actually, when people in my office take random days off, people assume they are interviewing for other positions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP- Teacher here and I suspect the rampant absenteeism will be a huge problem next year when students are expected to show up to school every day. So many of them took advantage of the lax rules last year. The attendance committee at our school worked their tails off last year trying to contact the parents whose kids just did nothing.
Yes. This happened at our school way before Covid. The truancy officer basically threw up his hands and said there was nothing he could do. It’s almost impossible to retain students who fail and you can’t track families down and force them to send their kids to school.
Why is this?
Homeschoolers doing a great job of raising their kids live in constant fear of not doing "enough" to show enough good work or progress at the end of the year, terrified of a trip from CPS. Even though studies show that homeschoolers outperform traditionally schooled children in tests across the board.
I wonder why homeschoolers bother jumping through these hoops at all, when apparently the states don't care if kids aren't learning or even attending school. Why aren't those people getting visits from CPS and getting their kids taken away?
Such a double standard.
Anonymous wrote:Blame the administration who send teachers to mostly BS training/PDs during the school year. My district won't approve time off before or after a holiday so no 3 day weekends for us. I work in a Title 1 school and I occasionally take mental health days in addition to actual sick days. I'm sure my friends who aren't teachers do too. Nobody thinks it is their business to comment about their time off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP- Teacher here and I suspect the rampant absenteeism will be a huge problem next year when students are expected to show up to school every day. So many of them took advantage of the lax rules last year. The attendance committee at our school worked their tails off last year trying to contact the parents whose kids just did nothing.
Yes. This happened at our school way before Covid. The truancy officer basically threw up his hands and said there was nothing he could do. It’s almost impossible to retain students who fail and you can’t track families down and force them to send their kids to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blame the administration who send teachers to mostly BS training/PDs during the school year. My district won't approve time off before or after a holiday so no 3 day weekends for us. I work in a Title 1 school and I occasionally take mental health days in addition to actual sick days. I'm sure my friends who aren't teachers do too. Nobody thinks it is their business to comment about their time off.
Well, teachers in the US may be absent more than in other countries, according to at least one study, and they are absent more than college educated workers in other industries. There may be valid reasons, but teacher absenteeism is a documented systemic problem that should be examined and addressed.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/brown-center-chalkboard/2020/01/27/we-should-be-focusing-on-absenteeism-among-teachers-not-just-students/
https://fee.org/articles/whats-behind-the-epidemic-of-chronic-teacher-absenteeism/
I would expect teachers to be more absent due to illness than other college-educated workers given the amount of germs they are exposed to, but I'm not sure about the comparison with other countries. Also, US has more female teachers who are more likely to be tapped for caregiving responsibilities--that might be another factor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blame the administration who send teachers to mostly BS training/PDs during the school year. My district won't approve time off before or after a holiday so no 3 day weekends for us. I work in a Title 1 school and I occasionally take mental health days in addition to actual sick days. I'm sure my friends who aren't teachers do too. Nobody thinks it is their business to comment about their time off.
Well, teachers in the US may be absent more than in other countries, according to at least one study, and they are absent more than college educated workers in other industries. There may be valid reasons, but teacher absenteeism is a documented systemic problem that should be examined and addressed.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/brown-center-chalkboard/2020/01/27/we-should-be-focusing-on-absenteeism-among-teachers-not-just-students/
https://fee.org/articles/whats-behind-the-epidemic-of-chronic-teacher-absenteeism/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP- Teacher here and I suspect the rampant absenteeism will be a huge problem next year when students are expected to show up to school every day. So many of them took advantage of the lax rules last year. The attendance committee at our school worked their tails off last year trying to contact the parents whose kids just did nothing.
Yes. This happened at our school way before Covid. The truancy officer basically threw up his hands and said there was nothing he could do. It’s almost impossible to retain students who fail and you can’t track families down and force them to send their kids to school.
Interesting. I have no idea about kids who don't attend school, as mine have regular attendance, but one of my issues with public school systems is teacher absenteeism. When I was younger, teachers weren't constantly out of the classroom. I know that some of it is training or family illness, but it is remarkable how many teachers have training or family illness immediately before or after a long weekend.
There have been studies demonstrating how teacher absenteeism hurt student achievement, with the worst attendance and educational outcomes in high poverty schools.
Anonymous wrote:Blame the administration who send teachers to mostly BS training/PDs during the school year. My district won't approve time off before or after a holiday so no 3 day weekends for us. I work in a Title 1 school and I occasionally take mental health days in addition to actual sick days. I'm sure my friends who aren't teachers do too. Nobody thinks it is their business to comment about their time off.
Anonymous wrote:PP- Teacher here and I suspect the rampant absenteeism will be a huge problem next year when students are expected to show up to school every day. So many of them took advantage of the lax rules last year. The attendance committee at our school worked their tails off last year trying to contact the parents whose kids just did nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP- Teacher here and I suspect the rampant absenteeism will be a huge problem next year when students are expected to show up to school every day. So many of them took advantage of the lax rules last year. The attendance committee at our school worked their tails off last year trying to contact the parents whose kids just did nothing.
Yes. This happened at our school way before Covid. The truancy officer basically threw up his hands and said there was nothing he could do. It’s almost impossible to retain students who fail and you can’t track families down and force them to send their kids to school.