Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 21:46     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention







Anonymous wrote:
They spent it all on virtual learning.



There is no virtual learning program this year. Try again.

No sh*t, Sherlock.
They spent money on it in the past. And now, that money is gone.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 17:15     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.

I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession


Okay but to attract the replacement fresh out of college of whatever and they can decide between FFX (cheaper housing, good schools for own kids, and short commute) vs Arlington (expensive housing or long commute, lackluster student performance) why would they go here??


Here’s the thing: there really aren’t “replacements fresh out of college” anymore. Ed prep programs are graduating fewer people than ever. Nobody wants to get into teaching anymore, and who can blame them? Crazy school boards, crazier parents, unsupportive admins and near-feral children, and for all this a salary that doesn’t make a dent in the student loans to get the preferred Masters.


Exactly
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 09:02     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.

I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession


Okay but to attract the replacement fresh out of college of whatever and they can decide between FFX (cheaper housing, good schools for own kids, and short commute) vs Arlington (expensive housing or long commute, lackluster student performance) why would they go here??


Here’s the thing: there really aren’t “replacements fresh out of college” anymore. Ed prep programs are graduating fewer people than ever. Nobody wants to get into teaching anymore, and who can blame them? Crazy school boards, crazier parents, unsupportive admins and near-feral children, and for all this a salary that doesn’t make a dent in the student loans to get the preferred Masters.

Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 07:59     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.


I agree with this. I'm in my 40s and wouldn't want to live in Fairfax.
I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession


Okay but to attract the replacement fresh out of college of whatever and they can decide between FFX (cheaper housing, good schools for own kids, and short commute) vs Arlington (expensive housing or long commute, lackluster student performance) why would they go here??

Better social life, more roommate/group housing/, closer/better opportunities for second jobs. I work with a lot of young teachers who do a couple serving or bartending shifts.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 07:53     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.

I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession


Okay but to attract the replacement fresh out of college of whatever and they can decide between FFX (cheaper housing, good schools for own kids, and short commute) vs Arlington (expensive housing or long commute, lackluster student performance) why would they go here??

Better social life, more roommate/group housing/, closer/better opportunities for second jobs. I work with a lot of young teachers who do a couple serving or bartending shifts.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 06:46     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.

I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession


Okay but to attract the replacement fresh out of college of whatever and they can decide between FFX (cheaper housing, good schools for own kids, and short commute) vs Arlington (expensive housing or long commute, lackluster student performance) why would they go here??
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2023 06:00     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.

I assure you most teachers who are leaving aren’t doing it for a cheaper house. They are leaving the profession
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 21:22     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:They spent it all on virtual learning.


There is no virtual learning program this year. Try again.
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 21:21     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.


APS has to pay more to be truly competitive because cost of living is higher in Arlington. Why would a teacher stay with APS when they can make the same pay in Loudoun or Fairfax without the commute?
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 21:08     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems


True.
But a better compensation package can attract candidates. Without it we risk losing our teachers.
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 21:05     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.

They are competitive with surrounding counties in that they all have huge staffing problems
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 18:31     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.


They absolutely can.

They don't care to.
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 16:58     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention





Anonymous wrote:
Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


For the sake of accuracy, it’s a step + 3%


Guess they think it's more important to pay the Syphax staff for all those extra holidays.
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 16:31     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.


In the past, APS always cited the need to stay competitive with the surrounding counties. There are different ways to achieve this; salary, benefits, support system. I cannot believe they can’t figure this out.

It’s on par with other districts
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2023 16:31     Subject: Re:APS- teacher retention

Anonymous wrote:Dr Duran just released his budget presentation and teachers are only getting a 3% cost of living increase. Inflation is more than double that. That means a teacher who makes $75,000 will only increase to $77,250. That is only $220 extra PER MONTH (before taxes!). We need to give teachers a solid raise that they will actual feel. What is the incentive to stay with APS? You could make the exact same salary in Fairfax or Loudon and have significantly cheaper housing.

For the sake of accuracy, it’s a step + 3%