Anonymous wrote:I call bull re the pay. If these jobs paid enough, people would do them. They don't pay enough.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers are telling their kids absolutely not to go into teaching. It has to do with behavior issues are not being addressed by administration and all the extra busy work/meetings/documentation that really are a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:I call bull re the pay. If these jobs paid enough, people would do them. They don't pay enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How have they adapted to the violence that mcps is known for?
They got plenty of experience from the violence that Philippines is known for.
Anonymous wrote:Has America churned, burned, and harassed all of our own human capital out of the profession that we have to outsource now? This will not make teaching more desirable but now we can open our dirty American secrets up to the international community about how dysfunction, predatory, and pathetic our education system is. Good luck teachers. Don't let the admin bastards get you down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spoke with one the other day. She was so impressed by MCPS and thought it was AMAZING!!
That's great and I hope she learns a lot from her visit, but she shouldn't be displacing primary staff.
No one displacing primary staff. MCPS cannot fill these positions lovally or even nationally, because no one wants them. Please read that last sentence again. They are bringing in teachers from overseas because no one here wants these jobs that many here are so great because: 10 month job, great pension, etc
It's BS. No one wants to teach here for many reasons, including crappy pay, bad administrators, delusional central office, and much more, but the worst are our kids today. They have no attention spans, no interest in learning, don't behave, and their parents make it worse
They are displacing primary staff, because MCPS is relying on them in solving the staffing problem.
With severe staffing shortages due to higher immigration, teacher resignations/retirements, as well as competition with more lucrative/less stressful professions, US school systems will continue to hire from from English-speaking countries like the Philippines. It really is as simple as that.
+1 Be grateful that MCPS is actually able to get qualified professional teachers to support special needs kids rather than having those positions vacant and the most vulnerable kids in the school system without instructors.
Anonymous wrote:How have they adapted to the violence that mcps is known for?
Anonymous wrote:Special Education teachers across the county are struggling, period. There are not enough teachers to implement IEPs. There is not enough time in the day to write IEPs, attend meetings, gather paperwork, teach, plan, etc.
MCPS is going to be in big trouble if someone looks at what is happening.
Anonymous wrote:I heard that some of the teachers from Philippines are struggling. They don't have the special education background needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:University Schools of education across the country are struggling financially because enrollment in teacher education programs are at an all time low- American University announced this week that their SOE is closing. Johns Hopkins SOE is staffed w scores of adjuncts. Young people in US dont want to be teachers. Average teacher age in US, like nurses, 40s. What is going to happen in next few years as people retire out….
Most people going into teaching could not afford AU or the loans.
I’m not sure why you would think that. My DD is an ed major and we’re quite able to afford college… OOS, no less.
Exactly, it’s for kids of rich parents who can pay. Then there is everyone else who cannot.
And how is that different from other majors?
It’s a guaranteed job out of college. That’s not the case for many, many majors out there.