Anonymous wrote:These parents are teaching them that family matters.
As for another morning of filling out make-work worksheets until early release....
Easy solution. Homeschool, take the F, discuss alternative plans or get out of my classroom.
These parents are teaching them that family matters.
As for another morning of filling out make-work worksheets until early release....
Anonymous wrote:
These parents are teaching them that family matters.
As for another morning of filling out make-work worksheets until early release....
Anonymous wrote:The people screwing the children are the dumb parents that are teaching kids that an extra day of vacation is more important than school. School is important. If you don't take it seriously, don't be surprised when your kids don't. If your kids grades suffer because you choose vacation over school, that's your fault, not the teachers'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was waiting for this thread to take a turn towards teachers having too much time "off." Because lessons and activities and graded papers just fall out of the sky, so teachers should never been paid for working when the students aren't even there! After all, lawyers are only paid for the time they spend sitting in front of clients or in court, surgeons are only paid for the time they spend actually performing the surgery, and retail employees only get paid when the store is actually open.
Conferences ARE held after the school days end. It varies from school to school, elementary to secondary, but conferences are held in the morning BEFORE school, and in the early afternoon through evening. If they were strictly after school, it would take a week. Do you think it's fair for someone to work required overtime every night for a week without pay? But, since teachers are overpaid and overappreciated anyway, I guess that's how it should be.
I work overtime for no pay all the time. When a big project is in the works, I work evenings and weekends if necessary.
"Overtime" is generally a concept used by people who punch a clock and are paid by the hour. It is not a term normally used by professionals.
uh huh
And how much do YOU make, sweets?
My friend works OT, too, but makes $200K for putting in the same amount of hours per week I do.
So fuck off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or all those "professional days" where kids don't have school. These all add up, and add up fast.
Are you f-ing kidding me?
I'm sorry that your "daycare" is off that day.
FWIW, don't complain, idiot. If you had the money to take the private route, the professional days double.
Your world is very small, PP.
so very small