Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents just want teachers to do the job that they are paid for, to the best of their ability (not DL).
As most everyone else in a capitalist society is required to do. Or you lose your job.
Keyword most. Teachers are doing their job through DL. School isn’t childcare. Teachers are truly not trained in that, that’s a benefit of in person.
So you can be angry but at this point it’s like a broken record. Enjoy DL for the rest of the year or get a pod.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t be that stupid. You don’t really think working with the same 3 students in a controlled pod environment is remotely similar to teaching in a DCPS school. I will have zero issues if my child’s teacher chooses to do that in the evenings. Sounds like some of you (or one persistent voice) just want to come up with new threads each week to slam teachers because you’re overwhelmed (like us all) during this pandemic and you need to direct your frustration somewhere. That’s the only way I can explain these illogical arguments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all, teachers are free people. They are allowed to do what they like with their own free time. The school system does not own them. Obviously, they can't tutor during school hours, or tutor their own students, but tother than that there are no restrictions.
Secondly, the teacher's union is just like any other large group, it has people with a variety of opinions. Not every teacher took the same position on hybrid vs virtual.
Finally, the difference between being in a room with one masked child, without shared bathrooms or hallways, and the ability to leave if the child takes off their mask is entirely unlike being in the classroom.
It's called a "conflict of interest" and most companies don't allow it. It has nothing to do with being "free people".
Secondly, if allowed by the union, it should be limited to non DCPS students. I don't recall hearing (from news media or social media) from the teachers who wanted hybrid and wish they had been more vocal.
Note, pods by definition are not one student but rather groups of students. Granted tutoring one child is a different situation unless you tutor multiple students.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah. Seems at first there was an interesting conversation about how it's unethical for teachers to make money off private pods and how that also puts their public school class at a serious disadvantage. Then a bunch of trolls started screaming and threw around the K-word just to muddy the discussion.
Anonymous wrote:I think this conflict of interest situation with dcps teachers teaching pods is going to blow up and generate a ton of anger media stories and backlash and the Mayor will demand that teachers be back in school on November 9.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher and have never heard of an actual policy before, and I don’t tutor so it’s not a concern of mine. A friend’s DCPS school sent this out though:
Q: Can a family hire DCPS teachers and staff to tutor or supervise a student outside of their tours of duty?
A: DCPS teachers or staff may not be employed by a family whose child attends the school where the teacher or staff member works. DCPS employees, including teachers, are bound by strict DC ethics regulations regarding outside employment and conflicts of interest. These prohibit DCPS staff members from tutoring students who attend the school where that staff member is employed. Additionally, teachers providing tutoring services to any students, regardless of whether the students attend DCPS, may not tutor students during their tour of duty, may not use government resources or non-public DCPS information while tutoring, and may not advertise their services (or allow the family to advertise their services) by describing their DCPS employment.
I just scoured DCPs and did not find this document. Please attach a link. I think this may be written by your friend’s school. There are programs run by DCpS where teachers are paid admin premium to tutor DCPS kids. I know you can’t tutor in a DC building but I have not read anything the quoted mentions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes we can teach pods, as long as it isn’t during contracted hours.
Although I think maybe some will blur that line by doing it during their lunch.
Why are people so interested in teacher’s money? I mean I get if you are still delusional and think we shut down in person that’s one thing. But those who are sane, why do you care?
Because it is extremely unethical. Talk about sleazy.
Simple answer, because as parents we want 100% focus on the kids you were hired under contract to teach at DCPS. Side hustles are just that, a side hustle. It's not hard to understand "conflict of interest".
Anonymous wrote:Parents just want teachers to do the job that they are paid for, to the best of their ability (not DL).
As most everyone else in a capitalist society is required to do. Or you lose your job.