Anonymous wrote:I had water damage in my basement and needed a total overhaul. the construction team has been here for a week and they arrive at 7am and leave at 6pm. They have ripped out carpet, drywall, a bathroom and have dealt with mold, tiling, carpet installation, fixing of stairs, etc...
They seem overworked and no one is posting about them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here: I acknowledge that teachers feel overworked.
Heck, I’ll take it. I notice you used “feel” instead of “are,” but this is still one of the nicer things on this thread. Thank you!
-A teacher heading into hour 11 of work today. Just 2 more hours of grading to go. (So… a normal day.)
Maybe if you spent less time on DCUM…
Cute response. I am allowed to take a breather from grading every 3-4 essays, correct? I always tell my students to look up from studying every 30 minutes or so…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here: I acknowledge that teachers feel overworked.
Heck, I’ll take it. I notice you used “feel” instead of “are,” but this is still one of the nicer things on this thread. Thank you!
-A teacher heading into hour 11 of work today. Just 2 more hours of grading to go. (So… a normal day.)
Maybe if you spent less time on DCUM…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here: I acknowledge that teachers feel overworked.
Heck, I’ll take it. I notice you used “feel” instead of “are,” but this is still one of the nicer things on this thread. Thank you!
-A teacher heading into hour 11 of work today. Just 2 more hours of grading to go. (So… a normal day.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha. I certainly have not read all 40-something pages of this thread, but in response to the title: lol. I CONSTANTLY hear about how teachers are exhausted / overworked etc etc. Teachers complain more than any other profession I can think of. If anything, this is OVER acknowledged.
If the title has been “why does no one acknowledge how overworked nurses/childcare workers/sales managers/etc are”, you would have had my attention
This is the schools and education forum. Why would there be a thread on overworked sales managers or nurses? If you aren’t interested in issues related to education, there are millions of other places to look.
DP. The reason it's relevant to this forum is that parents are constantly being told that teachers are overworked, but guess what? SO. ARE. PARENTS. That's the point. Everyone is overworked. Like, are you kidding me, on year three of a pandemic that has seen most parents working full time while also needing to keep kids home for months during school closures, or weeks during quarantines, scrambling to find childcare after daycares and aftercare programs shuttered or limited their services due to Covid?
The reason this thread is getting so much pushback is that DCUM is, primarily, a forum for parents, and it feels really rich to say to a bunch of parents "Hey, how come you all aren't acknowledging how overworked teachers are" when (1) most parents I know DO acknowledge this, and (2) there is no acknowledgement that parents, too, are overworked and exhausted and are not really in a position to alleviate the burden on teachers.
Perhaps go find the forum for school district leadership or city council members and ask them why they won't acknowledge that teachers AND parents are overworked and their policies don't seem to recognize the crisis that we are in with regards to education right now. Parents are not the problem and the fact that you think they are indicates that you don't really understand what is going on here.
Anonymous wrote:Here: I acknowledge that teachers feel overworked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha. I certainly have not read all 40-something pages of this thread, but in response to the title: lol. I CONSTANTLY hear about how teachers are exhausted / overworked etc etc. Teachers complain more than any other profession I can think of. If anything, this is OVER acknowledged.
If the title has been “why does no one acknowledge how overworked nurses/childcare workers/sales managers/etc are”, you would have had my attention
This is the schools and education forum. Why would there be a thread on overworked sales managers or nurses? If you aren’t interested in issues related to education, there are millions of other places to look.
DP. The reason it's relevant to this forum is that parents are constantly being told that teachers are overworked, but guess what? SO. ARE. PARENTS. That's the point. Everyone is overworked. Like, are you kidding me, on year three of a pandemic that has seen most parents working full time while also needing to keep kids home for months during school closures, or weeks during quarantines, scrambling to find childcare after daycares and aftercare programs shuttered or limited their services due to Covid?
The reason this thread is getting so much pushback is that DCUM is, primarily, a forum for parents, and it feels really rich to say to a bunch of parents "Hey, how come you all aren't acknowledging how overworked teachers are" when (1) most parents I know DO acknowledge this, and (2) there is no acknowledgement that parents, too, are overworked and exhausted and are not really in a position to alleviate the burden on teachers.
Perhaps go find the forum for school district leadership or city council members and ask them why they won't acknowledge that teachers AND parents are overworked and their policies don't seem to recognize the crisis that we are in with regards to education right now. Parents are not the problem and the fact that you think they are indicates that you don't really understand what is going on here.
Yeah, after the two years of the pandemic, parents on these boards showed their true colors. Not all of them, but enough to definitely let me know how the collective "you" felt about us.
Certainly, we hear from teachers every day how you feel about "us". Please don't pretend that teachers have universally been modelling good behavior on this board or really anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha. I certainly have not read all 40-something pages of this thread, but in response to the title: lol. I CONSTANTLY hear about how teachers are exhausted / overworked etc etc. Teachers complain more than any other profession I can think of. If anything, this is OVER acknowledged.
If the title has been “why does no one acknowledge how overworked nurses/childcare workers/sales managers/etc are”, you would have had my attention
This is the schools and education forum. Why would there be a thread on overworked sales managers or nurses? If you aren’t interested in issues related to education, there are millions of other places to look.
DP. The reason it's relevant to this forum is that parents are constantly being told that teachers are overworked, but guess what? SO. ARE. PARENTS. That's the point. Everyone is overworked. Like, are you kidding me, on year three of a pandemic that has seen most parents working full time while also needing to keep kids home for months during school closures, or weeks during quarantines, scrambling to find childcare after daycares and aftercare programs shuttered or limited their services due to Covid?
The reason this thread is getting so much pushback is that DCUM is, primarily, a forum for parents, and it feels really rich to say to a bunch of parents "Hey, how come you all aren't acknowledging how overworked teachers are" when (1) most parents I know DO acknowledge this, and (2) there is no acknowledgement that parents, too, are overworked and exhausted and are not really in a position to alleviate the burden on teachers.
Perhaps go find the forum for school district leadership or city council members and ask them why they won't acknowledge that teachers AND parents are overworked and their policies don't seem to recognize the crisis that we are in with regards to education right now. Parents are not the problem and the fact that you think they are indicates that you don't really understand what is going on here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha. I certainly have not read all 40-something pages of this thread, but in response to the title: lol. I CONSTANTLY hear about how teachers are exhausted / overworked etc etc. Teachers complain more than any other profession I can think of. If anything, this is OVER acknowledged.
If the title has been “why does no one acknowledge how overworked nurses/childcare workers/sales managers/etc are”, you would have had my attention
This is the schools and education forum. Why would there be a thread on overworked sales managers or nurses? If you aren’t interested in issues related to education, there are millions of other places to look.
DP. The reason it's relevant to this forum is that parents are constantly being told that teachers are overworked, but guess what? SO. ARE. PARENTS. That's the point. Everyone is overworked. Like, are you kidding me, on year three of a pandemic that has seen most parents working full time while also needing to keep kids home for months during school closures, or weeks during quarantines, scrambling to find childcare after daycares and aftercare programs shuttered or limited their services due to Covid?
The reason this thread is getting so much pushback is that DCUM is, primarily, a forum for parents, and it feels really rich to say to a bunch of parents "Hey, how come you all aren't acknowledging how overworked teachers are" when (1) most parents I know DO acknowledge this, and (2) there is no acknowledgement that parents, too, are overworked and exhausted and are not really in a position to alleviate the burden on teachers.
Perhaps go find the forum for school district leadership or city council members and ask them why they won't acknowledge that teachers AND parents are overworked and their policies don't seem to recognize the crisis that we are in with regards to education right now. Parents are not the problem and the fact that you think they are indicates that you don't really understand what is going on here.
Yeah, after the two years of the pandemic, parents on these boards showed their true colors. Not all of them, but enough to definitely let me know how the collective "you" felt about us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers lost all credibility when they chose not to teach and sold the idea that it didn't really matter
They did teach. Their employers set the conditions of their employment, not you. Enjoy staying ignorant.
Most did not teach and did not oppose the teaching bans.
The profession is dead.
good parenting seems to be dead too.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a GS-15 fed. Ph.D. social scientists with 8 years experience make less as a GS-9 at my federal agency than a first year teach with a BA and a license at my son's school. The first several years I was in a "prestigious" fellowship after grad school, I lived in subsidized public housing and had two additional jobs, one under the table as a personal assistant so I could pay my student loans and another job at night and on weekends working in public health outreach (think going to gay clubs and handing out condoms and giving HS students at a HS clinic pregnancy and STI tests). Everyone thought I "made" it and I was living in a closet in my grad school's studio apartment in Columbia Heights.
My mom, brother and several other family members are teachers. With the exception of my mom who worked nights and weekends as a manager at KMart, no one else had a second job or was considered underpaid where we lived. And they get paid a lot less than DMV teachers and my mom has a highly skilled, highly sought after specialty and two masters degrees and national board certification as a teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haha. I certainly have not read all 40-something pages of this thread, but in response to the title: lol. I CONSTANTLY hear about how teachers are exhausted / overworked etc etc. Teachers complain more than any other profession I can think of. If anything, this is OVER acknowledged.
If the title has been “why does no one acknowledge how overworked nurses/childcare workers/sales managers/etc are”, you would have had my attention
This is the schools and education forum. Why would there be a thread on overworked sales managers or nurses? If you aren’t interested in issues related to education, there are millions of other places to look.
DP. The reason it's relevant to this forum is that parents are constantly being told that teachers are overworked, but guess what? SO. ARE. PARENTS. That's the point. Everyone is overworked. Like, are you kidding me, on year three of a pandemic that has seen most parents working full time while also needing to keep kids home for months during school closures, or weeks during quarantines, scrambling to find childcare after daycares and aftercare programs shuttered or limited their services due to Covid?
The reason this thread is getting so much pushback is that DCUM is, primarily, a forum for parents, and it feels really rich to say to a bunch of parents "Hey, how come you all aren't acknowledging how overworked teachers are" when (1) most parents I know DO acknowledge this, and (2) there is no acknowledgement that parents, too, are overworked and exhausted and are not really in a position to alleviate the burden on teachers.
Perhaps go find the forum for school district leadership or city council members and ask them why they won't acknowledge that teachers AND parents are overworked and their policies don't seem to recognize the crisis that we are in with regards to education right now. Parents are not the problem and the fact that you think they are indicates that you don't really understand what is going on here.