Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
I figure 8-4:00 in the building (half hour before and after students) so that’s 40 hours. I then figure ~2 hours each night Sunday through Thursday making sure I have my ducks in a row for the next day. (What are we doing for our Morning Meeting greeting, share, activity and message, what sense making activity for math, which lesson with the phonics group, which lesson with the phonological awareness group, which math stations, who to meet with during the intervention block, etc?). That’s another 10 right there. Combine or add some more time for checking student work, putting together weekly email updates, etc.
This is my 30th year. I didn’t used to put in as many hours, but I didn’t have as much to plan for and I had fewer meetings during the school day. I used to be able to leave school planned and ready for the next day
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
Anonymous wrote:Maybe something like working for a research company. I make around mid-60s and have good benefits. The company I work for, as well as many others, do research into different education topics. With your background, this would be a good fit. I work 40 hours a week and the work isn’t very difficult but it’s interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
I'm not that poster, but we have faculty meetings, small group meetings, IEP meetings, and of course teachers are there before the school day starts and stay after the day ends. There's also professional development, preparing curriculum, etc.
Still doesn’t add up. If you are having 10 hrs of meetings that 2 hrs EVERY DAY
I'm not a teacher but this is the exact thing I hear every teacher say. I think things are very different now from when your parents were teachers.
So you have 2 hrs of meetings EVERY DAY? I swear I see many teachers leaving campus after school when i am there for extended day at 430pm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some ideas I had:
MSW to go into counseling or other social work
MLIS for library work or doing information systems work for organizations
Associates degree or Masters to go into nursing
But… apart from maybe library work (which seems to be a dying field) these options seem like they may be even harder than teaching.
Lol. If easy is doing technically sophisticated work while being underpaid and treated like 2nd class colleagues is easy, go for it.
MSW and nursing work is also challenging and draining.
These are all disrespected pink collar jobs, not easy jobs.
I am ok with low pay and with being disrespected. But it would be great to feel more human. I don’t think people realize what I mean when I say I make less than Starbucks workers. I make way less than 50k. I’m happy to get a degree and be “underpaid” in a difficult job at 50k. I would like to be able to pee when I want to though. And I’d like to feel my work is somewhat meaningful. I don’t need it to give my life meaning, but I’d like to feel like more than a body.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
I'm not that poster, but we have faculty meetings, small group meetings, IEP meetings, and of course teachers are there before the school day starts and stay after the day ends. There's also professional development, preparing curriculum, etc.
Still doesn’t add up. If you are having 10 hrs of meetings that 2 hrs EVERY DAY
I'm not a teacher but this is the exact thing I hear every teacher say. I think things are very different now from when your parents were teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
I'm not that poster, but we have faculty meetings, small group meetings, IEP meetings, and of course teachers are there before the school day starts and stay after the day ends. There's also professional development, preparing curriculum, etc.
Still doesn’t add up. If you are having 10 hrs of meetings that 2 hrs EVERY DAY
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
I'm not that poster, but we have faculty meetings, small group meetings, IEP meetings, and of course teachers are there before the school day starts and stay after the day ends. There's also professional development, preparing curriculum, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Kids are in school 6.5 hours a day, 32.5 hrs/ week. Elementary students don’t have much (or any in most DMV districts) homework.
What in the world are you doing the other 20 hrs of the week? Sure, your first year teaching planning maybe daunting, but once you have a curriculum you just tweak from year to year (parents were teachers)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you explain what you don’t like about your current job? Not sure what you are hoping to change.
I guess the things I don't like add up to feeling almost inhuman:
-not being able to go to the bathroom for hours (because you can't leave kids alone and there isn't a second adult)
-being massively underpaid-- I calculated by hours worked and if I break it down by hour, Starbucks and other wage workers make more than I do.
-being disrespected by students, parents, admin. Of course some are lovely, but the bad apples are... bad.
-having to skip meals or choke down a granola bar in the bathroom because of being pulled into subbing and having no lunch time. The reason for eating in the bathroom is because I don't think we are supposed to eat in front of students / in the classroom.
I guess I'd like to be able to drink water and go to the bathroom. And maybe make a little more than what amounts to about $17/hour. Summers off are nice, but I often end up working or doing classes so I don't actually take summer break.
Are you making less than $40k? If you work 55 hours a week (I’m usually in the 50-55 hour range) for the entire school year and average it out to $17/hour, it would be about $36,500 a year.
ES Teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you like to be around people? Working on teams? Do you need your work to be interesting?
If not, I recommend “back office” work for a federal contractor. It’s in house and mostly remote. Subcontracts, compliance, purchasing, contract closeout, accounts payable, records retention. There are a ton of jobs, I supervise several, that are fully remote, 40hrs a week if you work slow, that pay $65-90k. The catch is you work from home and talk to people 1-3x a week. It’s self paced, but detail oriented work. For some people, they would lose their minds with boredom and loneliness. For the right person, it’s a perfect job with minimal stress.
Sounds ideal for me (NP). How does someone break into these jobs? Do you need a particular degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you have a fundamental problem that is true of many people who get degrees, especially advanced ones. People who get such degrees are generally not risk takers or ambitious. Instead, they want their degree to get a job for them. And, as you say, they want to be paid professional wages for not doing much. When you really break it down, the argument is, "I'm smart. I have degrees. I should be paid well just because I'm a smart, interesting, and a great resource." The problem is, private business doesn't think this way. Your best best is a non-profit or government job, because they somewhat buy-in to your argument that well-educated people should be paid well. My advice is to get a generic, staff-level federal government job.
I totally admit to being risk averse and unambitious. However, I don’t expect to have a well paying job at all. I’m looking more for a little more job satisfaction and a little more pay. Not a high paying job, just highER paying. 50k sounds great to me. But again, it’s not the money that is the main motivation here. I’m looking for a better fit career wise. I do have a desire to help people, I think, which is why I mentioned the fields I did. I get that they are not without stress and not high paying professions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s tons of easy jobs but most of them don’t pay well. I do literally almost nothing on my shifts but I only make $50k a year.
You make more than I do, unless I work summer camp.
-OP
Why do you make so little as a teacher? Where do you teach? If you got certified you could probably get a better paying teaching job. It wouldn't be an easy job though.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have a fundamental problem that is true of many people who get degrees, especially advanced ones. People who get such degrees are generally not risk takers or ambitious. Instead, they want their degree to get a job for them. And, as you say, they want to be paid professional wages for not doing much. When you really break it down, the argument is, "I'm smart. I have degrees. I should be paid well just because I'm a smart, interesting, and a great resource." The problem is, private business doesn't think this way. Your best best is a non-profit or government job, because they somewhat buy-in to your argument that well-educated people should be paid well. My advice is to get a generic, staff-level federal government job.