Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A teacher with a masters degree and 10 years of experience (in the county) is paid roughly $48/hour for their contract hours. Any hours beyond their 40 hour work week is unpaid.
Last week I worked an additional 15 hours. If I were to recalculated my pay based on the hours worked, I received ~$35/hr.
In this high cost of living area, I couldn't afford to have children and live in this county without my husband's salary.
Why can't teacher median salaries reflect the areas they serve?
By additional hours, do you mean the time needed to prepare lessons or grade assignments? That's your job, a responsibility you knew you would have by making a career choice to be a teacher.Part of the trade off for having so many holidays and summers off.
If your job is so terrible, change careers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And maybe the County Council can share in some blame. They are the ones approving rampant unchecked, overdevelopment without planning for additional schools to meet the needs of the exploding population.
It actually isn't rampant unchecked overdevelopment (although it can feel that way, when you see the new buildings in some areas), and the population isn't exploding.
"The rate of new housing construction is well below levels typical of recent decades and is not nearly enough to keep up even with moderate rates of population and job growth" - see the chart with the title "New Housing Units Reported in Building Permits" at the bottom of this blog post:
https://montgomeryplanning.org/blog-design/2018/07/population-job-growth-and-housing-supply/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A teacher with a masters degree and 10 years of experience (in the county) is paid roughly $48/hour for their contract hours. Any hours beyond their 40 hour work week is unpaid.
Last week I worked an additional 15 hours. If I were to recalculated my pay based on the hours worked, I received ~$35/hr.
In this high cost of living area, I couldn't afford to have children and live in this county without my husband's salary.
Why can't teacher median salaries reflect the areas they serve?
By additional hours, do you mean the time needed to prepare lessons or grade assignments? That's your job, a responsibility you knew you would have by making a career choice to be a teacher.Part of the trade off for having so many holidays and summers off.
If your job is so terrible, change careers.
Anonymous wrote:
By additional hours, do you mean the time needed to prepare lessons or grade assignments? That's your job, a responsibility you knew you would have by making a career choice to be a teacher.Part of the trade off for having so many holidays and summers off.
If your job is so terrible, change careers.
Anonymous wrote:A teacher with a masters degree and 10 years of experience (in the county) is paid roughly $48/hour for their contract hours. Any hours beyond their 40 hour work week is unpaid.
Last week I worked an additional 15 hours. If I were to recalculated my pay based on the hours worked, I received ~$35/hr.
In this high cost of living area, I couldn't afford to have children and live in this county without my husband's salary.
Why can't teacher median salaries reflect the areas they serve?
Anonymous wrote:A teacher with a masters degree and 10 years of experience (in the county) is paid roughly $48/hour for their contract hours. Any hours beyond their 40 hour work week is unpaid.
Last week I worked an additional 15 hours. If I were to recalculated my pay based on the hours worked, I received ~$35/hr.
In this high cost of living area, I couldn't afford to have children and live in this county without my husband's salary.
Why can't teacher median salaries reflect the areas they serve?
Anonymous wrote:A teacher with a masters degree and 10 years of experience (in the county) is paid roughly $48/hour for their contract hours. Any hours beyond their 40 hour work week is unpaid.
Last week I worked an additional 15 hours. If I were to recalculated my pay based on the hours worked, I received ~$35/hr.
In this high cost of living area, I couldn't afford to have children and live in this county without my husband's salary.
Why can't teacher median salaries reflect the areas they serve?
Anonymous wrote:
And maybe the County Council can share in some blame. They are the ones approving rampant unchecked, overdevelopment without planning for additional schools to meet the needs of the exploding population.
Many years ago I did exactly that. It was great having summers off in addition to all the other holidays. In total, you get around 15 weeks off each year. This blows away the private sector, and don't get me started on the pension! I've been living off mine for the past 25 years and hope to be around for another 25. Overall it's a great field to be in if you work in a rich county like MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.mymcmedia.org/hogan-issues-executive-order-for-school-accountability/
“There is a persistent and alarming lack of accountability in local school systems across the state,” said Hogan. “It cannot and will not be tolerated by our administration.”
The article talks about PG County, but hopefully some of this will transfer over to MCPS. MCPS really, really needs someone to hold it accountable. Fingers crossed it leads to some positive changes. Especially when it comes to keeping kids safe from sexual abusers.
Can not wait to vote for this man again! Love him
Make Montgomery County Great Again!
I don't see how withholding school funds from MCPS has made it great again.
+1 Educational quality has dropped sharply during Hogan's tenure, but you know....who cares about facts?
Wait, what? You want to blame the decline of MCPS on Hogan? Can you clarify?
Did Hogan implement a crappy curriculum for MCPS? No, that was all MCPS on its own.
Did Hogan decide to spend $5 million on that useless curriculum? Nope, that was MCPS again.
Did Hogan encourage MCPS to shelter child sexual abusers over the past decade? Nope, again that was MCPS leadership.
I blame MCPS for the complete lack of leadership and lack of organization.
And maybe the County Council can share in some blame. They are the ones approving rampant unchecked, overdevelopment without planning for additional schools to meet the needs of the exploding population.
Anonymous wrote:Is MCPS liberal?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.mymcmedia.org/hogan-issues-executive-order-for-school-accountability/
“There is a persistent and alarming lack of accountability in local school systems across the state,” said Hogan. “It cannot and will not be tolerated by our administration.”
The article talks about PG County, but hopefully some of this will transfer over to MCPS. MCPS really, really needs someone to hold it accountable. Fingers crossed it leads to some positive changes. Especially when it comes to keeping kids safe from sexual abusers.
Can not wait to vote for this man again! Love him
Make Montgomery County Great Again!
I don't see how withholding school funds from MCPS has made it great again.
+1 Educational quality has dropped sharply during Hogan's tenure, but you know....who cares about facts?
Wait, what? You want to blame the decline of MCPS on Hogan? Can you clarify?
Did Hogan implement a crappy curriculum for MCPS? No, that was all MCPS on its own.
Did Hogan decide to spend $5 million on that useless curriculum? Nope, that was MCPS again.
Did Hogan encourage MCPS to shelter child sexual abusers over the past decade? Nope, again that was MCPS leadership.
I blame MCPS for the complete lack of leadership and lack of organization.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I wouldn't classify MCPS teachers as being underpaid. Teachers can easily make 6 figures for working 180 days per year not to mention a generous pension the likes of which nobody in the private sector gets.
I never understand why people believe that teachers work 180 days a year. And I am not a teacher.
Here is the current teacher salary schedule: https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/ersc/employees/pay/schedules/FY19%20MCEA%20Salary%20Schedules.pdf
A new teacher coming in with a bachelor's degree makes $49,013. The top salary, for a teacher at step 25 with a master's degree or equivalent plus 60 credit hours, is $109,449.
It's better pay than Oklahoma, West Virginia, or Arizona, certainly. But nobody is getting rich in Montgomery County by being a teacher.
Also, as always, it raises the question: if being a teacher is so well-paid, for so little work, with such a great pension (that you can't get in the private sector) -- why haven't you switched fields to become a teacher?
Many years ago I did exactly that. It was great having summers off in addition to all the other holidays. In total, you get around 15 weeks off each year. This blows away the private sector, and don't get me started on the pension! I've been living off mine for the past 25 years and hope to be around for another 25. Overall it's a great field to be in if you work in a rich county like MCPS.