Anonymous wrote:Teachers have worked as waitresses/waiters, painters, movers, retail workers and tutors in their free time for decades.
I don't see why this would change now.
I know some teachers now that work as servers on their second job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason it rubs you the wrong way is because it’s a clear conflict of interest. If a teacher can make $80 an hour (as one teacher I spoke to told me they are getting) private tutoring, they have obvious incentives to divert attention and planning towards that.
But this is America - for a country with no real culture, the one thing that is undeniably American is the ability for people to exploit moments like this for financial gain.
It bothers me because I’m sure kids will pay the price, but then again, having attempted to teach for 3 months and realizing how hard it is, if my 5th grade teacher moonlights and gets an extra $100K by milking someone, I’m kind of the view “good for you”.
Nobody is making $100k tutoring. They still have day jobs. They’re not teaching pods. If they can work 5 hours a week on evenings making a little extra cash, what’s the problem?
What happens when some of those teachers eventually get sick from making money off their private pod? Do they still get to call in sick? Can they still collect sick pay from the public school? How is that OK?
Anonymous wrote:I’m finding it pretty shocking that currently employed DCPS teachers are charging high rates to provide in-person tutoring after school hours, while their union has fought the notion that they return to work. Loads of them working with various tutoring agencies. Something about this rubs me the wrong way - like public resources becoming unofficially but effectively privatized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a massive conflict of interest because teachers said it was too unsafe to open regular schools and therefore created this crazy need for private pods in the first place!
Imagine if the water company turned off your line but the next day showed up with a truck of bottled water to sell it to you for 10X the cost.
Teacher here, and one who did not oppose in person learning, done safely. We did make our opinions known through the teacher survey. Speaking out more publicly than that would have put many of us in very hot water with our staunchly pro-DL colleagues. Most of us lay low for that reason. What if we had been highly vocal, do you really think that would’ve changed the mayor’s mind? And if it did, what if a child or colleague would have died? The precautionary principle took over on many fronts.
+1
In fact, our union sent out an email just this morning that basically said - we know that some of you wanted to return to the classroom but please respect all the work that has been done on your behalf to keep you and your colleagues safe. Since the union recommends we stay home, it must be the right thing to do! SMH
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a massive conflict of interest because teachers said it was too unsafe to open regular schools and therefore created this crazy need for private pods in the first place!
Imagine if the water company turned off your line but the next day showed up with a truck of bottled water to sell it to you for 10X the cost.
Teacher here, and one who did not oppose in person learning, done safely. We did make our opinions known through the teacher survey. Speaking out more publicly than that would have put many of us in very hot water with our staunchly pro-DL colleagues. Most of us lay low for that reason. What if we had been highly vocal, do you really think that would’ve changed the mayor’s mind? And if it did, what if a child or colleague would have died? The precautionary principle took over on many fronts.
Anonymous wrote:It's a massive conflict of interest because teachers said it was too unsafe to open regular schools and therefore created this crazy need for private pods in the first place!
Imagine if the water company turned off your line but the next day showed up with a truck of bottled water to sell it to you for 10X the cost.
Anonymous wrote:What happens when a teacher gets infected from their private pod? Their public school class suffers because their teacher is now on leave for months. So don't tell us this money grab doesn't affect the regular kids. It's just wrong and selfish all around.