Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Anonymous wrote:
It's terrible to see the schadenfreude, but good to know that it will be shortlived. Families who took their kids out of public will come running back when schools open in the fall because they cannot afford private school long-term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Go to RWNJ state for vouchers. Not happening around here. We value education too much to inflict that on ourselves.
Sorry, even if you have given up on the public school system, you don't get vouchers. Since before you were born, everyone pays the taxes that go into public schools. That includes millions of people who have no children, have children in private or parochial schools or children that are grown up and out of the system. Just because you don't like the public school system, you don't get to take that tax money back out to apply to private school tuition. This is like me saying that since I don't drive on any of the roads in your part of the state, I should get my infrastructure money back so that I can apply it to a new car that I drive in my part of the state. Pubic schools are a taxable item and are there for anyone who lives in the jurisdiction. We all pay for that whether we use it or not. We all pay taxes for many, many government agencies and budget items that we don't use. You don't get line item veto of the items you don't use.
So, you are welcome to send your child to a private or parochial school, but if you do so, you pay for the tuition out of your pocket and don't get to take back the tax money you paid to support the public schools.
Yup. I don’t agree that we should spend 600 billion+ dollars every year on our military, but that doesn’t mean that I get a refund on my taxes. Bummer.
No one is talking about just not paying taxes. I’m talking about advocating for legislation putting a voucher system in place and voting for people likely to support that platform. Just like you can do the same to try to reduce defense spending if that’s your priority.
No way, no how.
Don't defund our schools when they need support, more now than ever.
Ha- after the schools turned their back on parents like me that needed support this year I have zero loyalty to them.
Cool whine. Nobody is getting vouchers. Feel free to pay for private though!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Go to RWNJ state for vouchers. Not happening around here. We value education too much to inflict that on ourselves.
Sorry, even if you have given up on the public school system, you don't get vouchers. Since before you were born, everyone pays the taxes that go into public schools. That includes millions of people who have no children, have children in private or parochial schools or children that are grown up and out of the system. Just because you don't like the public school system, you don't get to take that tax money back out to apply to private school tuition. This is like me saying that since I don't drive on any of the roads in your part of the state, I should get my infrastructure money back so that I can apply it to a new car that I drive in my part of the state. Pubic schools are a taxable item and are there for anyone who lives in the jurisdiction. We all pay for that whether we use it or not. We all pay taxes for many, many government agencies and budget items that we don't use. You don't get line item veto of the items you don't use.
So, you are welcome to send your child to a private or parochial school, but if you do so, you pay for the tuition out of your pocket and don't get to take back the tax money you paid to support the public schools.
Yup. I don’t agree that we should spend 600 billion+ dollars every year on our military, but that doesn’t mean that I get a refund on my taxes. Bummer.
No one is talking about just not paying taxes. I’m talking about advocating for legislation putting a voucher system in place and voting for people likely to support that platform. Just like you can do the same to try to reduce defense spending if that’s your priority.
No way, no how.
Don't defund our schools when they need support, more now than ever.
Ha- after the schools turned their back on parents like me that needed support this year I have zero loyalty to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Go to RWNJ state for vouchers. Not happening around here. We value education too much to inflict that on ourselves.
Sorry, even if you have given up on the public school system, you don't get vouchers. Since before you were born, everyone pays the taxes that go into public schools. That includes millions of people who have no children, have children in private or parochial schools or children that are grown up and out of the system. Just because you don't like the public school system, you don't get to take that tax money back out to apply to private school tuition. This is like me saying that since I don't drive on any of the roads in your part of the state, I should get my infrastructure money back so that I can apply it to a new car that I drive in my part of the state. Pubic schools are a taxable item and are there for anyone who lives in the jurisdiction. We all pay for that whether we use it or not. We all pay taxes for many, many government agencies and budget items that we don't use. You don't get line item veto of the items you don't use.
So, you are welcome to send your child to a private or parochial school, but if you do so, you pay for the tuition out of your pocket and don't get to take back the tax money you paid to support the public schools.
Yup. I don’t agree that we should spend 600 billion+ dollars every year on our military, but that doesn’t mean that I get a refund on my taxes. Bummer.
No one is talking about just not paying taxes. I’m talking about advocating for legislation putting a voucher system in place and voting for people likely to support that platform. Just like you can do the same to try to reduce defense spending if that’s your priority.
No way, no how.
Don't defund our schools when they need support, more now than ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have heard from two well-placed sources that based on projected enrollment figures in two different public school districts, schools are already planning for teacher lay offs for next school year.
I genuinely wonder if the teachers saw that one coming.
Start with PE lmfao
I teach languages. That’s always In demand. So I’m chillin. F U tho
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is creating a virtual only school permanently. They will need staff to teach those classes separately.
Virtual pays a lot less.
Citation?
It requires specialized facilitation & technical skills.
Google Virtual VA pay. It’s about 40k, minimal benefits.
These are DC-area teachers. COL is much higher than most of VA.
They won’t get paid any less.
Virtual,teachers can be hired from a lower COL area in VA though. They don’t need to live near a school. You think teaching can be outsourced?
This is a district-specific, short-term virtual program. Think they will come up with a different pay-scale and go through the hassle of remote hiring just for this temporary program?
Nope. Will be DC-area teachers with DC-area pay. Probably current teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Go to RWNJ state for vouchers. Not happening around here. We value education too much to inflict that on ourselves.
Sorry, even if you have given up on the public school system, you don't get vouchers. Since before you were born, everyone pays the taxes that go into public schools. That includes millions of people who have no children, have children in private or parochial schools or children that are grown up and out of the system. Just because you don't like the public school system, you don't get to take that tax money back out to apply to private school tuition. This is like me saying that since I don't drive on any of the roads in your part of the state, I should get my infrastructure money back so that I can apply it to a new car that I drive in my part of the state. Pubic schools are a taxable item and are there for anyone who lives in the jurisdiction. We all pay for that whether we use it or not. We all pay taxes for many, many government agencies and budget items that we don't use. You don't get line item veto of the items you don't use.
So, you are welcome to send your child to a private or parochial school, but if you do so, you pay for the tuition out of your pocket and don't get to take back the tax money you paid to support the public schools.
Yup. I don’t agree that we should spend 600 billion+ dollars every year on our military, but that doesn’t mean that I get a refund on my taxes. Bummer.
No one is talking about just not paying taxes. I’m talking about advocating for legislation putting a voucher system in place and voting for people likely to support that platform. Just like you can do the same to try to reduce defense spending if that’s your priority.
No way, no how.
Don't defund our schools when they need support, more now than ever.
Anonymous wrote:I have heard from two well-placed sources that based on projected enrollment figures in two different public school districts, schools are already planning for teacher lay offs for next school year.
I genuinely wonder if the teachers saw that one coming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is creating a virtual only school permanently. They will need staff to teach those classes separately.
Virtual pays a lot less.
Citation?
It requires specialized facilitation & technical skills.
Google Virtual VA pay. It’s about 40k, minimal benefits.
These are DC-area teachers. COL is much higher than most of VA.
They won’t get paid any less.
Virtual,teachers can be hired from a lower COL area in VA though. They don’t need to live near a school. You think teaching can be outsourced?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a young teacher, I can only tell you how many vacancies went unfilled this year. The federal government just allocated a ton of money to state and local governments and earmarked much of it for education. If anything, we will need smaller classes and more teachers next year.
It’s comical that parents claim they want a better education for their children while celebrating something that would have the opposite effect. What parents actually want is compliant, docile women to watch their children all day and now they want revenge.
A lot of us just want vouchers since we have given up on the public school system.
Seriously. Where do I sign up for that?
Go to RWNJ state for vouchers. Not happening around here. We value education too much to inflict that on ourselves.
Sorry, even if you have given up on the public school system, you don't get vouchers. Since before you were born, everyone pays the taxes that go into public schools. That includes millions of people who have no children, have children in private or parochial schools or children that are grown up and out of the system. Just because you don't like the public school system, you don't get to take that tax money back out to apply to private school tuition. This is like me saying that since I don't drive on any of the roads in your part of the state, I should get my infrastructure money back so that I can apply it to a new car that I drive in my part of the state. Pubic schools are a taxable item and are there for anyone who lives in the jurisdiction. We all pay for that whether we use it or not. We all pay taxes for many, many government agencies and budget items that we don't use. You don't get line item veto of the items you don't use.
So, you are welcome to send your child to a private or parochial school, but if you do so, you pay for the tuition out of your pocket and don't get to take back the tax money you paid to support the public schools.
Yup. I don’t agree that we should spend 600 billion+ dollars every year on our military, but that doesn’t mean that I get a refund on my taxes. Bummer.
No one is talking about just not paying taxes. I’m talking about advocating for legislation putting a voucher system in place and voting for people likely to support that platform. Just like you can do the same to try to reduce defense spending if that’s your priority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of teachers retiring earlier than expected or leaving for other careers. I doubt anyone will end up without a teaching job if they want one.
And all of them will be paid a pension, meaning that the school system has to keep paying them until they die. That’s why there will be layoffs and increasing class sizes.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of teachers retiring earlier than expected or leaving for other careers. I doubt anyone will end up without a teaching job if they want one.