Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to teach K-3 I don’t see why a college degree would be needed given the teacher shortage. Any adult who clears a background check, and can read, write grammatically correct sentences, and do some basic math should be able to teach.
With jokers like this in public, I am so glad I am going private
Private schools very often don’t have good teachers.
Not data, thanks for playing
NP. You must be one of those poor private school teacher.
You don’t need teacher data to know if a private school has good teachers. You need salary data. My oldest just took a job with a private middle school. He has 4 years experience with a Title I high school and just finished his Masters. Pay is $88,000 plus decent benefits. School has good reputation and nice facilities. Not hard to see they are getting good staff. Wonder why that could be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure former military are the best people for the job. School isn’t the military and students can get away with a lot due to no consequences. Military folks would be in for a rude awakening at a public school these days.
Actually, I think the misbehaving students and their parents would be the ones in for a rude awakening these days. And I will cheer it on!
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure former military are the best people for the job. School isn’t the military and students can get away with a lot due to no consequences. Military folks would be in for a rude awakening at a public school these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/07/21/florida-education-program-military-veterans-teach/10117107002/
What a horrible disservice this is to children! Being in the military or simply being married to someone who was in the military does not qualify anyone to educate young people. They only need half of a degree, a low gpa, and a passing test score - Florida's children are doomed. This is the state's cheapest possible option to get warm bodies into classrooms - not educators. This is how little they care for the future.
Just like in private schools in DC. No degree or hours necessary; they will train you over the year and provide the curriculum and you can pick and choose what to teach and how.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/07/21/florida-education-program-military-veterans-teach/10117107002/
What a horrible disservice this is to children! Being in the military or simply being married to someone who was in the military does not qualify anyone to educate young people. They only need half of a degree, a low gpa, and a passing test score - Florida's children are doomed. This is the state's cheapest possible option to get warm bodies into classrooms - not educators. This is how little they care for the future.
Just like in private schools in DC. No degree or hours necessary; they will train you over the year and provide the curriculum and you can pick and choose what to teach and how.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/07/21/florida-education-program-military-veterans-teach/10117107002/
What a horrible disservice this is to children! Being in the military or simply being married to someone who was in the military does not qualify anyone to educate young people. They only need half of a degree, a low gpa, and a passing test score - Florida's children are doomed. This is the state's cheapest possible option to get warm bodies into classrooms - not educators. This is how little they care for the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2022/07/21/florida-education-program-military-veterans-teach/10117107002/
What a horrible disservice this is to children! Being in the military or simply being married to someone who was in the military does not qualify anyone to educate young people. They only need half of a degree, a low gpa, and a passing test score - Florida's children are doomed. This is the state's cheapest possible option to get warm bodies into classrooms - not educators. This is how little they care for the future.
To be fair, the politicians' kids are probably in private school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to teach K-3 I don’t see why a college degree would be needed given the teacher shortage. Any adult who clears a background check, and can read, write grammatically correct sentences, and do some basic math should be able to teach.
But since 50% of all new teachers quit by year 5, it should indicate that this job is not for everyone.
The teachers I knew who quit after a few years did so to have kids and stay home with them since it is relatively easy to re-enter teaching after a career break for the little kid years. Most went back after kids were in school.
No idea if that is statistically common but is seems very likely to be a sizable chunk of the 50% loss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to teach K-3 I don’t see why a college degree would be needed given the teacher shortage. Any adult who clears a background check, and can read, write grammatically correct sentences, and do some basic math should be able to teach.
With jokers like this in public, I am so glad I am going private
Private schools very often don’t have good teachers.
Not data, thanks for playing
NP. You must be one of those poor private school teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Why the military. Why? What is so special about the military? I don't "get it"
Can someone explain the thinking. Even if I don't agree, I want to know --- what are they thinking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to teach K-3 I don’t see why a college degree would be needed given the teacher shortage. Any adult who clears a background check, and can read, write grammatically correct sentences, and do some basic math should be able to teach.
With jokers like this in public, I am so glad I am going private
Private schools very often don’t have good teachers.
Not data, thanks for playing