Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am teaching an elementary grade level. We will be teaching new content. In reading, it will be a Benchmark unit and in math it will be a module that was skipped.
Then new content in math is just a matter of labeling. It’s really remediation.
Anonymous wrote:I am teaching an elementary grade level. We will be teaching new content. In reading, it will be a Benchmark unit and in math it will be a module that was skipped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t think the pay is good enough for me. I was concerned that mostly struggling learners would sign up, and I didn’t want to be cheap daycare for parents. That happened last time I worked summer school and I was worried it would be worse this year. Also MCPS has not been telling staff any details at all. All of the agreements and accommodations expire on June 17th and I don’t feel like being a test case for the issues that crop up.
Isn't that the actual point of summer school is remediation for struggling students?!
Not this year. It’s new content. They are encouraging all students to sign up at the elementary level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t think the pay is good enough for me. I was concerned that mostly struggling learners would sign up, and I didn’t want to be cheap daycare for parents. That happened last time I worked summer school and I was worried it would be worse this year. Also MCPS has not been telling staff any details at all. All of the agreements and accommodations expire on June 17th and I don’t feel like being a test case for the issues that crop up.
Isn't that the actual point of summer school is remediation for struggling students?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t think the pay is good enough for me. I was concerned that mostly struggling learners would sign up, and I didn’t want to be cheap daycare for parents. That happened last time I worked summer school and I was worried it would be worse this year. Also MCPS has not been telling staff any details at all. All of the agreements and accommodations expire on June 17th and I don’t feel like being a test case for the issues that crop up.
Isn't that the actual point of summer school is remediation for struggling students?!
Anonymous wrote:I am a DCPS teacher and MCPS parent. Honestly- teachers did this to themselves. Y’all have spent the better part of the year trying to convince yourself & others that you’d die if you went into your classroom. That IS exhausting. And now- in the fall you’ll have kids who have been running wild since March 2020. That’s kind of how this works…. And why some of us wanted things to actually open this year.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t think the pay is good enough for me. I was concerned that mostly struggling learners would sign up, and I didn’t want to be cheap daycare for parents. That happened last time I worked summer school and I was worried it would be worse this year. Also MCPS has not been telling staff any details at all. All of the agreements and accommodations expire on June 17th and I don’t feel like being a test case for the issues that crop up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out of curiosity, how much money is being offered to teachers who will teach summer school?
It’s less per hour than teachers regularly earn, but there’s a bonus if teachers commit before a certain date AND don’t take off any days of summer school. It’s going to be most attractive to teachers without young children who don’t have other options like tutoring, camp teacher, retail, or bar tending.
This is incorrect. It is our hourly salary rate (minus the usual 33% FICA, FED, and MD tax but with no other deductions) plus they add an extra $200 (33% removed again). Roughly 5 to 6 hours of work a day, but you are not allowed to have any days off during that time. So, it only really works for teachers that have no other commitments or childcare issues. Most staff prefer to focus on a mix of required training, taking state mandated grad classes to keep our teaching certificate, relaxing, home improvement, vacations, and childcare.
Anonymous wrote:It's typically the newer younger teachers who do the summer programs because many don't have kids yet and have the flexibility. They may also want the money. If you are making 50-60,000 then your hourly would be 24-29 dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Out of curiosity, how much money is being offered to teachers who will teach summer school?
Anonymous wrote:Out of curiosity, how much money is being offered to teachers who will teach summer school?