Cleveland Buck;622593 wrote:I didn't realize there were so many teachers here. Maybe that one guy was right and they really are hooking up with students.
Duh
Cleveland Buck;622593 wrote:I didn't realize there were so many teachers here. Maybe that one guy was right and they really are hooking up with students.
Ow! My Balls!;620029 wrote:Not even 13 hours into the new year and we already have our first "teachers are overpaid" thread. Want a cookie?
So let's see,
- actually 200 days for teachers
- P.E. still has to plan for activities (which does happen outside of the school day typically)
- etc...
and if it is such a great job, become a fucking teacher and quit bitching about it.
ccrunner609;622512 wrote: People want to bitch about pay....do you guys realize that after 15-20 years a teacher will teach another 15+ years and only see 2-3 years of built in pay increases? The only way to make more money is to go back to school.
dwccrew;622617 wrote:I would become a teacher, but the field is so oversaturated because there is so many people going into the profession. I wonder why that is..........
Most professions can claim the same thing.
I think the big problem most people have is SOME teachers act as if they are the only profession that has to take work home, work long hours, have to get continuing education, etc. etc. Truth is, teachers and other tax funded professions are about to feel the pain the private sector has felt. I'm not sure if teachers are overpaid, but if there is no money in the district anymore, they are either going to have to take cuts or layoffs.
Toledo is the perfect example. They will be running a huge budget deficit because there is no more tax money in the district. The people have been bled enough and have voted down 2 school levies handily.
I think SOME teachers are overpaid, some underpaid and some are compensated properly. However, I don't think teachers jobs are any harder than many other professions like SOME teachers would like people to believe.
I Wear Pants;622571 wrote:ccrunner, other people are taking pay cuts, not maintaining income against inflation. That's where the animosity comes from. People who aren't teachers see a lot of "damn I only got a small raise" instead of "I wish I made a bit more but at least I got a raise at all" and it can rub them the wrong way when they're taking large pay cuts.
BINGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!! How about working at a job for 7 years and NOT only not getting ANY raise, have your pay cut 7 1/2%!!!!!!!!!! Having a riase to MAINTAIN cost of living income is a luxury!
I Wear Pants;623055 wrote:How does one go to college for 11 years?
visionquest;623051 wrote:All I got from this thread was this or some variation of it>>>>"boo-hoo...whine-whine...I'm not a teacher. They have it made." I went to college for 11 years....make just under 40 grand and educate 140 kids per day. What did you do? Make some steel pipe or something?
I Wear Pants;623055 wrote:How does one go to college for 11 years?
Then you weren't full time for all the normal semesters correct?FatHobbit;623060 wrote:I don't know about visionquest, but I paid my own way through college and got a bachelors in 8.
I Wear Pants;623055 wrote:How does one go to college for 11 years?
I Wear Pants;623098 wrote:Then you weren't full time for all the normal semesters correct?
I was wondering how someone could do it on a "normal" college schedule and be there for 11 years. It obviously can be done if doing classes part time or while working.
Not sure of the trends in Toledo (I do not live there, thanks God!), but what is happening in Central Ohio is that raises, if there are any, are becoming smaller...not to mention that some districts teachers have voted to extend their current contracts at a their current levels (meaning zero percent increases).Scarlet_Buckeye;623260 wrote:I find it very amusing that when teachers are actually confronted with statistical facts about their salaries from non-teachers, coupled with facts about their benefit packages their tune does a 180 and they get all defensive and all they have as a comeback is basically well become a teacher. Non-teachers love to point out these actual facts and statistics because of all the whining and complaining that teachers do year in and year out about how bad they have it. See if I have any compassion when Francine Lawrence, President of the Toledo Federation of Teachers' Union, starts her negotiations which are forthcoming (i.e., like when the district wanted to have teachers pay a nominal co-pay for their doctor's visits which would save the district hundreds of thousands of dollars in their medical insurance ----- but noooooo, the poor teachers can't aford to absorb a co-pay).
Scarlet_Buckeye;623260 wrote:I find it very amusing that when teachers are actually confronted with statistical facts about their salaries from non-teachers, coupled with facts about their benefit packages their tune does a 180 and they get all defensive and all they have as a comeback is basically well become a teacher. Non-teachers love to point out these actual facts and statistics because of all the whining and complaining that teachers do year in and year out about how bad they have it. See if I have any compassion when Francine Lawrence, President of the Toledo Federation of Teachers' Union, starts her negotiations which are forthcoming (i.e., like when the district wanted to have teachers pay a nominal co-pay for their doctor's visits which would save the district hundreds of thousands of dollars in their medical insurance ----- but noooooo, the poor teachers can't aford to absorb a co-pay).
bLuE_71;623337 wrote:I started out at 22,000 STFU I work at the poorest school in the state.
I Wear Pants;623347 wrote:Which explains why you started with a low salary, no?
I have yet to see a teacher respond with anything other than "quit whining".