DawnM
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 16,630
Well, I do think that in many, many areas of the country, teachers are greatly underpayed.
I am not quite getting the connection between arguing pay of teachers and arguing that parents can teach their own children though. You lost me there.
Dawn
I am not quite getting the connection between arguing pay of teachers and arguing that parents can teach their own children though. You lost me there.
Dawn
I'm in a debate with a teacher at the moment in my current class for my Master's degree. Mind you, I WAS a public school teacher, so it's not like I'm NOT a "trained professional". She's been grousing about the pay. I told her that hour-for-hour, teachers actually do pretty well and if teachers earned that salary 52 weeks instead of 36, it wouldn't be so shabby. She also talked about underperformers getting paid the same as those who go above and beyond. I told her welcome to the real world, it's like that EVERYWHERE. She said that teachers are undervalued by society. I told her that when "ordinary" (although I believe we are "extraordinary" thankyouverymuch) parents can teach their children and those children show up at Harvard, Yale, MIT, etc, it's a hard argument to make that only "trained professionals" can educate children. I also pointed out the parable from Matthew which is featured in our textbook for the class about the men who went to work at different times of day for the farmer who paid them all the same amount, so the ones who worked longer were whining. I told her that teachers don't go into the field without knowing beforehand that the pay stinks, so it's either a calling where there is intrinsic reward or get out and find you a different job.
I'm just SO tired of people who think parents can't educate their children. We are their FIRST teachers!