C.Ann said:-----------------------------
I agree.. I was responding to a comment made by familydisney..![]()
Oh I know! I should have said I was agreeing with you!
C.Ann said:-----------------------------
I agree.. I was responding to a comment made by familydisney..![]()
---------------------my4kids said:I took mine out for 4 days unexcused absence. i thought it would not be a big deal. It was a huge deal!!!!!!!! They not only had to make up the homework , but every last worksheet and page of school work they missed during school hours! - Also, because it was an unexcused absence, the teachers were not required to give us the work ahead of time, but gave it to us when we returned. It had been so horrible trying to make up 32 hours worth of work that the kids have begged me to never take them out of school again. DD has been going to school sick for the last 2 days because she is terrified of missing more work!
MrsPete said:I don't think so. I live in a poor state, and we have almost THREE TIMES that much per student. Still, there is NO PROFIT. By law, there is no profit.
Consider the cost of the buildings (in our area they have bond costs), the cost of utilities, the busses (that's a huge one), the cost of materials, teacher salaries . . . it's astronomical. I seriously doubt any public school is doing it for 2K. (Okay, private schools can do it for little more than 2K, but they aren't providing busses, athletic programs, and -- the biggie: special education services, which are required by law.)
The pay for a classroom teacher is woefully inadequate
leighe said:I do try to get work together in advance if a student tells me they are going on vacation (I teach high school so I don't honestly have to deal with this a lot). Once, however, I had a parent send the work back to me because she claimed it was "busy work" and not "engaging lessons." Although the work wasn't just "busy work" I certainly can't pre-package "engaging lessons" to be done on an airplane. I kept picturing the kid having to set up learning stations on the plane (to mirror those we used in class that week), dividing the passengers up into groups, giving each group a different primary source, etc.![]()
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Lisa loves Pooh said:![]()
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I guess she expected you to record a DVD so that Junior could be engaged with his/her portable DVD player.
I can't believe you worked with her--and then she had the audacity to tell you it wasn't good enough.
The pay for a classroom teacher is woefully inadequate
WIcruizer said:That's just not true. The pay must be adequate, or you wouldn't have accepted and stayed in your current position.
MrsPete said:I don't think so. I live in a poor state, and we have almost THREE TIMES that much per student. Still, there is NO PROFIT. By law, there is no profit.
Consider the cost of the buildings (in our area they have bond costs), the cost of utilities, the busses (that's a huge one), the cost of materials, teacher salaries . . . it's astronomical. I seriously doubt any public school is doing it for 2K. (Okay, private schools can do it for little more than 2K, but they aren't providing busses, athletic programs, and -- the biggie: special education services, which are required by law.)
rt2dz said:There are a lot of people out there who do a job not because of the pay, but because it is what they want to do.
To put it simply someone asked my son what he was going to be when he grew up. He said a palentogist. They responded that was quite an interesting job. My son said, "it's not a job, it's fun."
familydisney said:I'd like to stop the insanity of this and tell all people who actually struggled through these posts to think before they speak and act. Pulling your kids out continually for vacations shows children that you value vacations more than education. Bad mouthing teachers show them that you don't respect them, so why should your kids? Disregard for the rules, be they "Fair" or not, will teach them insubordination is a good thing or that the rules don't apply to them. It's ok to fight the system as long as your reasons are just, but can any of us say that the American education system is flawed because we are trying to keep your kids in school?
familydisney said:but these 17 pages are the reason I'm frustrated in my profession...
1) Parents think it's fine to take their kids out for 5-14 days for vacations, many times when the student is struggling.
2) Parents also get angry with me when I can't accommodate their vacations because I can't have a student make up class participation or do my lesson plans months in advance for them.
3) Parents don't call me a professional, treat me as a professional, or by any means pay me as a professional
4) Parents expect me to act like a professional in spite of this.
5) When their children fail, they blame me rather than their own decisions and parenting.
6) Parents underestimate the power of attendance when it suits them and overestimate it when it's me missing a day.
7) The pay for a classroom teacher is woefully inadequate when you consider
that the animosity shown to teachers on this board is the prevailing attitude in our communities.
8) We struggle with unruly students, unruly parents, unruly administrators and decades worth of "bad press".
I know this sounds negative and cynical, and maybe I am just a little. I love my job and have been doing it for 13 years. I deal with many fabulous students and supportive parents, but I find it shameful that teachers are held up as paragons of virtue and the ultimate role models (one of the first posts even compared teachers to priests, for goodness sake!) and then are continually thrown under the bus. I know that most people consider teaching an inferior job because in the US, a person's value is equivalent to his salary. Many students assume their teachers aren't supposed to be smart because if they were, they'd be in a different profession...I wonder where they got that idea...
I'd like to stop the insanity of this and tell all people who actually struggled through these posts to think before they speak and act. Pulling your kids out continually for vacations shows children that you value vacations more than education. Bad mouthing teachers show them that you don't respect them, so why should your kids? Disregard for the rules, be they "Fair" or not, will teach them insubordination is a good thing or that the rules don't apply to them. It's ok to fight the system as long as your reasons are just, but can any of us say that the American education system is flawed because we are trying to keep your kids in school?
graygables said:I'm sure teachers would like to think that they are the only educators, but *I* was the one who taught my DDs to walk, talk, use the potty, hold a crayon, and read. I didn't pawn those responsibilities off on a preschool somewhere.
graygables said:The American education system is flawed b/c so many parents have handed over the rearing of their children to teachers (preschool on up) rather than doing it themselves. .
graygables said:Just a thought...athletic programs should not be funded by taxpayer dollars.
graygables said:. The American education system is flawed b/c so many parents have handed over the rearing of their children to teachers (preschool on up) rather than doing it themselves. For those of us who believe that it's OUR responsibililty to rear our OWN children, the "rules" overstep the bounds and it is our duty to challenge them for the sake of our children's children.
Which is better? Learning *about* Rome from a textbook, or VISITING Rome? They are literally worlds apart.
leighe said:The rules have to be enforced equally, however, in fairness to all kids. You can't go through a classroom and say "Well, you have parents who care about you and your welfare so you are exempt from the following rules," or "Your parents are terrible so you have to follow these rules so you'll have some structure in your life."
WIcruizer said:We're talking about WDW, not Rome. I can picture it now. Telling HS and MS teachers that we want our kids excused for educational purposes. AK for science. Epcot for History and Geography. MGM for Comm Arts. MK for Phys Ed.