No teacher shortage in the midwest either. Yes teachers were underpaid many, many years ago but not lately. The teachers I know about my age make as much if not more than I would make in my job and that is for working 185 days a year, of course subtract their 2 personal days and that brings it down to 183 days, no weekends, holidays either and as I showed they really only teach a bit over 6 hrs a day, but the have to be there 8hrs. but I would have to work a lot more than 183 days to do it! Some teachers have a lot of take home but others don't- how many papers does a kindergarten teacher have to correct that she can't check in an hour at school? How about Phys Ed teachers? I could put up with a lot of stress for $55,000 a year and their hours. Of course what job that pays 50 thous. doesn't have stress? Plus ours have excellent very cheap benefits, good beyond belief retirement and a guaranteed 4% raise a year. and you wonder why there are so many applicants.
You may speak for your state, but in NC, a teacher WITH a master's degree AND 30 years experience still does not make $55,000. We don't get a 4% raise each year. We got an 8% raise last year, only because we were losing teachers left and right to other states and had not had more than a 1% raise in forever. Here is a link to the new teacher pay scale for NC.
http://www.ncae.org/salaries/proposed0607.pdf
I make $33,000 a year(our charter school has not yet adopted the public school pay scale) and I have been teaching for 7 years! Health insurance is free for the employee, but pricey if you add your family. Retirement is taken out of your pay automatically, so that is YOUR money. Don't know if the state adds anything, because our school doesn't have state retirement, just a 403B.
I arrive at school at 8am and work until 3:45. That's almost 8 hours and that is when I am SUPPOSED to leave. I could take a lunch break, but that would mean I would need the time I would lose after school. We have a one hour rest time that we are not teaching, but we are working on lesson plans, cleaning the classroom, returning parent call and emails, making copies, record keeping, checking work etc. etc. etc. Our K's go to art and PE once a week, but we still have the 3's and 4's, so no break there. We usually leave the school around 4:30(need the time to finish what couldn't be done during rest time) Some afternoons, we have IEP meetings or staff meetings. Later in the evening, I usually check email again and answer any questions, then I will use some resources on the internet to come up with activities to do with the kids. I would say I spend 30 minutes to 1 hour each night on school stuff.
And yes, I am checking work in kindergarten. My kids do addition, multiplication, reading workbooks and worksheets, science and geography booklets and the list goes on. Someone has to check them! There is also lots of recordkeeping involved and planning what each child needs to do next. Teaching is a whole process, no matter what age the child is(or at least it is when it is done right)
Marsha