DawnM
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 16,648
No one said anyone didn't appreciate what they had.
I obviously LIKE teaching or I wouldn't have gone in to it. I have ZERO desire to work in some tech job or accounting (like my DH) job.
Nor did anyone suggest teachers work any HARDER than anyone else. It was just a response to your "Oh, boohoo" comment that has people upset.
What if your DH scheduled a vacation to WDW for a week and had it planned for months, prepaid the airlines, etc....and then was told, "ok, you have to be at a manditory meeting the Wed. you are on vacation. Too bad that you already planned it."
You have really turned this into something it should not be....a teacher bashing thread.
Dawn
I obviously LIKE teaching or I wouldn't have gone in to it. I have ZERO desire to work in some tech job or accounting (like my DH) job.
Nor did anyone suggest teachers work any HARDER than anyone else. It was just a response to your "Oh, boohoo" comment that has people upset.
What if your DH scheduled a vacation to WDW for a week and had it planned for months, prepaid the airlines, etc....and then was told, "ok, you have to be at a manditory meeting the Wed. you are on vacation. Too bad that you already planned it."
You have really turned this into something it should not be....a teacher bashing thread.
Dawn
no, you don't get a paycheck during the summer months, but your annual salary, which you all complain about, is based on a ten-month work year, not 12 months, like the rest of the work world.
Here's a link to an article that might just make you appreciate what you've got--
http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/jobseeker/tools/ept/careerArticlesPost.html?post=129
Oh, btw, I have done substitute teaching, I'm constantly amazed at the glib way teachers view their jobs. They call in for reasons the rest of us would be expected to work around, like their kids has a dental appointment (we schedule ours before/after work). Last school year my dd had a teacher who seemed to think she was some sort of part-time worker (maybe she tought she was the sub?) She took so much time off it was a wonder they kept her. It was a running joke with dd, was your teacher there today? This teacher seemed to always have a crisis on Fridays and Mondays, the days before/after breaks, holidays, etc. Try getting away with that in any other profession!
Oh, yes, I realize most teachers are hard-working, dedicated professionals who value their work, but its about the only profession I know of where you can call in sick and get a sub at a moment's notice (no such thing as a substitute engineer!). Also, they do get much more time off than any other profession. Do they work hard? Of course! So does the rest of the work force! We can't just call in when we feel like it or take vacations without being tied to the job via cell phone, pc, etc.
all jobs are tough, or they wouldn't pay you to be there!

. Oh, and I just spent part of my "vacation" discussing something on the phone with my AP. I'm already planning for next year.