In all of my salaried positions I also had the option of coming in late, working from home, etc. along with being expected to take work home, come in early if need be. So it was a give and take on the extended hours. I have never met a salaried teacher that was given the other side of being a salaried employee - you know...the benefits. Can you go in late if you need to wait for the cable installer?
In all of my salaried positions I also had the option of coming in late, working from home, etc. along with being expected to take work home, come in early if need be. So it was a give and take on the extended hours. I have never met a salaried teacher that was given the other side of being a salaried employee - you know...the benefits. Can you go in late if you need to wait for the cable installer?
For a great many people those flexible options come with a high cost as well, you're expected to keep abreast of your workload whenever and wherever. Several years back it was an issue when we were leaving the country and were not making provisions for cell phone coverage (deliberately). There was immense pressure on my husband to procure coverage, at our expense no less, so that he would continue to be available 24/7, vacation or no. It's also been an issue when we've headed to northern Michigan and spent time in areas where cell coverage is spotty or nonexistent. We've entered "civilization" again after a couple hours and have to take a few hours break for him to check all of his messages and email and then spend time putting out fires.
I think most people are trying to stand up for teachers not insult them.
I believe the OP's first words were that they are a teacher themselves. Can you point out specific teacher bashing in the thread?
If you don't like the tenor of the discussion, perhaps you can offer a counterpoint opinion with substance to that which you find offensive?
I think there are people in virtually EVERY profession who complain about aspects of their job. I guess I should count myself lucky that the teachers on my FB feed seem to be excited to return to school and do the fulfilling job they love instead of gripe about the downsides.
But, I don't think complaining about your job and/or thinking that others have it easier/worse off than you is unique to teaching. I see it from many industries . . .I think many have a grass is greener mentality regardless of field of employment.
I am a just retired teacher. I spent 38 years working with the kids and trying to the best I could to help them along. I never complained about coming early or staying late. A few years ago I did complain about the letters of recommendations I had to write but my dh turned to me and said "If you are going to teach the upper level courses then you should expect to have to write the letters." I thought about it and I have never complained since. I even have some to write this September, even thought I am retired.
The only thing I will complain about is the 20 minutes of lunch we get and many times that is cut short by a student who will stop you in the hall but that is one of the few things I will complain about my job.
I think it starts with how frequently teachers are teased (in good spirit or otherwise) about all the "time off" they have in their profession. The rebuttal of course is that many of them will be working during a portion of that "time off".
So, it is true that for many teachers, not all of their "time off" is actually "off". And while it's fair for teachers to point that out, it's not something unique to the profession. The unique part is the ribbing they receive.
You are correct, we get time off for vacations, but our summer vacation is unpaid. The time when kids are at special classes is the teacher's planning time. Time to prepare the room for the next activity, clean up from previous activity, confer with other teachers, grade papers,...we don't just go straight from one activity to another all day without ANY time to prepare. Those aren't considered breaks, it's planning time.
No flames coming from me. Besides the time off for vacations, many teachers also get time off during the day when the kids are at recess, art, music, PE, library, and other special classes.
You are correct, we get time off for vacations, but our summer vacation is unpaid. The time when kids are at special classes is the teacher's planning time. Time to prepare the room for the next activity, clean up from previous activity, confer with other teachers, grade papers,...we don't just go straight from one activity to another all day without ANY time to prepare. Those aren't considered breaks, it's planning time.
If teachers are doing all that during the breaks at school then why do they so often complain that they need to do it in the evenings, on their "own" time?
Teachers can choose to get paid for those summer months; they can have their yearly salary distributed over 12 months instead of 10.
I know what teachers make in my town; it's public information, and I take the time to look to see what taxpayers are paying these "underpaid" souls. I hardly think that for 180 days (plus several extra days before/after school start and end) that the salaries are low, especially once taking into account funded pensions and free health care. Many teachers in my town earn over $90,000 a year.
If teachers are doing all that during the breaks at school then why do they so often complain that they need to do it in the evenings, on their "own" time?
Teachers can choose to get paid for those summer months; they can have their yearly salary distributed over 12 months instead of 10.
I know what teachers make in my town; it's public information, and I take the time to look to see what taxpayers are paying these "underpaid" souls. I hardly think that for 180 days (plus several extra days before/after school start and end) that the salaries are low, especially once taking into account funded pensions and free health care. Many teachers in my town earn over $90,000 a year.
Teachers can't "choose to get paid FOR those summer months." They can have part of their pay held back and distributed DURING those months. It always amazes me that people can't see the difference. That is precisely why teachers feel the need to defend themselves - the insinuation that teachers are getting paid for not working.
I'm happy with my salary, but it still makes me mad when people insinuate I'm being paid for my time off when I'm not. Teachers don't get vacation pay, they get paid for the contracted time they work.
If you work for an hourly salary with no paid vacation, people don't divide your daily pay by 24 and say you're getting paid to do nothing on your off time. People seem to understand that you're paid when you're working and that evenings off, weekends off, etc. you're not getting "paid." You get paid for the time you work. Teachers are no different except their salary is not hourly, it's based on a contracted number of days. They are paid for those contracted days.