7:50-3:30 are my contracted hours of work. 30 minutes for lunch. My day normally runs from 7:30-4:30 (4:50 today when I left the school)
Here is some of what I had to do today:
1. Teach AP World History. Motivated students etc...can be great. Biggest difficulty is trying to teach the entire course before the first week of May. Why May instead of June? Well, the AP exam is the first week of May and the exam is about the entire course. Oh, sorry you don't have time to teach it all. And if your kids don't do well on the test, I guess you aren't doing your job.
2. I designed, adapted and modified test for World History and Sociology. Three versions. Many kids with IEP's. Some get extended time, some get modified answer choices, some get the test read to them due to reading difficulties, some have vocabulary issues, hand writing issues all of which I can not mark against them for. Some have ESL issues (English as a Second Language), some have speech and hearing issues and I am required to make eye contact with the student (who won't look at me) so they can read my lips when I speak.
3. Today I also had to deal with a situation that was shared with me from other students and an aid in the building. But a boy had inappropriately touched a girl in the building.
4. I also had another student hand me a note. In the note was a chronicle of her dreams over the last week. They were disturbing. I was required, by law, to discuss this issue with the administration of the school.
5. I am not underpaid. I have a master's degree. I have taught for 15 years. I make around 47,000 for teaching and around 3 grand for some extra curricular things that I do. The top of the pay scale where I am is around 57,000.
6. But what I do deserve is lunch.....without kids around. Sometimes I just want to get away from it for a few minutes. Sometimes I have to pee. Sometimes I have to email, call, or write handwritten notes home (oh that is required by my principal).
7. My job is not easy....yours isn't either. Sorry for the rant
