I didn't say you were whinning, did I ? . . . Did I equate college teaching as public school teaching??
Did you say I personally was whining? No, but someone was complaining about teachers whining, when actually this isn't a whining thread -- it's more of a correcting misunderstandings -- or attempting to correct misunderstandings thread.
Yes, you certainly implied that you understand teachers' jobs because of your college experience. That's how I interpreted it; sorry if I took that wrong.
When teachers say they do not get paid for time off in the summer this is not totally true. How many other people working salary jobs get that much vacation time in a year?
This is simply untrue. I work 10 months a year, and I receive 10 paychecks a year. I do not work in the summer, and I receive no paychecks in the summer. If I want to buy groceries, put gas into my car, and have money for other purposes, I'd better save a portion of each of my 10 paychecks for those unpaid months. These are facts. Summer is not "vacation" in the sense that the teachers are paid for that time. It is unpaid time off.
1. Many teachers have masters degrees or beyond which we pay for . . . 5. The stress level in the classroom is very high in many places. I personally know of two teachers who were attacked by students last year. One of these teachers has permanent damage from the attack. Gone are the days of "misbehavior" being gum chewing or talking in class.
It may be different in other places, but here teachers pursuing a master's degree (or higher) are reimbursed 40% of their tuition; no reimbursement for books or other expenses. I do not know how similar this is to other professions. In some states teachers are required to earn a master's degree within X years; my state does not require that, and most teachers here have only a bachelor's degree. A teacher with a Master's degree here earns 10% more than a teacher with a bachelor's degree. A teacher with National Board Certification earns 12% more than a teacher without.
I've been hit by a student. It is absolutely true that teachers are facing much more violent behavior than ever before, and it's scary. It's not a teacher thing or a school thing; it's a measure of the direction in which our society is moving, and it's bad on multiple levels.
I just want to add a bit of info. ABC 6 Providence reported last night that the average amount of sick days for a Central Falls High School teacher is 23 days per year. That's average, some teachers have less and some more. That's 12.77% of there work year out sick. They are still being paid and the school department has to pay a substitute.
Please remember this is not cometary just more information to help you form your opinion.
Does that mean they're given 23 days per year, or that the average teacher has accumulated 23 days from multiple years? I personally have about 140 sick days. I earn them at a rate of 10 days per year, and I've been teaching for 17 years. You can see that I haven't used many of those sick days, but I do like knowing that I have them. If something catestrophic happens, I can stay out almost a whole year. But don't lose track of the fact that it took me
almost two decades to accumulate those 140 days.
In other jobs I've worked -- jobs where people were required to "use or lose" their 10 sick days each year, most people used exactly 10 sick days each year. Hmmmm.