acroyear: (foxtrot snowball)
[personal profile] acroyear
In Search of Good Teachers - New York Times:
With 50 million children set to return to school, districts all over the country are still scrambling to fill teaching positions and are having an especially difficult time finding qualified applicants to fill shortages in vital areas like math and science. These shortages will persist and the education reform effort will continue to lag until states, localities and the federal government start paying much more attention to how teachers are trained, hired and assigned.
Guess which word is missing there.

It's a big one.

A HUGE one.

"PAID"

Until this nation and these states and localities get off their collective anti-tax, anti-"socialist" arse and actually start PAYING people to be good teachers in those subjects, they will NEVER EVER EVER increase the candidate pool.  When the difference between a math major doing engineering work 3 years out of college and a math major being a public school teacher 3 years out of college is a factor of FOUR, then there is simply no contest.  To live well enough to match your own education and status, you need to be paid what your brain is worth or you will never find job satisfaction.

Giving a person a choice between a $26,000 teaching job and a $100,000 engineering or programming job?

Well, you could do the math if you ever had qualified teachers to teach you...

Teachers are not and have never been paid what they're worth.  Change that, and you change everything.

Date: 2007-08-31 09:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cozit.livejournal.com
Sure they are willing to pay for their little darlings to get the education... they're just not willing to pay for *other* kids to get the basics and to support the schools in other ways. So many of those who pay through the nose *don't* go to public schools... and then turn around and say they shouldn't be paying taxes for others to do so. Then there are those who *had* the public education, but have no kids, so claim they shouldn't have to pay. (just think what PG, Anne Arundel, DC and Baltimore schools *could* be if everyone went *and* parents actually volunteered and showed interest... yes... some parents do, but...)

Um, yeah... can you imagine what their lives would end up if there *wasn't* public education? But of course, their private education never taught them enough logic or big picture thinking to actually figure that one out... Guess they think it is (or should be) serfs and lord of the manors still.. too bad we've gone rather more tech than that stage.
:-S

Date: 2007-08-31 09:58 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] thatwasjen
Sure they are willing to pay for their little darlings to get the education... they're just not willing to pay for *other* kids

I just cannot figure this out. I mean, I don't have children, but I damn well want other people's children to have the best possible education. I know that it well help me and everyone else in the long run.

I also have concerns with the fact that parental volunteers are necessary to the effective functioning of a school. Parents should take responsbility for supporting their children in their education, by helping with homework and such, but I don't think it makes sense that schools need parental help to function.

Teaching is a profession. Like medicine and law, it requires specialized postgraduate education, and like doctors and lawyers, teachers are essential to the public welfare. Like most of the rest of you, I find it baffling that most people can't seem to realize this or, if they do, aren't willing to put their money where their mouths are.

(That reminds me that the crappy state of medicine, which is partly due to the education-as-indentured-servitude bargain, is a whole other problem.)

Date: 2007-08-31 10:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] faireraven.livejournal.com
What really gets me is that nowadays it requires not only a bachelor's education but a Master's one to become a teacher, but they still aren't willing to pay them worth shite...

I don't have kids yet, but I want all of them to get an education, if nothing else, from the standpoint of crime. The less educated an area, the higher the crime tends to be. But if we have a lot of well-educated kids, we might actually get cashiers who don't look at you stupidly when you tell them they scanned the wrong item in...

And yes, I'm in your corner on the idea that people don't realize that teachers are essential to the public welfare.

I just don't get people. They're willing to leave their kids' education in the hands of almost anyone, and pay them shite to do it, yet they get upset and angry that their children aren't receiving a good enough education. Feh.

Date: 2007-09-04 07:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jump-street1980.livejournal.com
AMEN!!
You have no idea how difficult it has been just trying to get into PG Co. schools!!
This is one of the LOWEST RANKING DISTRICTS IN THE COUNTRY!! You remember that saying, "Beggars cannot be choosers."
These people are a joke. Im almost to the point of certification (having finished all my PRAXIS exams for now, and they still have not placed me. Meanwhile, there are people in the schools teaching who aren't certified, but have been either A)teaching longer or B)went through the "Resident Teacher Program...that's crap right there.
Personally, I'm now willing to take the pay cut and go to private schools (that's a 5-15k cut from 40k to anywhere from 26-30) just so I don't have to deal with the county anymore!
They are driving away people who are willing to teach in this county. And now I see why. I have become so insanely irritated...no joke.

Date: 2007-09-01 02:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tchwrtr.livejournal.com
Unfortunately, not everyone is looking out for the "greater good", or realizes that doing so will keep their own house and family safer and healthier. They are willing to lay out the cash to take care of their own, forgetting that their own have to interact with all those others out there.

Many, many good points throughout this post and comments.

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