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#121
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In NYC it is common for the head janitor to be over a hundred grand...
"Tom Sixkiller" wrote in message news ![]() "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Newps wrote: Turns out the average teacher salary is $41.5 here with 25-30% of the teachers making more than $50K per year. Fifteen years ago, the figures for the Franklin Township high school were made public. The janitor was making more than a CS major with a master's degree would get as starting pay ($41,000). The school had two principals, both making over $110,000. Teachers salaries were in the $70,000 range and up. They don't publicize the figures any more. They also stopped publishing stats around the country when someone pointed out that half or more of school spending was just "administrators"....like third assistant vice-principals. |
#122
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REALLY?!?!? Send them to Northern VA where we had lots of unfilled
positions last year with subs filling in. For quite a while 1/3 of our special ed teachers were on emergengy certificates. We can't find enough teachers to fill the rooms. The fact that it's difficult to find Special Ed teachers doesn't surprise me at all -- many people wouldn't do what you do for all the tea in China. In fact, I think special education is such a different animal as to not really be comparable to other teaching jobs. What you do, Margy, is beyond special, and qualifies you for sainthood. (Even more than being married to Ron, as hard as that is to believe...) ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#123
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Sad but often true. That's just one of the "headaches" I was talking
about. I know a few very talented teachers who have vowed NEVER to teach GT (gifted and talented) again unless all of the students were orphans. They loved the kids, but the parents drove them away. Another facet is discipline. Without it, the teachers are doomed. Our example: Iowa has it -- Wisconsin did not. It took half a dozen trips to the principal's office before my then-2nd grade son truly understood that when they said "Stay off the grass!" they REALLY meant "Stay off the grass!" In Wisconsin, the rules were simply not enforced. As a result, they had to install metal detectors in the middle schools, and cops in the high schools -- and we had to get our kids out of there. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "Margy Natalie" wrote in message ... Rob Perkins wrote: On Wed, 07 Jan 2004 19:12:01 -0500, Margy Natalie wrote: I don't think that is true, but the statistic I know is true states that most teachers leave teaching in the first 5 years. The reason? The pay isn't worth the headaches, time, etc. There's more than just salary levels behind the paucity of good teachers. I'm personally acquainted with one teacher who quit after one year. The reason? The school board stood behind a pair of wealthy parents who wanted their daughter to get away with cheating on his final test. When he refused his "contract was not renewed." Margy |
#124
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A friend of mine from high school retired from the Navy at 38! He pulls a
decent pension and last I heard had a great civilian job at the Pentagon. Don't most folks get a pension after 32 years at the same job? Uh, no. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#125
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Ummm, who paid for all those airports and ATC facilities you and your
customers use? Without those federally funded airports would you even have a business? Actually, my research shows that our airport was built by Boeing Air Transport. Of course, since then it's accepted federal funding... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#126
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Newps wrote:
A year ago December the teachers in our district went on strike for better pay and benefits. The conventional wisdom is that your typical public school teacher is lucky to make $30K after many hard years of teaching. Since teachers salaries are a matter of public record a full page ad was taken out in the Sunday paper the first weekend of the strike. Every teacher in the school district was listed, by name, and how much they made for that current school year. Turns out the average teacher salary is $41.5 here with 25-30% of the teachers making more than $50K per year. Starting pay was mid $20's. You could literally see the support for the teachers evaporate on that Sunday. A settlement was reached shortly there after. A teacher strike will not ever happen here again. Did the teachers then post the salaries of the administration personnel? That would be very eye opening... Even the salaries you list above are way below the average in my area for jobs that require a master's degree. Maybe they are competitive in your area, but they wouldn't be in PA or NY. Skilled labor in our area make in the 40s and that is with no college education at all. The must complete an apprenticeship, but this is paid, they aren't paying for it. Matt |
#127
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Margy Natalie wrote:
"Matthew S. Whiting" wrote: Richard Hertz wrote: I am changing careers. After working for 12 years in the computer science industry I am going to "semi-retire" to teach math and computer science. Many family members and acquaintances teach and when I compare their lifestyle and working hours and stress to mine I conclude that the pay cut is worth the reduced hours and the retirement benefits are almost criminal. (in my opinion) Let us know what you think after completing your first year of teaching. Good luck! I've often thought of this as well, but I know several teachers very well and low stress isn't in their job description. One of our newer teachers who left industry to teach stated at the end of his first year "now I know why teachers have the summer off, they need it to recover". He said he had never been so tired and burned out in his life. He's still teaching and rather good at it. I still may well give it a try as a second career if I get a shot at an early retirement package from my current employer. I think my CS/EE degrees would qualify me fairly well to teach math and science. However, I have no delusions of it being a high pay/low stress job. Matt |
#128
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Margy Natalie wrote:
"Matthew S. Whiting" wrote: One other big problem is the non-meritocracy of government/school systems. Pay is based on years of service and so-called education credits. In the "real" world pay is based on performance, merit, etc. Yes, that is my biggest beef with the teaching system at present. And the fact that it is unionized. I don't believe that "professional" and "union" go together, but then many pilots are union also... I'm in a "right to work" State so Union doesn't mean anything. The real reason teachers don't have a merit system is they discovered it was detrimental to the students. Right now if I write a lesson that really clicks and works great I make copies and give it to all the other teachers. We help each other out to give the best to our kids. Under merit pay (which many districts had for a while) teachers would keep their best lessons to themselves so they could be in the top 5% to get the raise. It didn't work. Another problem is how to score teachers to rank them. We have the same problem in private industry, but there are ways to mitigate it and I still believe that pay for performance is critical to achieving high performance. You could have merit pay based on the performance of an entire grade or school (somewhat analagous to profit sharing at a corporation). You can also base merit pay and promotions on how much a teacher helps and mentors other teachers. This is an explicit promotion requirement for technical professionals at my company. If you are keeping the goods to yourself, you'll not get promoted. No system is perfect, but I've worked in both environments, and I'll take a merit/performance based compensation system any day. Matt |
#129
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Morgans wrote:
"Matthew S. Whiting" wrote You could have merit pay based on the performance of an entire grade or school (somewhat analagous to profit sharing at a corporation). Matt So you want to base teacher performance on student achievement? What is the incentive for the students to pay attention to what is being taught, learn, and do well on the test? There is none, for most students, at present. They are only there because the law says they must be there. Have you ever watched some students take a standardized test, when there is nothing in it for them? They go A,B,C,D,A,B,C,D. Don't laugh, I have seen it, more than a few times. This is how you want merit pay to work? I don't think so. I welcome good answers to the problem. Problem is, no one seems to have any. When I was in school there were teachers able to motivate almost any student and teachers that couldn't motivate anyone. No system is perfect, but I want the teachers that are best at motivating their students to get the best pay and have the greatest chance of staying on the job. And maybe the other teachers will watch and learn from the teachers that have figured it out. I'm not saying it is easy, but if all schools have this problem, then the playing field is level and whichever teachers are best in even this environment should be rewarded. Matt |
#130
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Morgans wrote:
"Dennis O'Connor" wrote in message ... In NYC it is common for the head janitor to be over a hundred grand... DAmn! But have you checked the cost of living in NYC lately? 100 grand is probably barely above poverty level... :-) Matt |
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