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-   -   unions killing jobs... (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=43600)

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 802793)
She teaches in the berbs outside Philly.

Bucks? I believe Bucks would not permit bad teachers. :)

Riot 08-25-2011 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802788)
Two teacher friends use that number, just sharing their thoughts. They are both good teachers, cannot stand the union. The combined quote from these two would be surmised as, "the young kids come in here and all they want is tenure and summers off, they think 45K/yr is all the money in the world. The old teachers know they cannot be fired and no longer care, just plodding along toward retirement." This was not everyone but the 80% came from two individuals from separate school systems. I like teachers.

It seems quite inappropriate to demonize 80% of the hundreds of thousands of teachers in this country as incompetent hanger's-on based upon the opinion of two people about their own personal situations.

And it is completely pathetic that we consider $45K a good salary for one of the most important and respected jobs in the (rest of) the world. No wonder all school districts are getting are people that would be better suited to working behind the counter of the local convenience store. People can't raise a family on $45K.

Smart, educated people are going to get the best careers they can, both mentally and financially rewarding. And teachers have always been rather terribly paid for what they do, and now being actively demonized as evil. Who will go into teaching now in the US?

Meanwhile, in some other countries, teachers are considered important, smart, are revered, the profession is very respected - the smartest and most dedicated are recuited - and are paid very, very well for it.

You get what you pay for, and the United States is cheap and lazy.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 01:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802798)
It seems quite inappropriate to demonize 80% of the hundreds of thousands of teachers in this country as incompetent hanger's-on based upon the opinion of two people about their own personal situations.

Since there are no mathematical or scientific methods for measuring a teachers success or ability, the word of co-workers is really all we have. Perhaps the lack of this method is the reason the union proliferation is so grand in that profession.

Riot 08-25-2011 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 802792)
No Child left behind was good intentions from Bush, but not a good policy.

True. It turned disastrous. Obama immediately halted it in like the first month after he was elected. But I fear he is going too much to charter schools, which puts it right into the hands of privateers. Yes, Obama is very Republican in many ways.

Riot 08-25-2011 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802800)
Since there are no mathematical or scientific methods for measuring a teachers success or ability, the word of co-workers is really all we have. Perhaps the lack of this method is the reason the union proliferation is so grand in that profession.

In other words, you're going to keep making assertions as factual that you have simply pulled out of thin air about hundreds of thousands of teachers in the US.

Well, okay: then I say 80% of the teachers in this country are terribly dedicated and yet grossly abused and underpaid.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 01:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802798)
It seems quite inappropriate to demonize 80% of the hundreds of thousands of teachers in this country as incompetent hanger's-on based upon the opinion of two people about their own personal situations.

And it is completely pathetic that we consider $45K a good salary for one of the most important and respected jobs in the (rest of) the world. No wonder all school districts are getting are people that would be better suited to working behind the counter of the local convenience store. People can't raise a family on $45K.

Smart, educated people are going to get the best careers they can, both mentally and financially rewarding. And teachers have always been rather terribly paid for what they do, and now being actively demonized as evil. Who will go into teaching now in the US?

Meanwhile, in some other countries, teachers are considered important, smart, are revered, the profession is very respected - the smartest and most dedicated are recuited - and are paid very, very well for it.

You get what you pay for, and the United States is cheap and lazy.

I did forget to mention that 45K is starting and the reason they think it is all the money in the world is because "they are fresh out of college and live with their parents." It is an excellent starting salary and if that is what you make perhaps starting a family is not the best idea.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 01:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802805)
In other words, you're going to keep making assertions as factual that you have simply pulled out of thin air about hundreds of thousands of teachers in the US.

Well, okay: then I say 80% of the teachers in this country are terribly dedicated and yet grossly abused and underpaid.

You are entitled to believe that if you choose.

Riot 08-25-2011 01:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802806)
I did forget to mention that 45K is starting and the reason they think it is all the money in the world is because "they are fresh out of college and live with their parents." It is an excellent starting salary and if that is what you make perhaps starting a family is not the best idea.

If you think, in 2011, that $50-60K is a decent salary for a lifetime of raising a family of 4, when real wage value in this country has done nothing but fall precipitously over time, you don't have a good grip on what has happened in this country over the past 40 years.

Yes, $45K is a tremendous amount of money in my mind.

Except when it costs $2000 a month for housing, food, car, utilities, and student loan payback is another $500 a month, and retirement savings is 10% of take home. Then add in those that think evil teachers unions are destroying this country, so don't give them healthcare at work, take that away! Or make them pay $250 a month for it!

Yes, raise a family on what's left out of that $45K after the above.

Nobody deserves free money. They of course have to earn it through their competence no matter their profession or job.

But this country is in very, very deep trouble, we are no longer an elite first world country, and that problem was not caused by teachers unions.

We have " ... A republic - if you can keep it". I have serious doubts about the future of the next 50 years of this country.

Riot 08-25-2011 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802807)
You are entitled to believe that if you choose.

No, sorry. I prefer reality-based opinions.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802809)
If you think, in 2011, that $50-60K is a decent salary for a lifetime of raising a family of 4, when real wage value in this country has done nothing but fall precipitously over time, you don't have a good grip on what has happened in this country over the past 40 years.

Yes, $45K is a tremendous amount of money in my mind.

Except when it costs $2000 a month for housing, food, car, utilities, and student loan payback is another $500 a month, and retirement savings is 10% of take home. Then add in those that think evil teachers unions are destroying this country, so don't give them healthcare at work, take that away! Or make them pay $250 a month for it!

Yes, raise a family on what's left out of that $45K after the above.

Nobody deserves free money. They of course have to earn it through their competence no matter their profession or job.

But this country is in very, very deep trouble, we are no longer an elite first world country, and that problem was not caused by teachers unions.

We have " ... A republic - if you can keep it". I have serious doubts about the future of the next 50 years of this country.

Perhaps (again) raising a family is not the best thing for you if that is your salary.

Riot 08-25-2011 02:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802812)
Perhaps (again) raising a family is not the best thing for you if that is your salary.

If you are unable to talk about the subject matter you brought up in an intelligent and objective fashion, don't degenerate to silly ad hominem attacks.

Tell us - what annual income do you think is sufficient to raise a family of 4 nowadays?

And I wanted to ask you, as you said:
Quote:

Since there are no mathematical or scientific methods for measuring a teachers success or ability,
What do you call measuring percentage of students that advance to the next grade, the results of standardized testing on state, national and internation levels, percentage of students graduating and gaining admittance to which colleges, etc?

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 02:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802815)
If you are unable to talk about the subject matter you brought up in an intelligent and objective fashion, don't degenerate to silly ad hominem attacks.

Tell us - what annual income do you think is sufficient to raise a family of 4 nowadays?

That is completely based on where you live. In Denver, my current home, 60-80K should be plenty, you will not be in high cotton but will be comfortable. In the area of NJ I grew up in 45K puts at the top of the earnings list for sure. In the next town over in NJ you would need 100-140K to be OK. In Kentucky or West Virginia or most rural areas in the mid-west I would think 50-60K should be fine.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 02:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802815)
What do you call measuring percentage of students that advance to the next grade, the results of standardized testing on state, national and internation levels, percentage of students graduating and gaining admittance to which colleges, etc?

Those are methods for measure a schools performance. These results are very skewed based on location, income of the district, working parents (both, one or neither) etc. And I think they are the standards of the No Child Act.

Riot 08-25-2011 02:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802818)
That is completely based on where you live. In Denver, my current home, 60-80K should be plenty, you will not be in high cotton but will be comfortable.

What percentage of teachers within the city limits of Denver, Colorado, earn $80K a year?

Quote:

In the area of NJ I grew up in 45K puts at the top of the earnings list for sure. In the next town over in NJ you would need 100-140K to be OK. In Kentucky or West Virginia or most rural areas in the mid-west I would think 50-60K should be fine.
As incomes for families of four?

It's easy when you guess, isn't it ;) What you said previously is that $45K for a teacher was a good enough salary to raise a family of four. But even you say it is not, above.

Then you said that is just a starting salary. So how many teachers in that town in NJ earn 100-140K? or 60K in West Virginia?

Look: you think 80% of teachers are freeloading incompetents, with great salaries and benefits, and teachers unions enable it. You said teachers unions have destroyed the majority of schools in this country. I say that's wrong. We should just leave it at that.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802820)
What percentage of teachers within the city limits of Denver, Colorado, earn $80K a year?



As incomes for families of four?

It's easy when you guess, isn't it ;)

Master +30 past step 7 so probably in the neighborhood of 50-60% of Denver public school teachers.

I never felt I made enough money to support a family of four and maintain the lifestyle I enjoy, therefore guessing is my only option since my wife and I have chosen not to parent without the money to back it up. I know the following as fact; what I was raised on and where, what my employees that have families get paid, I know what I pay them and where they live.
The Denver numbers are based on facts.
The NJ numbers are based on friends with families and their estimated (or actual in some cases) salaries since I know what they do for a living.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 02:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802820)
What percentage of teachers within the city limits of Denver, Colorado, earn $80K a year?



As incomes for families of four?

It's easy when you guess, isn't it ;) What you said previously is that $45K for a teacher was a good enough salary to raise a family of four. But even you say it is not, above.

Then you said that is just a starting salary. So how many teachers in that town in NJ earn 100-140K? or 60K in West Virginia?

Look: you think 80% of teachers are freeloading incompetents, with great salaries and benefits, and teachers unions enable it. You said teachers unions have destroyed the majority of schools in this country. I say that's wrong. We should just leave it at that.

Show me. I have said over and over if that is your salary perhaps you should choose to not have a family.

Riot 08-25-2011 02:56 PM

And this is ME, posting:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802824)
Show me. I have said over and over if that is your salary perhaps you should choose to not have a family.

Again, what do my personal circumstances have to do with teachers being overpaid freeloaders or not? :zz:
--------------
And this is me, too (I'm not on my own computer)

Quote:

Posted by Clip-Clop
Those are methods for measure a schools performance. These results are very skewed based on location, income of the district, working parents (both, one or neither) etc. And I think they are the standards of the No Child Act.
Yes, but those individual tests measure a child's performance. And a teacher's performance can be measured upon the success of their students that they teach. And yes, such results can be skewed.

You said such measures don't exist. I am simply pointing out they do.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike2456 (Post 802831)
Yes, but those individual tests measure a child's performance. And a teacher's performance can be measured upon the success of their students that they teach. And yes, such results can be skewed.

You said such measures don't exist. I am simply pointing out they do.

The particulars of the measurement as stated above allow for far too many variables to transfer the success or failure onto the teacher, this makes it very hard to consider it either mathematical or scientific.
I was a A-B student for the most part (I was an extra-ordinary test taker though) , I learned more from the better teachers but I was going to test the same either way. One example but there are plenty of really smart kids who cannot test at all.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 03:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802833)
And this is ME, posting:



Again, what do my personal circumstances have to do with teachers being overpaid freeloaders or not? :zz:
--------------
And this is me, too (I'm not on my own computer)



Yes, but those individual tests measure a child's performance. And a teacher's performance can be measured upon the success of their students that they teach. And yes, such results can be skewed.

You said such measures don't exist. I am simply pointing out they do.

"You" and "your" was referring to the collective "you" (those teachers that make 45K).

Riot 08-25-2011 03:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802834)
The particulars of the measurement as stated above allow for far too many variables to transfer the success or failure onto the teacher, this makes it very hard to consider it either mathematical or scientific.
I was a A-B student for the most part (I was an extra-ordinary test taker though) , I learned more from the better teachers but I was going to test the same either way. One example but there are plenty of really smart kids who cannot test at all.

I don't think that assessing teacher performance is any more difficult than assessing the performance of other professions. The position that teacher performance is simply impossible to assess objectively doesn't hold up. If you have two classrooms in the same school, both teaching third grade math using the same textbooks and cirriculae, and one classroom of students scores consistently better on the same tests than the second classroom, you bet the first teacher should be considered objectively better.

But my point, going back to the original discussion, remains that I think that demonizing the vast majority of teachers in the US as incompetent and useless overpaid union thugs is absurd.

That meme is simply the current stated political ploy of the Republican party via ALEC and the RGA on the state level, since last year, in order to attempt to de-unionize school districts and thus privatize them.

People won't give up local control of their school districts unless they are convinced that the current situation is untenable. This is how the RGA, ALEC are trying to convince them.

The proof lives in example, Wisconsin is a good one: the unions agreed to every budget cut necessary, but the Republican governor still busted the union.

It's not about budgets and deficits. It's about union-busting as the first step.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802838)
I don't think that assessing teacher performance is any more difficult than assessing the performance of other professions. The position that teacher performance is simply impossible to assess objectively doesn't hold up. If you have two classrooms in the same school, both teaching third grade math using the same textbooks and cirriculae, and one classroom of students scores consistently better on the same tests than the second classroom, you bet the first teacher should be considered objectively better.

But my point, going back to the original discussion, remains that I think that demonizing the vast majority of teachers in the US as incompetent and useless overpaid union thugs is absurd.

That meme is simply the current stated political ploy of the Republican party via ALEC and the RGA on the state level, since last year, in order to attempt to de-unionize school districts and thus privatize them.

People won't give up local control of their school districts unless they are convinced that the current situation is untenable. This is how the RGA, ALEC are trying to convince them.

The proof lives in example, Wisconsin is a good one: the unions agreed to every budget cut necessary, but the Republican governor still busted the union.

It's not about budgets and deficits. It's about union-busting as the first step.

They were done a favor, individual bargaining is a far better practice.

Riot 08-25-2011 03:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clip-Clop (Post 802840)
They were done a favor, individual bargaining is a far better practice.

At least you admit it really is all about union-busting, and Gov. Walker was lying to his constituents.

Ah, big brother government - Republicans - telling individuals what is best for their own interests, and limiting their freedoms.

Some in the far right simply cannot see their hypocrisy.

Coach Pants 08-25-2011 03:33 PM

You could raise a family with $45,000. This country was built by immigrants who had large families and lived in poverty.

Materialism is bullshit. Love is free.

Clip-Clop 08-25-2011 03:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802845)
At least you admit it really is all about union-busting, and Gov. Walker was lying to his constituents.

Ah, big brother government - Republicans - telling individuals what is best for their own interests, and limiting their freedoms.

Some in the far right simply cannot see their hypocrisy.

Unions still exist. Not busted, just in a better spot now.

Big Brother government. All sides! Telling government and private sector employees what is best for everyone, especially the voting block that favors them.

I know and let it be know where I stand on any and all issues, just ask. There are no politicians I know of who share my views.

Antitrust32 08-25-2011 03:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802809)
If you think, in 2011, that $50-60K is a decent salary for a lifetime of raising a family of 4, when real wage value in this country has done nothing but fall precipitously over time, you don't have a good grip on what has happened in this country over the past 40 years.

.

so only one person is working in your definition of a family? with two incomes and one teacher being 50-60k the house hold income would be more like 90-120k

Danzig 08-25-2011 04:25 PM

since the median u.s. income is right at 45-46k, i'd have to think that plenty of families are being raised on that amount of money.
can you live in a mcmansion and drive a benz? probably not.
teachers have kids in front of them 178 days out of the year-which is less than half the year. the two week break at christmas is more vacation than most people get per year. that doesn't count spring break, t'giving, etc, etc.
i can think of worse jobs.

Riot 08-25-2011 04:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antitrust32 (Post 802857)
so only one person is working in your definition of a family? with two incomes and one teacher being 50-60k the house hold income would be more like 90-120k

You make my point. Real middle class wages have completely stagnated in this country over the past 50-60 years. They have not risen, they have fallen.

In the 1950's-1960's, yes, the father worked, the mother stayed home and raised the kids.

In the 1960's-1970's, that changed, and the mother had to go to work to afford the same lifestyle.

In the 1970's-1980's, Americans put that lifestyle on a charge card, if they wanted it, with two incomes.

In the 1990's, Americans mortgaged their homes to maintain that 1950's middle class lifestyle.

2011- the economy crashed. There is hardly any middle class left. They have no more money or credit to spend. The wealth disparity in this country is the greatest it's ever been.

http://motherjones.com/politics/2011...ca-chart-graph

(A great page of data explaining this nation's current troubles)
Quote:

A huge share of the nation's economic growth over the past 30 years has gone to the top one-hundredth of one percent, who now make an average of $27 million per household. The average income for the bottom 90 percent of us? $31,244.
Get that last sentence: the average income of the bottom 90% of Americans is $31,244.

That's ... not first world country income.








timmgirvan 08-25-2011 04:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 802874)
since the median u.s. income is right at 45-46k, i'd have to think that plenty of families are being raised on that amount of money.
can you live in a mcmansion and drive a benz? probably not.
teachers have kids in front of them 178 days out of the year-which is less than half the year. the two week break at christmas is more vacation than most people get per year. that doesn't count spring break, t'giving, etc, etc.
i can think of worse jobs.

In defense of teachers.. handling 30-35 kids is a pretty tough deal. Not all of the teachers are models of comportment(picture your favourite teacher) My daughter in law was teacher of the year in her school district and shes burned out after just 15 yrs...retirement is a long ways away.

Riot 08-25-2011 04:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timmgirvan (Post 802878)
In defense of teachers.. handling 30-35 kids is a pretty tough deal. Not all of the teachers are models of comportment(picture your favourite teacher) My daughter in law was teacher of the year in her school district and shes burned out after just 15 yrs...retirement is a long ways away.

No teacher should be expected to deal with 30-35, even with an aid. It's pretty clear that 26-28 works far better, at max. It's sad she's burned out and an excellent teacher lost.

That's the whole point - teaching is one of the most important professions, and they are currently thoroughly demonized here is the good old United States.

It's pathetic what this country has become.

Danzig 08-25-2011 04:33 PM

hey, i worked in the schools for five years. i love history, and have been told a million times i would be a great teacher-no thanks. i know how it is there. but, cops and firemen don't get rich doing what they do, and neither do teachers. is it right? probably not. could it be worse? sure. are teachers and their kids on food stamps? i doubt it.

i don't think teachers get demonized..but when people start saying that 45k isn't enough...yeah, that's not going to evoke a lot of sympathy right now.

Riot 08-25-2011 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 802881)
i don't think teachers get demonized..but when people start saying that 45k isn't enough...yeah, that's not going to evoke a lot of sympathy right now.

Yeah, I say $45K isn't enough for teachers. I think teachers are so important, and so be revered in this society, that the job should start at $60-$75K and go up to $120K or so. Then teaching would attract the best and brightest, like medical schools.

Not suffer from having their best people who "burn out" after 15 years.

And yes, calling 80% of teachers in this country incompetent freeloaders is indeed demonizing them. I spent most of my life hearing how teachers are never paid enough, how they are unsung heroes in this country, how they are not paid in line for the important and essential job they do. Now the societal meme (pushed by the GOP) is that they suck and it's evil teachers and their unions' fault we have no money.

Screw the GOP and their attempt to steal the last pennies from this country.

Coach Pants 08-25-2011 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802875)
You make my point. Real middle class wages have completely stagnated in this country over the past 50-60 years. They have not risen, they have fallen.

In the 1950's-1960's, yes, the father worked, the mother stayed home and raised the kids.

In the 1960's-1970's, that changed, and the mother had to go to work to afford the same lifestyle.

In the 1970's-1980's, Americans put that lifestyle on a charge card, if they wanted it, with two incomes.

In the 1990's, Americans mortgaged their homes to maintain that 1950's middle class lifestyle.

2011- the economy crashed. There is hardly any middle class left. They have no more money or credit to spend. The wealth disparity in this country is the greatest it's ever been.

http://motherjones.com/politics/2011...ca-chart-graph

(A great page of data explaining this nation's current troubles)


Get that last sentence: the average income of the bottom 90% of Americans is $31,244.

That's ... not first world country income.








Where are the income charts for 2010? KEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKKEKEKKEEKEKEKKEKKKE

Danzig 08-25-2011 04:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802891)
Yeah, I say $45K isn't enough for teachers. I think teachers are so important, and so be revered in this society, that the job should start at $60-$75K and go up to $120K or so. Then teaching would attract the best and brightest, like medical schools.

Not suffer from having their best people who "burn out" after 15 years.

yeah, we can pay everyone what they think they deserve. in fantasyland.

Riot 08-25-2011 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 802895)
yeah, we can pay everyone what they think they deserve. in fantasyland.

Countries - societies - value some things, and abhor others. The United States has indeed become unique among first world countries in what we do not value in this society, compared to other first world countries.

timmgirvan 08-25-2011 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802899)
Countries - societies - value some things, and abhor others. The United States has indeed become unique among first world countries in what we do not value in this society, compared to other first world countries.

So...in what current society does a teacher make more than 45k...not counting tenure?

Riot 08-25-2011 05:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timmgirvan (Post 802907)
So...in what current society does a teacher make more than 45k...not counting tenure?

Let's compare teacher salaries after 15 years experience, compared to GDP, okay? Who pays experienced teachers more than the United States, adjusted to GDP? (which means their salary is comparatively higher in their country compared to this country)

Korea
Germany
Portugal
Japan
Scotland
New Zealand
Switzerland
Mexico
Spain
England
Czech Republic
Turkey
Slovenia
Ireland
Belgium (FI)
Australia
Greece
Netherlands
Belgium (Fr)
Denmark
Chile
Finland
Austria
Italy
France
United States

Who pays more than the United States, in straight unadjusted teachers salary after 15 years experience?

Luxemburg
Korea
Switzerland
Germany
Ireland
Japan
Scotland
England
Netherlands
Australia
United States

http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/20...und-the-world/

timmgirvan 08-25-2011 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802924)
Let's compare teacher salaries after 15 years experience, compared to GDP, okay? Who pays experienced teachers more than the United States, adjusted to GDP? (which means their salary is comparatively higher in their country compared to this country)

Korea
Germany
Portugal
Japan
Scotland
New Zealand
Switzerland
Mexico
Spain
England
Czech Republic
Turkey
Slovenia
Ireland
Belgium (FI)
Australia
Greece
Netherlands
Belgium (Fr)
Denmark
Chile
Finland
Austria
Italy
France
United States

Who pays more than the United States, in straight unadjusted teachers salary after 15 years experience?

Luxemburg
Korea
Switzerland
Germany
Ireland
Japan
Scotland
England
Netherlands
Australia
United States

http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/20...und-the-world/

Well....its obvious we're getting our moneys worth then....considering how well our kids stack up against other countries students! Who goofed I've got to know!

Riot 08-25-2011 05:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timmgirvan (Post 802928)
Well....its obvious we're getting our moneys worth then....considering how well our kids stack up against other countries students! Who goofed I've got to know!

That is about where we are comparing our students to those countries. Our kids stack up very poorly to the kids in those countries.

Antitrust32 08-25-2011 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802891)
Yeah, I say $45K isn't enough for teachers. I think teachers are so important, and so be revered in this society, that the job should start at $60-$75K and go up to $120K or so. Then teaching would attract the best and brightest, like medical schools.

Not suffer from having their best people who "burn out" after 15 years.

And yes, calling 80% of teachers in this country incompetent freeloaders is indeed demonizing them. I spent most of my life hearing how teachers are never paid enough, how they are unsung heroes in this country, how they are not paid in line for the important and essential job they do. Now the societal meme (pushed by the GOP) is that they suck and it's evil teachers and their unions' fault we have no money.

Screw the GOP and their attempt to steal the last pennies from this country.


45k is entry level. higher than entry level at a lot of jobs

timmgirvan 08-25-2011 05:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Riot (Post 802891)
Yeah, I say $45K isn't enough for teachers. I think teachers are so important, and so be revered in this society, that the job should start at $60-$75K and go up to $120K or so. Then teaching would attract the best and brightest, like medical schools.

Not suffer from having their best people who "burn out" after 15 years.

And yes, calling 80% of teachers in this country incompetent freeloaders is indeed demonizing them. I spent most of my life hearing how teachers are never paid enough, how they are unsung heroes in this country, how they are not paid in line for the important and essential job they do. Now the societal meme (pushed by the GOP) is that they suck and it's evil teachers and their unions' fault we have no money.

Screw the GOP and their attempt to steal the last pennies from this country.

Teachers unions DO SUCK because they push their own socialist agenda and hold sway with the politicians that do their bidding.

Just so you know...a teacher has a lesson plan that she mustn't deviate from....she has to toe the line in what she brings to the students personally. It is no wonder that the best teachers leave for different careers, even giving up the lucrative pensions they've earned.


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