[quote name='Alpha_ProgDes' timestamp='1320442590' post='4880630']
[quote name='ManOfThePast' timestamp='1320439608' post='4880616']
[quote name='tstrimple' timestamp='1320432856' post='4880564']
The union doesn't care about sensible education policy. They care about maintaining their control over the education system. Their goal is not to better educate our students but to provide maximum protection for teacher, regardless of the quality of that teacher. Please, provide evidence that educators are CONSTANTLY researching education best practices. I'm sure that some educators do, but it's hardly a common practice. It's similar to the programming field, there are those who are constantly learning new things and staying on the cutting edge, but the majority of them work their 8 hours and that's it. What we need are more of those teachers who are willing to put in the extra effort, and the ability to get rid of those who don't! I'm all for higher teacher salaries, but only for deserving teachers, and the teachers unions make it impossible to do that.
Most of my family are American public teachers so I'm relaying what I've heard from them over the years:
(1) The unions are necessary. Teacher's are constantly marginalized into accepting lower pay for more work and less freedom. It's demoralizing and making the problem worse. Every teacher I know is now telling the next generation NOT to get into teaching, that it's not a good career choice anymore. It used to be, but it's not today. How do you expect to get good teachers when we're pushing away so many? Unions aren't the problem. It's politicians and adminstrators brainwashing people.
(2) Every teacher I know puts in rediculously long hours (10+ hours) and weekends for very little pay. You don't see it but when they go home they'll often have hours of grading papers to do each night. Administrators make rediculous amounts and comparatively don't work many hours at all. New "best practices", standardization, No Child Left Behind has all contributed to much worse education in the eyes of the teachers I know.
(3) Think back to the best teacher you ever had. What made them great? I can only speak for myself, but following a standardized textbook line for line is not the reason. They had real insight into their subject and life in general that they shared. They were able to inspire. You wanted to keep talking to them after class. We talk about good teachers and bad teachers, but we aren't measuring the right things.
And just to give you a little insight, think about how long it takes to make an hour long presentation. Now imagine you had 6 of those to do every day, and grading work to do after that. Being a teacher is a lot of work. Even once you have most of your lesson plans already written and you can reuse them year to year (you still get new classes/mandatory changes/new textbooks every few years), it's still mindblowing because you always have to tweak them and prepare beforehand and the grading never stops.
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This! 1000 times!
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Glad to know you get so worked up over anecdotal evidence. I have plenty anecdotal evidence to the contrary. Teachers who put in a lot of extra hours are the exception, not the rule.[/quote]
Bullshit. Every teacher and I mean every teacher has to grades papers, talk to students, have meetings with parents, and prepare curricula. And that's outside of their normal working hours. Show me a working teacher, any working teacher who does nothing but come to school at 7:00am and leaves at 3:30pm. And does nothing else work-related outside of those hours.
And Michael wonders why children don't have respect for teachers (yes, that's an opinion).
And how you make a comment like that ("worked up over anecdotal evidence") when way2lazy responded in the same way to your
opinion about OWS? I didn't see you make a snark comment about that post.