You asked as to why it was seen in a negative light, I'm looking to teach/lecture and gave you the truth. I was just stating the fact.NEVAGIVEUP said:May be thankless, yet rewarding in its' own way, pay is tipped to increase, teachers are well respected because they provide students knowledge that not everybody unqualified to do can and yes lots of stress/work
The fact you only have one hour with these kids is the very reason why the disruptions are so detrimental. Numbers don't talk back, taxes throw chairs at you. You outline some awful awful examples of 'good teachers' btw, one should never embarass a child.Cookie182 said:You paint a picture like their CO's in a max security prison or something. I guarrantee you Taxi Driver's, Police Officers and Baggage Handlers get a tougher time from the public then teachers. I'm not saying it is easy, sure you get some abusive kids, but at the end of the day your in the class room (high school) at max an hour with that lot before they move on. Plus, they are only kids- their often immature and a good teacher knows a little bit of psychology and how to handle this. Many of my best teachers never went crazy/yelled, but calmly embarrassed the disruptive kids, isolating them from the social circle they were attempting to impress. These teachers were also highly funny, interactive, passionate and treated the kids like freinds- and hence the respect flowed towards them. The teachers that often cop shit are in many cases incompetent, lack passion or have no personal skills or interest in the subject and hence should not have choosen the career path in the first place.
You, like most people, assume that teaching is something that finishes at the bell. Lesson plans for 4-5 different classes a day, every weekday for 4-5 months takes a lot of time not directly attributable to the 8-3 time-frame you point out.Anyway, lets take a generalised look at the standard day-
The normal teacher prob arrives at 8-8:30 has coffee in staff room before going to their roll call class etc. Generally teachers also get a free period on many days (an hour) plus they get the lunch/recess or afternoon break off as well (even though they do get play ground duty rostered). Then factor in events like assemblies, often 40 minutes to an hour once a week they can sit down for and of course sport- up to 2 hrs of their afternoon where they jsut monitor the kids and have a chat. For eg, i use to go to the gym for sport and ten pin bowling- at both venues the teachers would bring a magazine/paper and just sit down and have a coffee. Not a bad way to get paid. In fact, on that same day we always had a 40 minute assembly in the morning and a half hour break before sport. Thursdays at my school meant a max of of 2-3 hrs in the classroom and a full day's pay!!!!!! Lets also consider that on the normal day, we are only talking about 6.5 hours people- my high school was 8:30-2:45 (that's 6.25 hrs but allow 15 in either arvo/morning for arriving etc)
Like my point above, if you think that teachers just stop working after the day/semester is out, is frankly insulting and just wrong.Now i have a lot of respect for good teachers and Im not saying it is not stressful, but not many other professions gets 10 week+ paid holidays a year as well. They never can get 'called in' for weekends etc There is a lot of perks. If you make head teacher etc it does nearly cap out at 80 grand a year. Not bad!
Rofl, this is bordering on wishful anecdotes, please refrain. "LOL IF YOU MEET A FELLOW HIGH COURT JUDGE YOU'LL HAVE A COMBINED ANNUAL INCOME OF A GAZILLLION BAJILLION DOLLAHS!"Assuming you meet someone in the profession as a future partner, u could b on 150+ a year combined. I know many wealthy teachers and they love their job and also after the first few years of settling do not find it stressful at all. They also have a very nice superannuation package, which i think came in during the 80's, but sadly might be phased out for new teachers now.
You work similar if not longer hours marking essays, giving feedback, as well as developing lesson plans. Your stance is indicative of the cultural problem we have towards education, we devalue it as something 'easy' or not particularly worthy. We place more emphasis and value upon lawyers, in an industry which is so overcrowded with lawyers, that most graduates end up as glorified photocopiers and office bitches. Or accountants, who deal with very standardised and static situations.The 'marking' is pitiful compared to a lawyer's work he has to bring home or an accountant's work around tax time. These professions, particularly a busy solicitor work very long hours for the money they earn as do many other professionals, often including weekends. They would also be lucky to get any more then four weeks annual leave.
Casual teachers are some of the hardest working teachers out there. You probably don't realise, but most of them do not have stable incomes, they have to be willing to travel to different places and schools just to make a living. Of those casual teachers, there is a good minority of them who are also studying at the same time, for their PhD or Masters.Plus, if your good at your area of study teaching it at the high school level can be very briezy if not boring. Look at how bludgey casual teachers get it, often just babysitting classes without having to do any teaching. Geez look at PE teachers! Of course every1 wants 2 be one- paid the same as the 4 U maths teacher and they get to stand in the sun and blow a whistle or a draw a diagram of a dick on the board and explain sex to laughing yr 8 kids.
Your arguments regarding PE teachers and whatnot illustrates your general level of maturity and understanding of these things.
Head lecturers and professors have it easier than most really. You lecture 5-10 hours a week and that's it. Those tutors you again put shit on, like the casual teachers, are the ones who are running these unis. Do you know that you're expected to do three times the work (or more to get promoted or even considered to be promoted) as a tutor or contract staff than a head lecturers? That you're expected to not only teach 3-4 units (not classes) but in addition to teaching, marking and supervising, but also that on top of this that to get higher in the food chain, you have to publish in 3-4 times more publications compared to the one citation of a head lecturer?If you want to talk about really hard teaching, then discuss being a University Lecturer cause that IS NOT easy (emphasise lecturer/academic/subject coordinator NOT tutor, cause many of them do seem to have it easy).
No, so please stop sprouting your crap because frankly its insulting to any teacher worth their salt out there.