Those are pretty low salaries for the degrees listed. The total compensation at the right is not what those teachers are paid, it includes the districts part of the insurance, retirements, etc. Now look at the actual salaries and take out of those the retirements, the insurance, etc. and they don't get paid squat. As for only working 180 days a year,, let me tell you about a teacher's year:
1. We go to work at 7am. our day officially ends at 3:30 but then we are in our classroom for a few hours after that planning and grading, and sponsoring after-school activities, meeting with parents who can't be bothered to come to parent teacher meetings during the day, or those who can't come because of work, so we make the time to see them.
2. We are responsible for educating your child, and on the average 25 - 30 others every day for a self-contained class that teaches Math, Language Arts, Science and Social Studies. For the teachers who are in the upper grades? Try an average of 200 to 250 students every day. Do you have any idea how long it takes to grade all those papers? Yeah and I guarantee it's not done during those class hours, it's done on our own time and takes time away from our own families.
3. We are responsible for attending constant trainings and inservice days to keep up on the latest educational trends and tests, we have to constantly update our own education, usually at our own cost too, to make sure your child gets the best education possible.
4. I have to sit and smile pleasantly while you ream me out because your child is failing due to your own laziness and lack of attentiveness in assuring they do their work and behave. I can teach them, I can give them all the notes in the world, but I can't force them to learn, I can't force them to work, and I can't force you to take responsibility; and unfortunately I can't grab you by the neck, drag you over my desk, and forcibly show you how you are damaging your child by not making them take responsibility!
5. I get called on the carpet because 10% of my class did not perform at Proficient or above on the State Board of Assessments, but of course that student not being able to speak English, not having been in class for long, or is a transient student, well that doesn't matter, it's MY fault they didn't pass it. That kid that sits there and stares at me, and plays with their pencil, because they know my hands are tied and no matter what happens it will be my fault? Yeah, it's my fault he failed.
6. My usual summer: Get out June 2 or somewhere near that. I have the first week off, then I have a week of SC2 (Science) training, then a week of MC2 (Math) training, then I have a week of Balanced Literacy (Language Arts) training, by the way? Those are not counted in the 180 days, those are during the summer, but since we are salary, we have to go.
7. We have to watch out for every cut, scrape, or bruise, on a child and then report to CPS what we think might be abuse, and of course when they show up at your house to do a welfare check on your child and make sure they are safe, well I over-stepped my bounds and you will SEE THAT I PAY for it. I'd rather risk it for the safety of your child. When family members die and you are too busy to see to the needs of your grieving child guess who does it during the day, me. When you send your child to school sick because you don't want them at home getting the baby sick guess who has to wipe their nose, send them to nurse and force you to come get them, me. When I hand out letters explaining something is happening in class, field trip, celebrations, days off, etc. and you don't get it until the day before? Maybe you should ask your child why they didn't give it to you the day I handed it out!
8. Who has to take the blame for government entities who take the money away from schools? The teachers. No matter what happens the first solution everyone has is punish the teachers, that will fix it! I am sick and tired of being the whipping boy for everyone who knows nothing about the educational system in the US.
Teachers do not have 180 day years my friend, those are classroom days only, those do not count the inservice, the trainings, the schooling, the after-hours grading and planning, the hours and days and weeks lost with our own families. Teacher's families are special, they know we have more than an 8 hour day invested in our jobs, our jobs never stop. We don't do it for the pay, we do it because we love it, we love your children, we love to see them grown and blossom, we love knowing we are affecting the future of someone and possibly our own country some day.
Are there those who just sit and get a check and don't care? Sure. Just like some of you who go in every day, do your job to the minimum requirements and go home, sure there are teachers just like that. They are few and far between, but I guarantee they get a lot more notice than the rest of us who devote our lives to what we do. Like a told a school board member at a community meeting last week: Happy people don't show up, they don't come and say "Great Job!!", they stay home and stay quiet. The ones who have a problem or an issue? They are the ones who show up and make the noise, they are the ones who demand satisfaction. So when you have a district with 14,500 students, and only 51 parents show up for a meeting, it's a a good sign, it means the rest are happy with the district and the teachers.
I sure wish they would raise their voices too.
180 day year? Sure.
pips&peeps :
This is the salaries of the teachers in my school district. A couple years ago the District was complaining that the teachers were underpaid. Well, I see some part time people with lowere salaries and some teachers aides, but for the most part I see people who work only 180 days a year that are way overpaid.
My daughters special needs teacher's salary is about right on for how many years she has been there and what she has to do compared to regular curriculum based teachers.
http://www.myfreedomfoundation.com/files/pdf/2011teachersalaries-districtse-j.pdf