I see people argue that teachers should *both* be held to a higher standard *and* be paid less than private sector counterparts. Teachers would be better able to read up on the evidence and take a principled stand if they weren't already working 50+ hour weeks.
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Replying to @Kirsten3531 @jcrichman and
And, more than teachers, I would argue that parents have a voice - which is where this discussion started. Parents and teachers should work together to challenge norms that don't help children learn. (Just please don't yell at teachers about the homework policy.) /end
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Mason 🏃♂️ ✂️ Retweeted Mason 🏃♂️ ✂️
FWIW, - teachers' unions and teachers are two separate entities; AFAICT, the unions hold the real power - private school teachers earn less than public school teachers https://twitter.com/webdevMason/status/1029764091810725888?s=20 … - not yelling at a child on behalf of a teacher is not a crime against the teacher.
Mason 🏃♂️ ✂️ added,
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Yeah, not telling at your child is not what I'm talking about. I had had an uncountable number of students' parents yell at me on an uncountable variety of topics, and I was only a FT teacher for less than two years.
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Then remember that what you've been replying to this entire time is the very idea of a parent saying "I won't make my child do that." It's laughable that the teacher would be the victim, there.
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*sigh* What I've been trying to suggest, repeatedly, is that you need to aim higher than teachers. Use teachers as your allies and change the system.
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If the teachers themselves supposedly have no influence over the system, then how much influence do you think the parents have?
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Individual teachers and individual parents can't do much, but I'd suggest that if they work together and target actual decision-makers, they could change quite a bit.
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I've spent the past 2 years dedicating myself to understanding the labrynthian system of incentives that is the US public school system; all I can say is "good luck with that." At the end of the day, you're either executing on it or not. "Nothing I could do" is worth zero points.
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All a parent can do is say "no, I'm not going to do that." All a teacher can say is "no, I'm not going to do that." All a principal can do, etc. They almost never do. It's personally costly. Zero points all around.
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For what it's worth, public school teaching is a horror show of a job. On some measures, some of the lowest job satisfaction of any career on the market. Critical responsibility coupled with virtually no agency. I feel bad for teachers. They should refuse.
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Replying to @webdevMason @larajaan
I was shocked to learn that something like half leave the field within three years. Some huge percentage anyway.
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But they don't, en masse. They do what they do, though they hate it. The kids endure what they endure. The system rolls on. Zero points.
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