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Re: "the myth of underpaid teachers" no longer true!
Posted by julia on 6/20/09

    I didn't read any of the other responses, but "only need a bachelors" may be
    true for getting a preliminary license, but in 5 years at a large district in
    massachusetts I have yet to see the district hire anyone without a masters and
    initial or professional license. Because there are so many applicants out there,
    they can pick from the best and don't need the ones who only have a bachelors.
    I suppose if the job market changes, enrollment goes way up, funding
    increases, then maybe the bachelors people will get hired.

    On 6/17/09, job-seeker wrote:
    > Hi. I'm throwing this out for discussion......
    >
    > Years ago, teachers were considered underpaid, overworked,
    > generally a lousy profession. But this seems to be a thing
    > of the past.
    >
    > Since teachers have been unionized, they have a pretty
    > good situation. Benefits, pension, tenure, union lawyers,
    > paid training, long vacations...As for salaries, in my
    > state (new hampshire....a rural state) the average salary
    > is $50,000.
    >
    > To become a teacher, you only need a bachelors in
    > education. This is why the job market is flooded with
    > teachers and it is no longer easy to find teaching
    > positions.
    >
    > Getting a teachers contract in a public school is VERY
    > desirable, not what it used to be! Any thoughts?

     
     

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