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Re: Another Perspective
Posted by Mark on 3/18/08

    On 3/18/08, ... wrote:
    > you do work because you want to make money, and you can determine how many bills you
    > have. I do not have an extravagant house or a fancy car because I know I cannot
    > afford it. I could be a manager at Wal-Mart making more money than I do now, but
    > would never dream of it because I know I have a positive impact on my kids lives
    > everyday. You may work because of the money, but you have a choice in where you
    > work. And if someone is not there 100&37; for the kids, then they shouldn't be there at
    > all.

    No, I reject that. We're not the peace corps, we're not priests. We don't and shouldn't
    have to take a vow of poverty to become teachers. In areas where they do have to take
    such a vow, they have mostly bad teachers. Obviously if we wanted to be rich, we'd be in a
    different field, but don't you dare make people feel guilty for wanting to be middle-class
    and afford a decent home and car while they have Master's degrees!

    Bad teachers are ones that don't teach well, by the way. Good teachers are those who help
    students learn. End of story. There are many bad teachers who are "100 percent" for the
    kids and they think their "selfless" attitude makes up for the fact that they aren't
    effective teachers. There are many teachers who are excellent, but they'd leave the
    profession if they were told they're loosing 30 percent of their pay next year.

    It is not wrong for teachers to demand good pay, treatment, and benefits. This leads to
    attracting better people into the profession, which helps kids a lot more than good
    feelings.


 
 
 
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