Saturday, December 10, 2011

LITTLE KNOW FACTS ABOUT THE AMERICAN TEACHER

Dr. Wendy Ghiora – Posting #100 – December 10, 2011
Have you ever thought about becoming a teacher? I found it to be an extremely rewarding job, not so much financially, but spiritually. I believe becoming a teacher is definitely a “calling”. Unfortunately, it is more and more difficult these days to entice college students to pursue teaching careers and to retain the ones that began to teach, but just couldn’t continue.
Here are a few possible reasons for this dilemma:
• Teachers work an average of ten hours per day
• 46 percent of teachers quit before their fifth year of teaching.
• Teachers cannot afford to buy a home in 32 metropolitan areas
• Over 92 percent of American teachers spend their own money on their students or their classrooms each year.
• 62 percent of teachers have second jobs outside of the classroom


Most teachers I have worked with during my 25 + years as a teacher and principal in various public schools, work long hours for not enough pay. They sometimes neglect themselves and their own families in order to do the best they can for their students. Teachers cannot take a break or go out for lunch whenever they want. By the time students are walked out to the lunch area, teachers have about twenty minutes to guzzle down their food and get the classroom set up for the next activity for the students. When teachers are absent, classroom production decreases. And by the way, teachers are not paid for the two months of summer vacation. Teachers cannot afford to have a bad day; they always need to be "on." Not many jobs are this demanding in so many ways and on so many levels.

Is it possible for teachers to gain the respect, recognition and paycheck they deserve for arguably the most important job there is? If you have any ideas on this, I’d love to hear them.
Modern cynics and skeptics see no harm in paying those to whom they entrust the minds of their children a smaller wage than is paid to those to whom they entrust the care of their plumbing.
John F. Kennedy

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