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DanteAlighieri
Guest
Wow. See, that’s just so sad to me that teachers make so little, considering the responsibilities they have and the lives entrusted to them.![]()
Wow. See, that’s just so sad to me that teachers make so little, considering the responsibilities they have and the lives entrusted to them.![]()
Arrogant nonsense! Everybody in nearly every profession thinks this. I’m a civil engineer. I design potable water distribution systems and sanitary sewer networks. Without my profession, you probably wouldn’t even exist since your great grandpa would’ve died from a cholera epidemic along with most of the rest of today’s population.(cont)
Aside from doctors and researchers, there is no other occupation that I can think of that harbors more responsibility for society.
How did you learn all that genius? Books you say? Who wrote them?Arrogant nonsense! Everybody in nearly every profession thinks this. I’m a civil engineer. I design potable water distribution systems and sanitary sewer networks. Without my profession, you probably wouldn’t even exist since your great grandpa would’ve died from a cholera epidemic along with most of the rest of today’s population.
Lawyers rightly point out that our complex specialized economy could never function if law didn’t reliably provide a stable foundation and predictable environment.
Auto mechanics note that our civilization would collapse if we had to go back to walking and horse riding for transport.
Electric linemen correctly note that doctors and researchers couldn’t do hardly squat if they didn’t keep the juice flowing.
And so on. Fact is that we live in an amazingly specialized culture and are ALL interdependent on each other. I make less than some teachers in my area in spite of needing 5 years of college, a 4 year internship, licensing exam and ongoing education. I make more than some other teachers. Right in the middle.
But you know who ticks ME off? School administration who give themselves a 250% raise the year before they retire so that their pension is based on a skewed number and they make more in retirement than they did while working. It’s become SOP around here and it STINKS!
Good point. Further, I am impressed with all the schooling your job requires. And with all the schooling many impressive careers require. Who taught those courses? Teachers? Where would you, or anyone for that matter, be without teachers? All successful people with successful careers can trace that success back to a teacher .How did you learn all that genius? Books you say? Who wrote them?![]()
Who are you referring to when you say “YOU miss the point.”?You miss the point. You claim yours is the most crucial of professions. I say that is like arguing whether humans need oxygen or water more. It’s a silly argument.
We’re up the creek if ANY of the major professions suddenly were to vanish! Claiming the superiority of yours is petty tribalism.
My response was to boppaid, but it applies to anybody with a similar attitude of supremacy for his/her own profession in the pecking order of society.Who are you referring to when you say “YOU miss the point.”?
I don’t suppose it applies to me since I consider accountants a necessary evil.My response was to boppaid, but it applies to anybody with a similar attitude of supremacy for his/her own profession in the pecking order of society.
I’m sorry if my post came off that way. But let’s face it EVERY profession that is necessary in our world is educated by teachers, and would not be where they are today were it not for teachers. That includes doctors, scientists, accountants, researchers, etc. However, that is NOT to say they aren’t extremely important professions either. They are! And, yes, we’d be up a creek if those professions vanished. However, I just want you to remember who educated the people in those professions.You miss the point. You claim yours is the most crucial of professions. I say that is like arguing whether humans need oxygen or water more. It’s a silly argument.
We’re up the creek if ANY of the major professions suddenly were to vanish! Claiming the superiority of yours is petty tribalism.
You, I think, are misunderstanding me. My point really had nothing to do with pecking order, but rather, that teachers aren’t paid their worth. We pay certain professions SO MUCH money (doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc). Yet, we don’t offer compensation for teachers anywhere near that! Even teachers who have as much (or more) schooling than doctors and lawyers. It was pointed out to me that these professions are extremely valuable. I was simply stating that, yes, they are…but there wouldn’t be educated doctors, lawyers, etc., were it not for the education they received.My response was to boppaid, but it applies to anybody with a similar attitude of supremacy for his/her own profession in the pecking order of society.
I think there are 2 reasons why other professions make more than teachers, on the whole (and they are both kinda connected):We pay certain professions SO MUCH money (doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc). Yet, we don’t offer compensation for teachers anywhere near that!
True, they would make more money that way, but then they wouldn’t have the best interests of the children at heart which would, in turn, mean that they aren’t “good” teachers.If good teachers want to make more $ they should work to eliminate compulsory, government education.
Where do parents fit into your plan? What’s a teacher to do when parents don’t make their children come to school, respect the teacher, give them proper nutrition and rest so they can learn and see that they do their homework? That’s only scraping the surface.I think there are 2 reasons why other professions make more than teachers, on the whole (and they are both kinda connected):
If good teachers want to make more $ they should work to eliminate compulsory, government education.
- Accountability (Risk). As an engineer, if I install a multi milllion $ system and it doesn’t work, I’ll lose my job. I do not believe I’ve ever heard of a teacher losing their job because kids in their class are not learning. I imagine it happens, but the teachers unions fight to make sure it doesn’t.
I’m not sure I am completely clear on which part would not be in the children’s best interests - compulsory education or teachers working in a free market system to maximize their earnings?True, they would make more money that way, but then they wouldn’t have the best interests of the children at heart which would, in turn, mean that they aren’t “good” teachers.Kind of a vicious circle, I guess.
That would be in the entire part you cut from my post - eliminate compulsory education.Where do parents fit into your plan? What’s a teacher to do when parents don’t make their children come to school, respect the teacher, give them proper nutrition and rest so they can learn and see that they do their homework? That’s only scraping the surface.
I know a few meat packing plants and canneries that these children could go work in. That would keep them off the streets and still contribute to society.If good teachers want to make more $ they should work to eliminate compulsory, government education.
True, they would make more money that way, but then they wouldn’t have the best interests of the children at heart which would, in turn, mean that they aren’t “good” teachers.Kind of a vicious circle, I guess.
In a free market teachers would only get paid if they show the best interest of the children. It is the compulsory market that accepts terrible teaching performance with equal (or superior) pay. (based on years of service)I know a few meat packing plants and canneries that these children could go work in. That would keep them off the streets and still contribute to society.
Amen Brother!In a free market teachers would only get paid if they show the best interest of the children. It is the compulsory market that accepts terrible teaching performance with equal (or superior) pay. (based on years of service)