Hello_Kitty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Wed Mar-11-09 11:21 PM
Response to Original message
11. Jesus god. Because we have PARENTS!!
Some folks want to make teachers - people who devote themselves to a career that requires an incredible amount of training for low pay and the patience and enthusiasm of a saint - jump through all kinds of arbitrary hurdles to get a pittance of a raise.
I may very well get BS'ed for this (what else is new?) but the bolded portion, going from my personal experience, is bullshit.
I spent two years studying higher math for my degree. At my university, as at I'm guessing most universities, something like 80% of the math majors were also education majors, with the remaining 20% a more-or-less even split between applied math and math theory.
A lot of the applied guys would take math theory courses as electives, and us theory guys would take some of the harder applied courses if schedules permitted (PDE's, numerical analysis, etc.). We did it because we enjoyed the material and/or enjoyed the challenge.
The ed majors, on the other hand, only took those higher-level courses (think anything past multi-variable calculus) which they needed for their teacher certification. Things like number theory, modern algebra, probability - nothing that's difficult at the intro level, or at least it had better not be if you're supposed to teach the stuff.
These kids would complain about how difficult the material was, and how it wasn't relevant to what they wanted to do. (Yeah, because algebraic topology and measure theory are really relevant to my helpdesk job.) They shyed away from challenge. They were SLACKERS. No curiousity about their supposed passion, no drive to improve themselves. More often than not, when you asked them why they wanted to teach math, they'd say something along the lines of the shortage of math teachers guaranteeing them a job.
The only way you can claim that math teachers, at least, have "incredible amounts of training" is if by training you mean the Marxist drivel they teach over at the Education department.FlyingSquirrel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Wed Mar-11-09 11:29 PM
Response to Original message
13. Here's a better idea:
Pay all teachers WAY MORE regardless of whether they "deserve it" or not.
The end result will be that people like me who would probably be good teachers if we weren't allergic to being shafted will enter the profession. It won't help in the short term, but in the long term it will do much more to improve things than "merit pay" could ever do.
Behind the batsh*t insanity, FlyingSquirrel actually has something resembling a coherent thought. The awful pay of teaching professions does tend to turn off the more competent. Even without any Education credentials, there's fast-track programs where with my Math degree I could be teaching in a year or less - and be getting paid to get a Master's in Education at the same time. I know, I looked into them right before graduating. But considering that I easily make twice a teacher's starting salary working in a call center, and I make, oh I'm guessing 4 or more times a teacher's hourly rate tutoring high school math on the side, why on Earth would I bother with something like that?