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To: gunsequalfreedom
I am always amazed at these type of stories. The people who write them seem to think that a young 20 something kid, right out of college, who has never actually taught for a living, should be at the same pay scale as someone who has put in 20 years or so. It is ridiculous. No one does that. You start at the low end of the pay scale. That is why they call it a pay scale. As you gain more experience, you gain steps up the pay scale.

And, even if you are a truly lousy teacher, you can never be fired. But, yeah, keep complaining about how $30,000 plus for a yearly salary, plus medical benefits and paid vacation and holidays, is going to leave you starving.

10 posted on 05/30/2012 8:37:01 AM PDT by LibertarianLiz
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To: LibertarianLiz

>>And, even if you are a truly lousy teacher, you can never be fired.

In a state with a teacher’s union. A non-union state can fire anyone easily for the first three years after three warnings are accrued.


14 posted on 05/30/2012 8:40:35 AM PDT by struggle (http://killthegovernment.wordpress.com/)
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To: LibertarianLiz
I am always amazed at these type of stories. The people who write them seem to think that a young 20 something kid, right out of college, who has never actually taught for a living, should be at the same pay scale as someone who has put in 20 years or so. It is ridiculous. No one does that. You start at the low end of the pay scale. That is why they call it a pay scale. As you gain more experience, you gain steps up the pay scale.

The real purpose of this is to argue for raising the starting salary, SO THAT the unions can raise ALL salaries in the pay scale by the same percentage.

Hardly anybody gets a starting salary that will support a family. Teaching is no exception. She should live frugally until she gets her first two years of experience.

In NYC, teachers advance two salary steps per year, according to a salary schedule that has a new teacher with her Bachelors degree making $45K. After four years and getting her masters, that jumps to $56, finally topping out at 100K

34 posted on 05/30/2012 9:27:00 AM PDT by PapaBear3625 (If I can't be persuasive, I at least hope to be fun.)
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To: LibertarianLiz
paid vacation and holidays

I do not know of any teacher having paid vacations or holidays. In GA they get 12.5 days of sick leave, but no paid vacations or holidays. They are only paid for the days they work.
64 posted on 05/30/2012 1:33:09 PM PDT by John D
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