Clearly the best way to attract talent is to pay less
9/14/2012 3:51:30 PM
I've learned that among right-leaning folks (and trollin' communists, apparently), the law of supply affects all occupations but teachers. "Teacher quality is the biggest problem in education today, and they're paid too much" was more or less the gist of a major Heritage Foundation study a couple months back.[Edited on September 14, 2012 at 5:05 PM. Reason : ]
9/14/2012 5:01:36 PM
9/14/2012 5:05:11 PM
9/14/2012 5:12:32 PM
9/14/2012 5:20:44 PM
Sure they could, any web developer on this site could probably do it right now:http://www.ncpublicschools.org/licensure/steps/
9/14/2012 5:32:06 PM
I know of quite a few people who quit teaching in a hurry. Obtaining the license might be easier than performing the job itself.
9/14/2012 6:23:49 PM
48th in education
9/14/2012 6:24:27 PM
9/14/2012 7:00:33 PM
Software developers attrition rate is ~2/10 or 20%.I am also not sure how you are correlating attrition rate with how hard a job is as there are many reasons and factors behind job turnover.
9/14/2012 7:27:14 PM
It's a good thing you converted that fraction into an easy to read percentage for all us simpletons.
9/14/2012 7:40:04 PM
A quick number crunch shows us that software developers quit at about a 33.33 rate.........repeating, of course.
9/14/2012 7:41:11 PM
^^^Attrition from the profession, not turnover within the profession. The latter has nothing to do with the difficulty of the profession; the former has everything to do with it.Over 45% of teachers leave the profession within five years. Can you tell me what percentage of software developers leave for another profession within 5 years of starting?[Edited on September 14, 2012 at 7:47 PM. Reason : ]
9/14/2012 7:41:18 PM
lol Kris think getting a certification means you're going to be able to be an effective teacheri'd love to see a web app developer get dropped into an inner city school and effectively teach 18 year old kids repeater algebra when they're reading at a 4th grade level[Edited on September 14, 2012 at 8:54 PM. Reason : .]
9/14/2012 8:51:39 PM
9/14/2012 9:58:36 PM
9/14/2012 10:43:18 PM
9/14/2012 10:46:16 PM
^ That post very neatly summarizes why I contemplate getting out of teaching at least a couple of times per year. None of it has anything to do with the kids themselves, whom I really enjoy teaching.
9/14/2012 11:17:51 PM
it would be nice if teaching was controlled by teachers and not politicians. Thats private school. Private schools can be great but I'm not for privatization because lower income kids would miss out. I think that government should provide funding and get out of the way though. Putting more control into each teacher's hand with them being directly controlled by the principal and vague standards. Standardized testing is a complete joke and means nothing. Stop wasting time and money on it.
9/14/2012 11:23:04 PM
9/15/2012 7:28:42 AM
9/15/2012 8:05:29 AM
9/15/2012 9:10:25 AM
9/15/2012 10:01:34 AM
Yeah, I think that until the teachers offer a counter proposal for annual evaluation that offer quantitative analysis and objective criteria they need to shut the fuck up.I'm sure that value added has its issues, any and all evaluation based on results will, but unless you can offer a better, more fair solution you deal with it.Time for the teachers union to climb down off the cross and get back in the classroom.
9/15/2012 10:14:30 AM
9/15/2012 10:16:19 AM
9/15/2012 10:31:24 AM
9/15/2012 1:57:53 PM
So what I am getting from this thread is:(a) software developers contribute very little to society unlike teachers.(b) being a software developer is a easy job compared to being a teacher based on attrition rates.I personally don't understand how a higher attrition rate means its a harder job as there are a lot of factors involved.[Edited on September 15, 2012 at 2:45 PM. Reason : .]
9/15/2012 2:45:35 PM
9/15/2012 4:40:29 PM
9/15/2012 5:33:50 PM
9/15/2012 6:57:45 PM
I'm not saying that good and bad teachers don't exist, or that we can't figure out who's who.I'm arguing that value-added models derived from standardized tests don't accomplish this end. What's incoherent about that? I'm literally the only one in this thread to provide evidence for my assertions. We can evaluate teachers via process-based evaluation from superiors, just like most other professions that don't depend on the production of x widgets per unit of time. It's the way we did it in the 50's, it's the way that's continuing to work in right-to-work states, and it's the way that would work in Chicago if tenure wasn't so ridiculous. Your post is heavy on desire for quantitative metrics and short on evidence for whether they're ready to hire/fire people
9/15/2012 9:52:17 PM
http://hotair.com/greenroom/archives/2012/09/14/almost-40-of-chicagos-public-school-teachers-send-their-kids-elsewhere-to-learn/Almost 40% of Chicago’s Public School Teachers Send their Kids Elsewhere to Learn
9/16/2012 12:24:12 AM
This is also very interesting:
9/16/2012 2:48:29 AM
^what kind of garbage source is that and what does the length of the school year have anything to do with quality of education. Chicago is a dangerous city, I wouldn't take $150K to work there. If you would take less than $70K to work there than move your butt over there and work as a teacher.san antonio is number 3 on that chart...i don't know anyone who is excited to have their kids educated here in san antonio...
9/16/2012 3:22:55 AM
^ the issue was that the strikes started partially because Emanuel the mayor wanted to increase the days in the school year. Chicago has a significantly shorter school year and all I have heard was how horrible it was to make the teachers work longer school years on CNN.Fact of the matter is they work very very short school years.The source is Illinois Institute of Policy.BTW, I never said this had any impact on education standards or quality of education.[Edited on September 16, 2012 at 4:10 AM. Reason : f]
9/16/2012 4:05:16 AM
^^^^Those numbers are meaningless without a comparison to their peer group. Lies, damned lies, and statistics.
9/16/2012 4:54:49 AM
9/16/2012 11:40:53 AM
^^ LMAO... the Chicago Public School system was the one that brought up these figures. They determined based off the number of days of school per year and the length of the school day. It doesn't take a genius to figure it out.[Edited on September 16, 2012 at 11:41 AM. Reason : g]
All this is great, but how do you curve the scores so that the teachers that get assigned to the remedial classes get a fair shake against those who teach the honors/AP classes? Any curve would be subjective, but an across the board "meet this percentage or else" isn't fair either. Also, at least in Maryland, there are not standardized tests for every subject. In fact, only Algebra I, Biology, English 10, and US Gov't are tested in high school. Does that mean that standardized tests need to be created for every subject, including PE, music, and art for this to work, or is it only the unfortunate teachers that get assigned to the tested topic are the only ones under the gun that year? I am all for being able to get rid of the awful teachers, but I don't think that the system to do it is as easy as some on here believe it is.Oh, and to whoever it was that said anyone with a degree can teach, they need to look more at the link they posted. Yes, some (most?) states will let you teach without a teaching degree, but you have to take all of the education classes before you can become a full on teacher. In MD, I taught for my first 4 years as a provisional teacher ($5k less pay, no tenure). I needed seven classes that taught you the skills to be a teacher. I was able to pick up teaching fairly easily, but in those 4 years, I saw numerous first year teachers wash out because they could not figure out how to get the material across to the kids. Can you teach without an education degree? Yes. Can everyone with a 4 year degree be a successful teacher? Absolutely not.
9/16/2012 12:29:33 PM
Standardized testing as a measure of teacher performance is seriously flawed.I can agree with the outrage in terms of how teachers are evaluated. The thing I don't agree with is how the unions were fighting back against increasing the number of hours of the school year. They increased the length of the school day... it will be interesting to see if it stays that way or if the Union will be able to get the school board to revert to the old length of days.
9/16/2012 12:56:50 PM
Teacher performance should be based on lesson plans, execution of lesson plans and execution of professional development strategies in the classroom. Put cameras in if you have to. Don't just hire teachers because they are licensed. Screen their ability to teach prior to hire and you won't hire so many bad teachers. Then you won't have to fire them unless they don't do what they are supposed to do. You can't use the kids as a measure because kids are too inconsistent. Kids can know the information and completely blow off the standardized test because it does not affect their grade. Classes where passing depends on the grade are the biggest cancer to our education system because all the "great teachers" do is teach their kids how to do well on that specific test. This means teachers who actually teach end up looking bad. I know getting things across to the kids is important but you have to Evaluate the teacher, not the kids.
9/16/2012 1:18:16 PM
9/16/2012 2:05:12 PM
9/16/2012 4:11:10 PM
9/16/2012 4:25:53 PM
You'll never raise systemic problems of student underachievement by focusing solely on teachers.There are a myriad of factors plaguing Chicago. From institutional segregation, isolation, and high concentration of poverty and crime in the city, the city is suffering from access inequality.Any discussion about education that views student's results and teacher quality in an isolated vacuum is a worthless exercise.
9/16/2012 4:55:49 PM
Why bother discussing things that no one can do anything about? No doubt parents suck. No doubt the culture sucks. No doubt Chicago is full of racists. But short of violating their rights, there is nothing we can do about those things. But, what we can do is work on fixing the visibly broken government run education system. After-all, the government runs the damn thing and has all the authority it needs to do something about it.
9/16/2012 5:23:52 PM
9/16/2012 5:45:50 PM
Compulsory attendance is an issue, but one that no one will agree to eliminate, and one that probably shouldn't be eliminated as much as I dislike it as a concept. With the amount we're spending per student we could easily scrap government run education and give out vouchers to attend whatever school you want (which is what they do in Sweden) or do, fuck, anything else than what we're currently doing.Honestly, stuff like this teacher strike just further illustrates how broken public education is as an institution, but it's so deeply embedded in our culture that any change at all is viewed as a crazy proposal and fought tooth and nail by those with a vested economic interest in maintaining it no matter the cost to the children.
9/16/2012 5:52:20 PM
9/16/2012 6:21:35 PM