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The Water Cooler
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State Question 779. Penny tax for teachers raises by the numbers
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<blockquote data-quote="crrcboatz" data-source="post: 2894836" data-attributes="member: 32702"><p>Curriculum coordinators are there because of state and federal requirements that districts place on a district. These reports and monitoring are lengthy and detailed. In order to receive state and fed funding their guidelines and all that go with it must be adhered to. The public has NO idea how much paperwork goes into mandated guidelines. Also in some districts this position is piggybacked with other things. I was a federal and state programs coordinator and personnel director at one district. If a district misses its funding deadlines for a single year what the school board go nuts. Loosing a few hundred thousand will get you fired. As for national board certification it is one way to develop, keep and maintain better educated teachers particularly in small districts. The idea that it makes for better test scores, well to each his on on that one. Coaches, ah yes the local hero coach thing. That is all about LOCAL CONTROL. Districts make those decisions, not the state. Don't like whats going on there, blame your local school board. The state regulates those activities in order to create parity, stop cheating, promote sportsmanship, etc but hiring and firing, pay, responsibilities, hey set down with your board on that one. Oh but may I say get ready to hang onto your butt because most of this state lives and dies sports when it comes to local schools. At one time private schools gave a person relief from that but NO LONGER. Most of the private schools are A** deep in athletics as much as public schools. Sports is what the public identify with along with Vo Ag. Trust me on this one.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="crrcboatz, post: 2894836, member: 32702"] Curriculum coordinators are there because of state and federal requirements that districts place on a district. These reports and monitoring are lengthy and detailed. In order to receive state and fed funding their guidelines and all that go with it must be adhered to. The public has NO idea how much paperwork goes into mandated guidelines. Also in some districts this position is piggybacked with other things. I was a federal and state programs coordinator and personnel director at one district. If a district misses its funding deadlines for a single year what the school board go nuts. Loosing a few hundred thousand will get you fired. As for national board certification it is one way to develop, keep and maintain better educated teachers particularly in small districts. The idea that it makes for better test scores, well to each his on on that one. Coaches, ah yes the local hero coach thing. That is all about LOCAL CONTROL. Districts make those decisions, not the state. Don't like whats going on there, blame your local school board. The state regulates those activities in order to create parity, stop cheating, promote sportsmanship, etc but hiring and firing, pay, responsibilities, hey set down with your board on that one. Oh but may I say get ready to hang onto your butt because most of this state lives and dies sports when it comes to local schools. At one time private schools gave a person relief from that but NO LONGER. Most of the private schools are A** deep in athletics as much as public schools. Sports is what the public identify with along with Vo Ag. Trust me on this one. [/QUOTE]
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State Question 779. Penny tax for teachers raises by the numbers
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