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The Water Cooler
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Do teachers "really" have it that bad???
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<blockquote data-quote="cjjtulsa" data-source="post: 2993573" data-attributes="member: 6146"><p>Yes - it was so great that my wife quit teaching after 10 years to go back to school for her Bachelor's in nursing. She was sick of watching her husband with a HS diploma make double her salary. She was irritated to talk to a girl that helped at the school with an Associates degree in nursing, who was working 36 hours a week as a nurse and making more than twice her salary. She was sick of spending sh*t loads of time at home planning for classes, showing up a good three weeks before school (you know, on that endless summer break she got) to rebuild her classroom after it was dismantled after every school year. She so enjoyed those who put their kids in school as a day care, as they clearly weren't ready to be in school yet (daily pants-sh*tting and wetting). She got to enjoy the spoils of our legal system, who insist that ALL students have the right to the same education, including the ones who hit, bite, try to stab others with pencils, flip desks, and these kids are regular regulars to this behavior - and because they deserve this right, can't be culled from the class that they are disrupting. Just the daily call to the counselor, and off to the Principal's office, only to be right back the next morning. Then there is the warm, fuzzy feeling of spending part of that whopping $33,000 a year (and that's after starting at $30,000 ten years earlier) to buy school supplies that our worthless public school system can't afford, and that worthless parents just figure drops from the sky when butterball needs pencils, crayons, paper, and every other damned thing under the sun.</p><p></p><p>Yes - the public school system is a dismal failure. But I will no longer have to hear about it first hand, as we'll leave all of the fun that is being a public school teacher to the poor souls who haven't escaped yet, or who are naive enough to be entering the field.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cjjtulsa, post: 2993573, member: 6146"] Yes - it was so great that my wife quit teaching after 10 years to go back to school for her Bachelor's in nursing. She was sick of watching her husband with a HS diploma make double her salary. She was irritated to talk to a girl that helped at the school with an Associates degree in nursing, who was working 36 hours a week as a nurse and making more than twice her salary. She was sick of spending sh*t loads of time at home planning for classes, showing up a good three weeks before school (you know, on that endless summer break she got) to rebuild her classroom after it was dismantled after every school year. She so enjoyed those who put their kids in school as a day care, as they clearly weren't ready to be in school yet (daily pants-sh*tting and wetting). She got to enjoy the spoils of our legal system, who insist that ALL students have the right to the same education, including the ones who hit, bite, try to stab others with pencils, flip desks, and these kids are regular regulars to this behavior - and because they deserve this right, can't be culled from the class that they are disrupting. Just the daily call to the counselor, and off to the Principal's office, only to be right back the next morning. Then there is the warm, fuzzy feeling of spending part of that whopping $33,000 a year (and that's after starting at $30,000 ten years earlier) to buy school supplies that our worthless public school system can't afford, and that worthless parents just figure drops from the sky when butterball needs pencils, crayons, paper, and every other damned thing under the sun. Yes - the public school system is a dismal failure. But I will no longer have to hear about it first hand, as we'll leave all of the fun that is being a public school teacher to the poor souls who haven't escaped yet, or who are naive enough to be entering the field. [/QUOTE]
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