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No Child Left Behind

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    mcdermottmcdermott Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    mcdermott wrote: »
    Man, I think starting my school district in Dallas was 30k.

    Starting pay for teachers up here only recently (last 2-3 years) broke the $20K line in many areas, well below median per-capita income.

    I remember hearing that when Helena put up a teaching position opening that had a decent salary for there - well, they got responses from all over the US, from top notch candidates.

    This is true, and part of why my wife and I now life 100 miles apart during the week (she got a position in Helena). But Helena is, IIRC, either the top-paying district in the state or a close second...and she still only started at like $35K* (elementary, though) with two bachelor's degrees (psychology and el-ed).

    Though the second degree didn't bump her as much as a master's would.

    From what she tells me, though, part of why Helena pays better than other districts in the state is because they also require more hours/days each year of non-school time to be put in by teachers...for various shit, like training and community bullshit or whatever. The extra work still doesn't outweigh the increased pay, but it does offset it a bit.

    I think overall though Montana is like 49th or 50th in absolute terms for teacher pay...so this is unsurprising. Pegged to median per-capita income I believe we fare a bit better, but still not great.

    * - Keep in mind, of course, that the median income in the state is only like $29K, and was less a couple years ago when she got hired...so not quite as bad as it might sound.

    mcdermott on
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    Marty81Marty81 Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    Marty81 wrote: »
    They had an interesting program which I almost decided to do, which was basically, anybody who graduated from a Dallas high school in the top 10% of their class got a letter in the folder with their diploma. The letter offered them a guaranteed position in a Dallas school at the above pay, if they got a teaching certification within 5 years. They really wanted teachers.

    Wow, that's actually kind of scary.

    The thing is that schools are desperate. The cost of a post-secondary education combined with the low salaries that teachers get means that in many ways, it's a sucker's game.

    It's less scary when you consider that a bachelor's degree is required to get a teaching teaching certificate in TX (I just looked it up), but still. As much as I love teaching, the thought of doing it in a public school is sickeningly off-putting. I'm either going to teach college or just become a corporate whore. I haven't decided which yet.

    Marty81 on
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    AngelHedgieAngelHedgie Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Marty81 wrote: »
    They had an interesting program which I almost decided to do, which was basically, anybody who graduated from a Dallas high school in the top 10% of their class got a letter in the folder with their diploma. The letter offered them a guaranteed position in a Dallas school at the above pay, if they got a teaching certification within 5 years. They really wanted teachers.

    Wow, that's actually kind of scary.

    The thing is that schools are desperate. The cost of a post-secondary education combined with the low salaries that teachers get means that in many ways, it's a sucker's game.

    It's less scary when you consider that a bachelor's degree is required to get a teaching teaching certificate in TX (I just looked it up), but still. As much as I love teaching, the thought of doing it in a public school is sickeningly off-putting. I'm either going to teach college or just become a corporate whore. I haven't decided which yet.

    In some states, like NY, teachers are required to have masters degrees (though new teachers can enter with just a BS, but must get their masters in a set period of time and show adequate progress in doing so each year).

    AngelHedgie on
    XBL: Nox Aeternum / PSN: NoxAeternum / NN:NoxAeternum / Steam: noxaeternum
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    DocDoc Registered User, ClubPA regular
    edited October 2007
    It has been pointed out that parents in poorer areas (read:the areas that are having problems with No Child Left Behind) read to their kids less and generally speaking take less of an interest in their education, right?

    Mental development and learning shouldn't stop when the kids leave school.

    Doc on
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    Marty81Marty81 Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    Doc wrote: »
    It has been pointed out that parents in poorer areas (read:the areas that are having problems with No Child Left Behind) read to their kids less and generally speaking take less of an interest in their education, right?

    Mental development and learning shouldn't stop when the kids leave school.

    Yes it has, but I disagree that the poorer areas are the only ones having problems with NCLB.

    Marty81 on
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    DocDoc Registered User, ClubPA regular
    edited October 2007
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Doc wrote: »
    It has been pointed out that parents in poorer areas (read:the areas that are having problems with No Child Left Behind) read to their kids less and generally speaking take less of an interest in their education, right?

    Mental development and learning shouldn't stop when the kids leave school.

    Yes it has, but I disagree that the poorer areas are the only ones having problems with NCLB.

    Is there not a strong correlation between the two?

    Doc on
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    Marty81Marty81 Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    Doc wrote: »
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Doc wrote: »
    It has been pointed out that parents in poorer areas (read:the areas that are having problems with No Child Left Behind) read to their kids less and generally speaking take less of an interest in their education, right?

    Mental development and learning shouldn't stop when the kids leave school.

    Yes it has, but I disagree that the poorer areas are the only ones having problems with NCLB.

    Is there not a strong correlation between the two?

    It depends what you mean by "having problems." The ones that NCLB itself reports as having problems are typically the poorer ones, yes. The ones that are having problems in the sense that they're harming the education and intellectual development of their better students are all over the place.

    Marty81 on
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    DocDoc Registered User, ClubPA regular
    edited October 2007
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Doc wrote: »
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Doc wrote: »
    It has been pointed out that parents in poorer areas (read:the areas that are having problems with No Child Left Behind) read to their kids less and generally speaking take less of an interest in their education, right?

    Mental development and learning shouldn't stop when the kids leave school.

    Yes it has, but I disagree that the poorer areas are the only ones having problems with NCLB.

    Is there not a strong correlation between the two?

    It depends what you mean by "having problems." The ones that NCLB itself reports as having problems are typically the poorer ones, yes. The ones that are having problems in the sense that they're harming the education and intellectual development of their better students are all over the place.

    I'd agree with that, absolutely.

    I should have been more clear:
    I'm saying is that all NCLB looks at is performance, and it assumes that the teachers and schools are 100% responsible for that, which is fucking dumb.

    Doc on
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    Marty81Marty81 Registered User regular
    edited October 2007
    Ok :^:

    IIRC NCLB also looks at performance increases from year to year. At some point, it's going to be hard to continue increasing :P.

    The problem I and most others have with NCLB is that it's only concerned with a single score cutoff point. Lots of students above the cutoff = good. NCLB isn't concerned with excellence in any way. It's only concerned about students meeting minimum requirements.

    Marty81 on
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    link064link064 Registered User new member
    edited November 2007
    I'm not sure if it covers all of Texas, but in the Dallas metroplex, they have a program going on where, if a recent college graduate gets hired as a high school math teacher, the state pays off all of their student loans over 5 years (as long as they are a teacher for that long). I don't know about you, but that sure makes me want to be a math teacher with a masters or doctorate :P

    link064 on
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    ArgusArgus Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    link064 wrote: »
    I'm not sure if it covers all of Texas, but in the Dallas metroplex, they have a program going on where, if a recent college graduate gets hired as a high school math teacher, the state pays off all of their student loans over 5 years (as long as they are a teacher for that long). I don't know about you, but that sure makes me want to be a math teacher with a masters or doctorate :P

    AR has the State Teacher Assistance Resource (STAR) Program, where eligible students "may receive up to $6,000 per year or a total of up to $18,000 in scholarship money for a five-year education degree program."

    Also, my school system starts out with $41,000 for a teacher with a Bachelor's, and maxes out at $64,799, but that's with 25 years of teaching plus a master's plus going to extra classes for teaching on your off-time, and we're pretty much the richest district in AR (yay, Wal-mart?)

    Argus on
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    DerrickDerrick Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    Marty81 wrote: »
    Ok :^:

    IIRC NCLB also looks at performance increases from year to year. At some point, it's going to be hard to continue increasing :P.

    The way around that is to lower the standards every year. Wow look at that progress! (This is happening btw. I didn't make that up)

    Derrick on
    Steam and CFN: Enexemander
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    FencingsaxFencingsax It is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understanding GNU Terry PratchettRegistered User regular
    edited November 2007
    Oh, it's no question that, on the whole, school teachers in America are payed horribly.

    Fencingsax on
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    mcdermottmcdermott Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    Fencingsax wrote: »
    Oh, it's no question that, on the whole, school teachers in America are payed horribly.

    Apparently there is some question, since I've seen some passionate arguments on this very forum that this is not the case. Mainly from people who gather their information on how much and how hard teacher work from their schedules and workloads as a student.

    mcdermott on
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    AngelHedgieAngelHedgie Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    mcdermott wrote: »
    Fencingsax wrote: »
    Oh, it's no question that, on the whole, school teachers in America are payed horribly.

    Apparently there is some question, since I've seen some passionate arguments on this very forum that this is not the case. Mainly from people who gather their information on how much and how hard teacher work from their schedules and workloads as a student.

    There's also the classic "but teaching is a 'calling' " argument too - in other words, teachers should accept poor pay because they're teaching "for the children".

    Everytime I hear that argument, I want to stab the speaker in the face with something blunt.

    AngelHedgie on
    XBL: Nox Aeternum / PSN: NoxAeternum / NN:NoxAeternum / Steam: noxaeternum
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    AngelHedgieAngelHedgie Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    Oh, and to the person in the Ron Paul thread who said they didn't want to get into NCLB there - why don't you come in here?

    AngelHedgie on
    XBL: Nox Aeternum / PSN: NoxAeternum / NN:NoxAeternum / Steam: noxaeternum
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    mcdermottmcdermott Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    Oh, and to the person in the Ron Paul thread who said they didn't want to get into NCLB there - why don't you come in here?

    Why don't you just invite some vampires in while you're at it?

    mcdermott on
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    AngelHedgieAngelHedgie Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    mcdermott wrote: »
    Oh, and to the person in the Ron Paul thread who said they didn't want to get into NCLB there - why don't you come in here?

    Why don't you just invite some vampires in while you're at it?

    We'd have an easier time dealing with the vampires.

    AngelHedgie on
    XBL: Nox Aeternum / PSN: NoxAeternum / NN:NoxAeternum / Steam: noxaeternum
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    sumwarsumwar Registered User regular
    edited November 2007
    I've only read up to the first 30 posts at the moment. I just finished high school last school year and I live in Canada. I have to say that if this is true about teachers being forced to focus on tests and not fun, well damn that sucks. Sure the teachers here teach to help you with the tests by preparing you but I've had plenty of teachers that have fun. Some make a lot of jokes some talk to people that are really interested in politics about what is going on in the world and the class gets to hear. It's nice to start the day off making fun of politicians.

    I'm not sure if I heard someone say that teachers teach by the textbook? I hope not if America's textbooks are even half as bad as ours. Also there are guidance councilor's to help you if you ever have issues and want to talk to someone privately. Plus I've had a few teachers mention several times that these tests aren't the end of the world so I hope that's not what America's school system is currently trying to burn into the children's minds.

    sumwar on
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