What could go wrong?

  • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This isn’t as ridiculous as the headline makes it out to be. You still need to be licensed, which means a college degree. You can’t get through college without reading. They’re trying to get more teachers by reducing restrictions, although what they should be doing is making being a teacher a higher paying, less grueling job.

    My mother was a Special Education teacher for 40 years and was at the top of her pay scale at 89k. I work in tech and 5 years out of college I was making 4 grand less than her. 5 years later I’m now applying to remote jobs where they’re offering $60-75/hour or upwards of $150k/year! I worked for Disney+ and was making $110k/year not including benefits and was literally doing nothing half the time, meanwhile she would literally have to bring work home with her multiple times a week. People I graduated high school with were working in her district and were making like $35-45k/year which is fucking ridiculous.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      1 year ago

      I guess there are two big questions.

      1. Is FORT a good test to require teachers to take? The test seems rather difficult if it is a problem for college educated adults. What skills are lost by allowing professionals who can’t pass the test?

      2. How messed up is the current school funding situation? School-age children as a percentage of the population is dropping, so it isn’t like we need more children as a percentage of the population. If school budgets kept up with inflation, we shouldn’t need teachers to take a vow of poverty.

      • eclectic_electron@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        School budgets are paid out of city property taxes, which are mostly paid and voted on by old people who own homes with no mortgage and little chance of increasing their income. They also don’t have young kids and are probably Republican.

        They’d gouge their own eyes out before they’d vote to raise their own property taxes to pay for something that doesn’t benefit them.

        Ergo, schools are always underfunded.