independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > General Discussion > 40,000 teachers walk off their jobs in Oklahoma.
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #60 posted 04/03/18 1:31pm

endymion

avatar

SuperFurryAnimal said:

The teachers walked out? Hope it was not during the summer or the extensive breaks that these expendables have.




If we met at a friend's wedding and I told you I was a teacher is the above quote from you the kind of interaction we would have?

If so, which is your prerogative, what is the motivation behind the comment?
What you don't remember never happened
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #61 posted 04/03/18 1:36pm

endymion

avatar

benni said:


Craig Troxell steps precariously across a customer's roof, marking hail damage from yet another Oklahoma storm. He still smells of the freshly cut grass from the swanky side of town, where he had just mowed lawns to make a few extra dollars.



But Troxell, 50, isn't a landscaper nor roof salesman by trade. He's a full-time high school science teacher who works four jobs to make ends meet.

Oklahoma is among the bottom three st...r salaries, where educators often work about 10 years before reaching the $40,000 salary mark. And they haven't gotten a raise from the state in 10 years.

Several teachers told CNN they're working multiple jobs in food delivery, retail, rideshare driving, restaurants and even surrogate pregnancy to pay the bills. Some now rely on a food bank to feed their own children.

Moy teaches high school algebra, drives a school bus in the afternoon, coaches football and wrestling, umpires Little League baseball and drives for rideshare services.

All of that combined, Moy said, brings home about $36,000 a year after taxes.

"Last night I drove Lyft and Uber for six, seven hours," Moy said. "When you have to do that to help supplement your income, it's tough when you don't get home when your kids go to bed."



_____

This is why the teachers in Oklahoma are on strike. When they have to supplement food by going to a food bank, have to work 4 to 6 jobs to earn extra income in order to pay their bills, take care of their families....then we are failing those teachers.




Thanks for sharing Bren

I think, to be fair, teachers in the US have a much shittier deal than we do in the UK.
What you don't remember never happened
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #62 posted 04/03/18 1:40pm

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

PennyPurple said:

OnlyNDaUsa said:

yeah, they are old. but their condition is maltreatment.

No, their condition is called USED by multiple students.

bull that is NOT normal wear and tear. If it was they would all look about the same,

[Edited 4/3/18 13:41pm]

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #63 posted 04/03/18 1:41pm

PennyPurple

avatar

OnlyNDaUsa said:

PennyPurple said:

No, their condition is called USED by multiple students.

bull

Bull.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #64 posted 04/03/18 3:18pm

morningsong

endymion said:

benni said:

Craig Troxell steps precariously across a customer's roof, marking hail damage from yet another Oklahoma storm. He still smells of the freshly cut grass from the swanky side of town, where he had just mowed lawns to make a few extra dollars.

But Troxell, 50, isn't a landscaper nor roof salesman by trade. He's a full-time high school science teacher who works four jobs to make ends meet.

Oklahoma is among the bottom three st...r salaries, where educators often work about 10 years before reaching the $40,000 salary mark. And they haven't gotten a raise from the state in 10 years.

Several teachers told CNN they're working multiple jobs in food delivery, retail, rideshare driving, restaurants and even surrogate pregnancy to pay the bills. Some now rely on a food bank to feed their own children.

Moy teaches high school algebra, drives a school bus in the afternoon, coaches football and wrestling, umpires Little League baseball and drives for rideshare services.
All of that combined, Moy said, brings home about $36,000 a year after taxes.
"Last night I drove Lyft and Uber for six, seven hours," Moy said. "When you have to do that to help supplement your income, it's tough when you don't get home when your kids go to bed."


_________________________________________________________________________

This is why the teachers in Oklahoma are on strike. When they have to supplement food by going to a food bank, have to work 4 to 6 jobs to earn extra income in order to pay their bills, take care of their families....then we are failing those teachers.
Thanks for sharing Bren I think, to be fair, teachers in the US have a much shittier deal than we do in the UK.



I was listening to some other news stuff, where a lot of schools here have to recruit outside the country for teachers in a lot of districts.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #65 posted 04/05/18 9:16am

poppys

gandorb said:

OnlyNDaUsa said:

they get between $20 and $30 an hour that is not bad. That is about $60K corrected for days worked.

You must be clueless about teachers. You have no idea how many hours above the scheduled time may teachers put in. There is a reason why there is so much teacher burnout compared to other jobs. Moreover, they keep adding non-teaching components to the jobs that they didn't sign on for. I guess you think you know more than the 40,000 teachers about their jobs and situations.

Like now they may have to be trained sharpshooters so we can keep the guns flowing...

Those teachers want money for the schools. Some are only open Monday-Thursday to save money on utilities, maintenence, and gas for buses. It's not like they have a normal school week with breakfast for their kids in the first place. Did you see the books? Shredded. And no money for paper - they run out. The school budget has been slashed to the bone by the (greedy oil interests) state. Striking is a necessary tool.

"if you can't clap on the one, then don't clap at all"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #66 posted 04/05/18 9:30am

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

poppys said:

gandorb said:

You must be clueless about teachers. You have no idea how many hours above the scheduled time may teachers put in. There is a reason why there is so much teacher burnout compared to other jobs. Moreover, they keep adding non-teaching components to the jobs that they didn't sign on for. I guess you think you know more than the 40,000 teachers about their jobs and situations.

Like now they may have to be trained sharpshooters so we can keep the guns flowing...

Those teachers want money for the schools. Some are only open Monday-Thursday to save money on utilities, maintenence, and gas for buses. It's not like they have a normal school week with breakfast for their kids in the first place. Did you see the books? Shredded. And no money for paper - they run out. The school budget has been slashed to the bone by the (greedy oil interests) state. Striking is a necessary tool.

but none of that the lack of supplies has anything to do with if a state/district/individual staff member chooses to have a gun.

and do you think the photos represent normal use even over 10 years?

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #67 posted 04/05/18 9:57am

2freaky4church
1

avatar

Somebody should walk it off.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #68 posted 04/05/18 1:08pm

NorthC

As George Clinton said: teachers work harder than you do, no matter what you do.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #69 posted 04/05/18 1:33pm

OnlyNDaUsa

avatar

NorthC said:

As George Clinton said: teachers work harder than you do, no matter what you do.


Hog flipping wash
"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #70 posted 04/05/18 1:34pm

benni

OnlyNDaUsa said:

poppys said:

Like now they may have to be trained sharpshooters so we can keep the guns flowing...

Those teachers want money for the schools. Some are only open Monday-Thursday to save money on utilities, maintenence, and gas for buses. It's not like they have a normal school week with breakfast for their kids in the first place. Did you see the books? Shredded. And no money for paper - they run out. The school budget has been slashed to the bone by the (greedy oil interests) state. Striking is a necessary tool.

but none of that the lack of supplies has anything to do with if a state/district/individual staff member chooses to have a gun.

and do you think the photos represent normal use even over 10 years?


Yes, that is normal wear and tear on books over 10 years. Kids have backpacks crammed full of stuff that are required for their classes. Many of those kids do not have time between classes to go to their lockers before going to the next class, and have to make sure those books are available, so they are crammed in with everything else.

My 14 year old daughter's backpack, when packed with what she needs for the day at middle school, weighs approximately 8 to 10 lbs on any given day. This includes separate 3 ring binders, which each of her classes requires. (I've wanted to combine her classes into one binder, but the teachers balk at the idea, and tell me that she is graded on the set up of her binder in a specific way they require). The weight also includes a math book, a social studies book, and a science book. My daughter weighs a mere 92 lbs. She actually carries a second bag to put extra paper and homework in.

Also, many of these kids have younger siblings at home that may get ahold of the book, when the student isn't around. And yes, kids are hard on text books, just tossing them on the table or desk at home. But a school text book, especially, does not last long. Now, in a classroom in which they have to share text books, and you have 5 kids handling the same text book, multiply it's use by the number of kids handling it. And keep in mind, that many textbooks in poorer school districts are probably older than 10 years.

[Edited 4/5/18 13:35pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #71 posted 04/05/18 1:36pm

benni

endymion said:

benni said:

Craig Troxell steps precariously across a customer's roof, marking hail damage from yet another Oklahoma storm. He still smells of the freshly cut grass from the swanky side of town, where he had just mowed lawns to make a few extra dollars.

But Troxell, 50, isn't a landscaper nor roof salesman by trade. He's a full-time high school science teacher who works four jobs to make ends meet.

Oklahoma is among the bottom three st...r salaries, where educators often work about 10 years before reaching the $40,000 salary mark. And they haven't gotten a raise from the state in 10 years.

Several teachers told CNN they're working multiple jobs in food delivery, retail, rideshare driving, restaurants and even surrogate pregnancy to pay the bills. Some now rely on a food bank to feed their own children.

Moy teaches high school algebra, drives a school bus in the afternoon, coaches football and wrestling, umpires Little League baseball and drives for rideshare services.
All of that combined, Moy said, brings home about $36,000 a year after taxes.
"Last night I drove Lyft and Uber for six, seven hours," Moy said. "When you have to do that to help supplement your income, it's tough when you don't get home when your kids go to bed."


_________________________________________________________________________

This is why the teachers in Oklahoma are on strike. When they have to supplement food by going to a food bank, have to work 4 to 6 jobs to earn extra income in order to pay their bills, take care of their families....then we are failing those teachers.
Thanks for sharing Bren I think, to be fair, teachers in the US have a much shittier deal than we do in the UK.


You may be right about that Simon.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #72 posted 04/08/18 8:55am

uPtoWnNY

poppys said:

gandorb said:

You must be clueless about teachers. You have no idea how many hours above the scheduled time may teachers put in. There is a reason why there is so much teacher burnout compared to other jobs. Moreover, they keep adding non-teaching components to the jobs that they didn't sign on for. I guess you think you know more than the 40,000 teachers about their jobs and situations.

Like now they may have to be trained sharpshooters so we can keep the guns flowing...

Those teachers want money for the schools. Some are only open Monday-Thursday to save money on utilities, maintenence, and gas for buses. It's not like they have a normal school week with breakfast for their kids in the first place. Did you see the books? Shredded. And no money for paper - they run out. The school budget has been slashed to the bone by the (greedy oil interests) state. Striking is a necessary tool.

That is so sad. And we wonder why the U.S. education system is a mess. I have friends who've worked in NYC schools....they deserve combat pay for what they have to deal with.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 3 of 3 <123
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > General Discussion > 40,000 teachers walk off their jobs in Oklahoma.