09-21-2009, 01:31 PM
No thread on this yet, so I thought I'd start one.
How do parents feel about this 17 day reduction in school days? Perhaps they should call it a student furlough.
I teach at a local charter school and am not sure exactly how this will play out for our school and/or my class, but a few thoughts come to mind...in no particular order:
The teachers appear to be running scared of layoffs (and we'll see how a preliminary union vote goes tomorrow) but how about laying off the top heavy administration. I don't have data, but I suspect that if DOE laid off everyone above the principal level there would be _plenty_ of money to spare. And schools would finally be able to deal with teaching the students instead of implementing DOE top-down silliness.
Why not have the 17 days come off the end of the year instead of dispersed throughout the school year on Fridays. Would that be easier for working parents to deal with? Would it be more "honest" to cut the school year short? (Thank Kelli for this idea.)
Would it be more "honest" to simply have an across the board pay cut for all DOE employees (including teachers) and not have the furlough days?
There is some serious irony in having teachers get more days off (paid or not) than they already do...
As a teacher, I may have a dilemma. I have no idea whether I will actually have the choice or not to participate in the furloughs. But if I do have that freedom, wouldn't I chose to teach on the furlough days? After all, the pay cut is going to happen anyway, but I really don't want to be responsible for 17 lost school days. Given my drithers, I would ignore the furloughs. This would outcast me from many teachers, but that's OK. If I, or other teachers, found a way to still hold classes on furlough days, would that simply send a message to DOE that they can up the furlough days in the future? Slippery slope stuff?Don't I _have_ to participate in furloughs to keep the responsibility of the cuts affecting students on the government (and the teacher's union...sigh)?
You may be able to tell that I have about as much respect for HSTA (the teacher's union) as I do for the crippling top heavy administrators of DOE--very, very little.
Please feel free to respond and don't worry about offending me as a teacher. Just wondering what parents, and even folks w/o school age children think about all this.
Cheers,
Kirt
How do parents feel about this 17 day reduction in school days? Perhaps they should call it a student furlough.
I teach at a local charter school and am not sure exactly how this will play out for our school and/or my class, but a few thoughts come to mind...in no particular order:
The teachers appear to be running scared of layoffs (and we'll see how a preliminary union vote goes tomorrow) but how about laying off the top heavy administration. I don't have data, but I suspect that if DOE laid off everyone above the principal level there would be _plenty_ of money to spare. And schools would finally be able to deal with teaching the students instead of implementing DOE top-down silliness.
Why not have the 17 days come off the end of the year instead of dispersed throughout the school year on Fridays. Would that be easier for working parents to deal with? Would it be more "honest" to cut the school year short? (Thank Kelli for this idea.)
Would it be more "honest" to simply have an across the board pay cut for all DOE employees (including teachers) and not have the furlough days?
There is some serious irony in having teachers get more days off (paid or not) than they already do...
As a teacher, I may have a dilemma. I have no idea whether I will actually have the choice or not to participate in the furloughs. But if I do have that freedom, wouldn't I chose to teach on the furlough days? After all, the pay cut is going to happen anyway, but I really don't want to be responsible for 17 lost school days. Given my drithers, I would ignore the furloughs. This would outcast me from many teachers, but that's OK. If I, or other teachers, found a way to still hold classes on furlough days, would that simply send a message to DOE that they can up the furlough days in the future? Slippery slope stuff?Don't I _have_ to participate in furloughs to keep the responsibility of the cuts affecting students on the government (and the teacher's union...sigh)?
You may be able to tell that I have about as much respect for HSTA (the teacher's union) as I do for the crippling top heavy administrators of DOE--very, very little.
Please feel free to respond and don't worry about offending me as a teacher. Just wondering what parents, and even folks w/o school age children think about all this.
Cheers,
Kirt