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So that's that. It was the last day of my son's schooling yesterday - GCSE exam in the am, a bit of generally tolerated horseplay and signing of shirts and whatever at lunch and then all sod off (inset day today). Of course the Y7-10 go back for another 3 weeks or so, but that's us done - 7 overlapping years of my daughter and son, finished.
In this wrap up we've learned of a few teachers leaving, and one in particular I'm gutted by. They have been brilliant to both my kids but esp my son who has needed a huge amount of support. They're also a brilliant teacher; not a fashionable subject and not one either of my kids were massively enthused by but they made lessons a joy; lively, engaging, well controlled (had that experienced teacher ability to wither a trouble maker in an instant). Sadly, they're done and are leaving the profession. I think remaining in education somewhere (charity?) but if people like this teacher are being lost we are not valuing their abilities properly.
I'll see them next week at 'Prom' (I know, let's not go there) and I'll tell them what a help they've been and what a loss they'll be. But to all teachers, it's a tough job and getting tougher with the lack of respect from pupils and parents alike and so - thanks for all you do, or did.
Who else has a teacher that inspired you or your kids, and needs a belated thankyou even if they probably aren't going to see it?
and just because
Some teachers go that extra mile. I remember the geography teacher with long hair and a beard who shaved it all off and went totally clean shaven for charity.
Pupils also said it made his penis look larger according to the reports in to paper.
No particularly inspiring teachers for me, just lucky to have a lot of very good, experienced and competent ones.
My kids both had a really good teacher at primary school who ran the "maths club" for those that way inclined. Stretched them, challenged them, supported them, made it "OK" to be academic. Two of the six in my lad's year are at Oxbridge, which isn't bad for a (large) village primary school.
Just as important are the teachers that can support and guide the kids who aren't academic, engage their interest and help them find their path to go forward.
That Wrighty clip always makes it dusty in my house.
Along with this:
Teachers in general are amazing.
You get the odd one who shouldn't be there, but it is a job i am sure i couldn't do, so am very thankful for them and think they should be paid more
+1 on doing a really, really challenging job, with a layer of challenge, daily moving stress, picking up the pieces / supporting young people who haven't had a fair chance, and a layer of bureaucracy that few understand. And then usually do a sterling job.
I know our kids wouldn't be who they are today without the teachers and educators in their life.
(said as an ex-teacher who now teaches teachers and meets hundreds of them yearly).
It's a hard but can be rewarding job. Where the Tories' policies have got us: few applicants for PGCE, Teach First struggling to recruit, schools don't want student teachers for fear of effects on test results, teachers don't want to join management because the hassle is not commensurate with the pay differential, supply teachers losing half of what the school pays to the agencies, academy trust schools doing less well than LA schools. Zahawi claims to be able to raise an army of supply teachers if teachers go on strike. Who in their right mind would want to become part of all that?
My kids go to a new Welsh language secondary school. I am bowled over by modern teaching methods; the inclusivity and ability to allow every pupil to find their ‘thing’ and achieve is a whole different world to the education I received in the 80s and 90s.
All the teachers there are brilliant.
Only 2 years left before our youngest leaves and heads out into the big bad world of FE college which I fear will be a very different ball game.
Where the Tories’ policies have got us:
My kids go to a new Welsh language secondary school
And mine have been through the Scottish education system.
While none are perfect, and said as someone who has the luxury of working across all 4 national education systems in the UK as well as International Schools, the English education system is becoming rather extreme. And that is not the teachers fault.
Everyone remember this when teachers are painted as the greedy enemy in the press in coming months. Because they will be. Hug a teacher when you next see one (or if you're English, substitute in a handshake, let's not show too much... stiff upper lip). So many burn the candle at both ends and have to deal with stuff, day to day, that would send many of us over the edge. Just trying to keep kids safe, never mind educating them, is a hard, hard job.
Teaching is so much more professional than when I was at school in the 80s. Some of the characters I encountered would never be allowed near kids today. I’m always impressed by the dedication of my kids teachers, they do a great job. I am slightly annoyed by the claim that teachers jobs are too hard though when I think about some of the crap I used to have to deal with in private industry and what people I know have to do in other jobs. No doubt the bureaucracy is worse and targets are harder, but there is job security, job satisfaction, reasonable pay and of course more holidays than anyone else. Am happy to be persuaded otherwise if people have examples.
'The extreme English system': I was at a school where the new head announced no-one could go on training courses for a year. That didn't play well with me as an examiner for two boards, an exam reviser and an executive member of a professional association. That year the school became an academy and the head got a £50k bonus (Companies House).
Experienced staff are leaving in droves. Lack of new ones coming through is nothing new. Other support staff can get paid more at Macdonald's or Lidl without any of the stress. I have no skin in the game other than my partner being a head teacher of a large primary but it seems to me that children are literally the future of the country and if you were interested in that you'd be investing in education properly.
All this lot not know how to do is break things though so no-one should be holding their breath.
Is there a happiness split between Primary and Secondary Teachers?
I know 3 primary school teachers and they all seem fine with their lot. And rarely moan about the job.
Secondary school ones look like they've been hit by a bus at the end of the week. Including my niece who did all the training and lasted 2 years before she quit. She now works for a council in child services as a commissioning officer as that was lest stressfull!
Secondary school teacher here....
This year (in fact this term!) had been extremes.
From being assaulted by a Yr11 student twice, to yesterday taking an absolutely delightful group of Yr9 students to a technology show at the NEC.
On the way home I bumped into an old GCSE and A level student of mine (she's now 26). Not seen her in 8 years, and she ran up to me, hugged me and said that she still remembers my A-level lessons as the high point of her time at school 🙂 made me very happy!
Saw some stats the other day that recruitment for Physics teachers (not my subject) is at 15% of what is required. I'd lay the blame squarely on the Tories for that.
I have to agree - on the whole teachers are great. Our two girls are very different academically - one being a learning sponge and just needs a bit of guidance which she gets but the other struggles a bit at times. She started secondary school getting 1s, 2s and 3s in most subjects (they score 1 – 9) but she is now regularly getting 6s, 7s and 8s in core subjects (and has just got an 8 in English which she struggled with) and that is 100% down to the excellent support she gets. She does have some external English and maths tutoring to help her, but it's the teachers supporting her that is making the difference. She's going to be going into yr9 in the 'regular' maths group now rather than in the low-achievers group. We couldn't be happier for her.
And she can run a 14sec 100m at 13 yrs old (only just turned 13 this month). But that isn't the tutoring, it's just me being proud dad LOL!
Both my kids finished secondary school this week (GCSE's for one and A levels for the other) and we are all very happy that they won't be going back into the system again (University for one, college for the other) neither had a particularly positive experience at secondary schools, not the fault of the teachers i hasten to add, but the entire system is broken.
I am slightly annoyed by the claim that teachers jobs are too hard though
You're annoyed?
My partner and her leadership team are ruined by about half way through the term. Every term. By the time July rolls round they're hanging on by their finger nails to any shred of sanity they have left. I work with a former head of physics who is brilliant and a lovely person but got fed up of working flat out 6 days a week through term time and had to leave for the sake of mental health.
Also I think I am correct in saying that teachers aren't paid all that holiday time.
Undoubtedly there are some who can cruise but generally speaking if you think they have it easy you don't have an accurate grasp of the situation.
I always respected teachers, but homeschooling during lockdown took my respect to a whole new level.
I am slightly annoyed by the claim that teachers jobs are too hard though
Not too hard - if it was we'd all have left.
But it is bloody hard!
That is not denigrating other hard jobs though...we don't see it as a competition.
But to all teachers, it’s a tough job and getting tougher with the lack of respect from pupils and parents alike and so – thanks for all you do, or did.
This^^^
but there is job security, job satisfaction, reasonable pay and of course more holidays than anyone else
^^^^ ha ha ha ha ha ha
Well done on hitting the Teaching stereotype bullseye.
Going back 54 years & there was only one teacher in our school who did any good cos he used to organise ‘outward bound’ courses in the Lakes for us.
The rest were mainly crap. The maths teacher was particularly bad, he he never taught, just told. Woodwork teacher was ok, the rest were unmemorable.
That Ian Wright clip properly got to me.
I didn't have any particularly inspiring teachers, but then I grew up white middle class and was reasonable academically, so didn't need any real inspiration.
Wife works at a school and even as a TA she puts in more work than she should. Currently sat downstairs with COVID feeling crap but still doing work on the laptop. Teaching, even in primary, takes that up to a whole other level. There's no way I'd do it.
Edit: And now I've just watched that clip of Musharaf and set myself off again.
Bets on teachers being the next sector to refuse to go to work until they are given more money? 😉
(tongue in cheek before anyone goes off on one)
My wife; she up at 6 every morning and works until 11pm most nights trying to bring on a group of children who’s parents, by and large, see school as free babysitting. Children who, due to Covid, never received preschool, nursery or foundation teaching, some of which are still not potty trained, and are expected to perform to the standards of a couple of years ago.
She has well over 20 years in the profession, is unlikely to be able to retire until she’s 67+ and suffers numerous stress related conditions. She cries most days.
Alongside her day job as class teacher She was a special educational needs coordinator (SENCO) at a school that had 61% of its pupils with special educational needs. Because of the austerity measures the Conservative party introduced, all of the local support services that she could have accessed disappeared virtually overnight. As a result she received verbal abuse and threats from parents who couldn’t or wouldn’t understand that the help for their child simply does not any longer exist.
She spends her own money feeding, clothing and buying resources to help these kids. At home, we go through printers like shoes because the equipment at school is old, unreliable and has to meet the demands of the whole school.
Why or how she carries on teaching is a constant wonder to me. She is an absolute hero.
Bets on teachers being the next sector to refuse to go to work until they are given more money? 😉
(tongue in cheek before anyone goes off on one)
And that they do it for a block of days rather than stagger them every couple of days.
( might be able to sneak a cheap holiday in ) 😉
Also I think I am correct in saying that teachers aren’t paid all that holiday time.
Incorrect. The salary is usually year round.
Although with the lack of standard pay and conditions now emerging in England, this may yet become a thing.
Am happy to be persuaded otherwise if people have examples.
@supernova - go and volunteer in a school for a week. Please then come back to this thread.
She spends her own money feeding, clothing and buying resources to help these kids. At home, we go through printers like shoes because the equipment at school is old, unreliable and has to meet the demands of the whole school.
Why or how she carries on teaching is a constant wonder to me. She is an absolute hero.
this kind of thing that teachers do is so common its silly and doesnt get enough press. i couldnt be a teacher - waaaay to hard - emotionally and physically and practically. its amazing that anyone does it with the grief they all get.
I did my work experience at a school - had some rewarding moments (teaching a kid a maths problem that the teacher had struggled to get across), but saw enough to convince me that it definitely wasnt a career path I was going to choose
Both my parents were teachers, both still gets spotted and chatted to when we're out locally by former inmates students. I think they found their careers rewarding and definitely had some wins and losses.
It's not an easy job and contrary to popular belief the hours are not 9-3:30 5 days a week, the pay isn't Stella and conditions are 'variable', I still remember my Dad telling us about the time he got threatend with a knife, while on bus duty, by a disgruntled dickhead's older brother.
It's definitely a vocation not just a job, which partly explains the current attrition rate.
Good teachers deserve support and decent pay, they are a vital national resource...
Incorrect. The salary is usually year round
I stand corrected, thank you. I understand support staff are paid for 39 weeks only.
Am happy to be persuaded otherwise if people have examples.
A few;
Being spat on, physically assaulted, sexually assaulted, verbally abused, and having to teach those same pupils that afternoon or the next day, with no consequences for the pupils
Having a child cling to you as they are scared to go home
Dealing with children who have not been fed, washed in days
Dealing with children who have been sexually abused
Dealing with children who have been physically abused
Using your own money to feed neglected children
Meeting a primary school kid at 10pm in Tesco who is not allowed in the house, or is hiding from an abuser
Dealing with screaming and abusive parents
Being followed home by pupils
Not getting your break or lunch as the school is too short staffed
Buy your own computer or laptop, printer, paper and ink to print at home as the school printer is broken (again), or has run out of paper/ink
Dealing which children who have no discipline from parents, bad behavior has no consequence, so they will just laugh in a teachers face (teacher cannot do anything, and their parents will do nothing or some actively reward bad behavior, eg excluded from school trip for assaulting another pupil, parent takes them on a better trip so they dont miss out...)
Dealing with children who arguably should not be in mainstream education, but due to policy/lack of funding for special units or LAs, non exclusion policies etc, are allowed to disrupt years of education for the rest of the class
Being pressured for results, having to evidence why pupils who are not in school 1/2 the time do not meet the expected educational stages.
All while trying to provide a rounded education for the whole class, meet the latest learning outcomes (and provide all paperwork to show you have done so). Make sure you do CPDE. Provide extra curricular activities. Go on class trips away (but dont get paid for it)
Buy resources with your own money
Spend weekends and evenings planning lessons to make them engaging and enjoyable for pupils. (and missing time you could spend with your own children)
I know people will say that is poor time management, but if you have been in school 8-5, dealing with work and issues that have to be dealt with, and still have to prepare lessons for tomorrow....
There are also some teachers who work 8:15-3:45, and just dont give a shit. Dont do anything you could be fired for, and its a reasonable job if you just dont care.
You just need to look at the staff retention rates, average was 5 years last time my wife checked. That is not good for staff experience.
The education system seems to survive on the good will of the staff, and enough of them genuinely care for their pupils/well being/education.
Obviously there are terrible teachers, and its not all negative for good teachers who enjoy seeing children progress, but its not just the easy part time job many people make out.
If its so easy/cushy, why do more people not do it?
I have no idea how anybody has the patience to be a teacher, but am incredibly grateful for those who do.
Incorrect. The salary is usually year round
I stand corrected, thank you. I understand support staff are paid for 39 weeks only.
Bit of a grey area.
Yes teachers are paid monthly, so a salary paid all year round.
But the length of holidays is taken into account and we are paid based on teaching 39 weeks a year, so nominally a pro rata rate.
BUT the teachers pay and conditions documentation doesn't say that explicitly.
TBH, I'm relatively happy with my pay (and holiday provision), but...(info from IFS)
The government froze public sector pay in 2010, and rises for teachers were capped at 1 per cent from 2013 until 2018.
Pay rises of 3.5 per cent for newer teachers and 2 per cent for experienced staff were announced for 2018-19, while a 2.75 per cent across-the-board rise implemented in 2019-20.
Last year, the government announced a further 5.5 per cent rise for newer teachers and another 2.75 per cent increase for others.
All that means that in real terms teacher's pay has fallen way behind inflation for the last 12 years. Even a pay rise of 6 or 7% this year would still mean we're underpaid compared to 12+ years ago.
Bit of a grey area.
Yes teachers are paid monthly, so a salary paid all year round.
But the length of holidays is taken into account and we are paid based on teaching 39 weeks a year, so nominally a pro rata rate.
BUT the teachers pay and conditions documentation doesn’t say that explicitly.
I'm struggling with this a bit.
Any salaried job with more days holiday per year than the statutory requirement could claim to be pro-rata then? Extra leave is normally seen as a benefit in most industries.
Think of it as seasonal work, with no holidays allowed during the open season... it's just a bloody long season.
Mrs Beaker is a year 5/6 primary teacher, I couldn't do what she does. She is paid from 9:00 until 3:30 but gets into work every morning for 7:45 and gets home for around 5:30 most nights. She goes in early to prepare her lessons and print whatever is needed for the day. After school she has to mark the pupils books, which for a class 28 doing four lessons in a day is potentially over 100 books, there is a weekly staff meeting, emails from parents, special needs meetings, professional training courses and subject leader (Maths in her case) work where she is the SME who the other teachers come to improve their teaching.
She has just done a three day residential for the class, three days where she and three others are responsible for the kids 24-7 but only paid for the standard school day and no time in lieu.
She has a half day non teaching time to plan once a week, she is able to come home and most of the time that is a mental break that allows her to get through the rest of the week. Most evenings the laptop comes out for an hour, most weekends its comes out for several hours. Not because her time management is poor, far from it, all teaching has to be evidenced and that means planning for the next week, medium and long term planning. There is no other time to do it, if it isn't done she'll be picked up for it.
Her pay is performance related, she has objectives and targets. She isn't paid over the holidays but her pay is pro-rata over 12 months. I've not even mentioned dealing with some of the parents....
Think of it as seasonal work, with no holidays allowed during the open season… it’s just a bloody long season.
Are you having a laugh - what's the average half term, 6 weeks? 😉
I had three truly inspirational teachers at secondary school. Mr Aldridge, Mrs Jennis and Mr Kirk - History, English and Geography.
I still think of them all with respect and much affection.
My boys think less fondly of one of their former teachers - Jonathan Gullis, who became a Conservative MP. He’s even less effective and impressive as an MP than he was as a teacher - and he was terribly shite and lacking in the human touch.
Are you having a laugh – what’s the average half term, 6 weeks? 😉
Tbf to teachers, a lot of my colleagues take a day off, or half day, every few weeks. I don't think some of them would cope with a full 6 week stretch. 😀
Sometimes it's the little things!

I understand support staff are paid for 39 weeks only.
Depends on the contract, which local authority, MAT, Academy or other private enterprise and what they want to pay.
I understand support staff are paid for 39 weeks only.
Incorrect again - my wife is support staff (which comprises comms services as well as special needs student support/transition support - so some 'admin' and some educational support) and is paid an annual salary.
For me teaching has come a long way, back when I was at school it was a nightmare, teachers actively picking who in their class was worth teaching and at what level, lots left behind, as there’s always menial or manual jobs for them of course.
From what I see now it’s a world apart, my daughter loves her teachers, they help her and know her, as they do all of the class, I just find teachers more professional and understanding nowadays, as well as overworked and under resourced.
Incorrect
Is incorrect pay is over 12 months. But the days to earn that pay is term time weekdays. Whole years pay earned over 196days (or whatever). This was done to stop people striking or taking leave that costs time. 1 day off costs nearly 2 days pay/pension.
First hit I got after my initial comment. In any case neither teachers or support staff are paid sufficiently in my view whether the holidays are priced in, it's pro rata, or annualised. Investment in the country's future is investment in education.
If a supply teacher teaches every day of the school year, getting paid at their day rate, they earn the same as they would in a full time teaching position. We're paid for 200 days, but it's in 12 equal installments over the year.
For a job that's so well paid and so cushy it's strange that there's an issue with recruitment and retention. I have it relatively easy in a sixth form college - anyone who manages more than a few years in primary or secondary deserves a medal. I did 3.5 terms of primary and left.
Mrs Pondo is a teacher - the hours and effort she and many of her colleagues is vastly underestimated by the majority of people who don't know of or live with a teacher. She'll regularly be at work from when the gates open in the morning until she gets kicked out in the evening, will then regularly work from home in the evening, regularly works weekends and regularly works during her holidays, and she's not unique in that, as this thread testifies. Increasingly, that's against a backdrop of increasing workload and decreasing resource, and a slow drop in the lack of respect towards education that means that children are more likely to get their parents to get them out of homework or detention or intervention than they are to attend, whilst of course the performance-related pay and relentless drive to improve results continues. Now many secondaries are academies run by trusts, profit is now key, so she has to buy much of her own stationary and supplies, the school canteen offers shit food because the company they outsourced to has to turn a profit, and teachers have to cover lunch and break time duties because that's cheaper than hiring dinner ladies. Her school has a massive staffing issue this year (half the teaching staff, Mrs Pondo included, are leaving, in some cases to other schools, some to non-teaching jobs, which means many staff next year will be NQTs or Teach First, who are significantly cheaper than experienced teachers, all to make sure the trust director can keep himself in new Mercedes.
Not all teachers are conscientious and hard working, although many are - but there's a limit to how far that piece of string can be stretched until it breaks. I don't think breaking point is too far off.
Teachers pay is different in the different nations. Del's article has "England only." At the start.
the school canteen offers shit food because the company they outsourced to has to turn a profit,
You can't really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don't offer any sort of canteen, shit or not.
the school canteen offers shit food because the company they outsourced to has to turn a profit,
You can’t really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don’t offer any sort of canteen, shit or not.
The point is that the kids are eating this shit, and then dozing all afternoon from too much lard. And getting fatter by the day.
I've worked long term in two schools. In one the food was reasonable, in the other I wouldn't touch it: greasy, stinking non-food.
If there's one thing worth investing a few extra quid in it's decent food for kids.
You can’t really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don’t offer any sort of canteen, shit or not.
I think you’ve missed the point; school children are not employees, are they? They’re children who need a proper balanced diet, and the school dinner is the only opportunity some of them get for actual real food, that isn’t nutritionally devoid shite, which they get at home if they’re lucky.
You can’t really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don’t offer any sort of canteen, shit or not.
I really can. 🙂 Whether they took it or not, schools had the opportunity to provide genuinely healthy food if they wanted to - this school now outsources it so shit quality burger and chips is it, for our rapidly-expanding children.
Feeding kids crappy food is such a short sighted policy. Good nutrition in childhood would probably save the NHS billions in later life. I’m sure I read about a study once that decent food in prisons reduced recidivism. We’re so stupid.
I got complained about by the head for getting into school too early (7.15 after a 28 mile drive) as it was a PFI building and they wanted more money as a result of my conscientiousness.
/taking the piss
Being a teacher is a doodle...
My best mate is a head teacher in a large Scottish secondary. His entire career is based on "open your books at page 23. If you get stuck, the answers are at the back"
Taking the piss/
After school she has to mark the pupils books, which for a class 28 doing four lessons in a day is potentially over 100 books
Wow. I never take pupil’s books in to mark. What a waste of time. I presume this is something she is obligated to do?
Teachers....or should I say school
I can't wait for my kid to finish school...from what I'm told its all political with stupid rules made upby people who haven't worked in the real world.
Basically they gone to school as a kid went to uni and then gone back to school.
Yeah you get some good teachers...but the one in authority are up their own butt's.
I'm not a fan.....and this is coming from a parent with a straight A kid
from what I’m told
the one in authority are up their own butt’s.
And thus the child is in charge of this relationship.
You can’t really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don’t offer any sort of canteen, shit or not.
😄😄😄😄😄If ever a post exemplified exactly how much people don't understand about schools and education this is it. Top work!!
You can’t really complain about that when the vast majority of employers don’t offer any sort of canteen, shit or not
You could not have missed the point more.
I can’t wait for my kid to finish school…from what I’m told its all political with stupid rules made up by people who haven’t worked in the real world.
Not in any school I've worked in. Also what is the real world?
Teachers….or should I say school
I can’t wait for my kid to finish school…from what I’m told its all political with stupid rules made upby people who haven’t worked in the real world.
Basically they gone to school as a kid went to uni and then gone back to school.
Yeah you get some good teachers…but the one in authority are up their own butt’s.
I’m not a fan…..and this is coming from a parent with a straight A kid
Priceless...
You're spot on, teachers should get a two year apprentice course and then be straight in the deep end teaching physics, maths, Ingerlish or whatever to your little "straight A" darlings, as well as kids with special educational needs, kids with issues at home, various other traumas and field all the crap from parents on a spectrum ranging from pushy to actively anti-school to disinterested... Oh and whe should only pay them during term time, they can side hustle deliveroo during the summer hols...
If school is "too political" with rules you don't like, don't blame teachers they're just teaching a curriculum set by government and following the rules set by the LEA/governors/government... Well from what I'm told anyway
If it's so easy why didn't you home school them?
I’m not a fan…..and this is coming from a parent with a straight A kid
Hmm. Maybe if you supported them better your kid might actually get good grades 😉
made upby people who haven’t worked in the real world
Interesting. My daughter is somewhat tempted to go into teaching, having now worked in the ‘real world’ for about 6 years. However, she doesn’t think she could cope with the c £50 000 pay cut!
Furthermore, if you have a degree in say maths, the sciences or computing etc - there is a reduced chance of ‘progressing’ within the profession. Since it is difficult to find replacement staff, promoted posts are full of PE teachers.
people who haven’t worked in the real world
It usually turns out that those who make these 'real world' comments live in detached houses, take an air-conditioned drive straight to work in their air-conditioned office, then straight home again. They ignore the cleaning staff at work, and only ever talk to a 'prole' if they have to do an emergency shop at Asda instead of their usual Waitrose delivery.
Go and work in a comp in Balham if you want to find out what the 'real world' is like.
I can’t wait for my kid to finish school…from what I’m told its all political blah blah blah.
What does your kid say?
We need a list of acceptable real world jobs. Yours, for example?
The comments about teachers not 'working in the real world' really boil my piss.
When I was teaching I had to deal with kids that had been abused and were coming in to school, kids whose parents had died, kids who had lost their homes so were basically homeless. Kids who were going through the care system, kids whose parents were just divorcing...the list goes on. Teachers deal with the real world every day, the real problems that families face, helping children negotiate life with all the sh*t things happening to them.
They are heroes.
Haha ha....im a builder with my own business, I do the lot from digging footings to kitchens/bathrooms...to paper work in the evenings
And from what I heard is from other parents inc the PTA ones...and my kid.
Haha ha….im a builder with my own business, I do the lot from digging footings to kitchens/bathrooms…to paper work in the evenings
And from what I heard is from other parents inc the PTA ones…and my kid.
Phew, that’s fortunate - you can get your child a job in your business. I’ve heard that in the real world, most jobs have all sorts of petty rules 😉
If digging holes is what you aspire to for your kids, crack on - shame you can't be arsed to form opinions from your own experience, instead of relying on others to tell you what to think. 😉
Ha, of course, ha.
Ah yes, builders - we all know about builders.
They overprice the job, do shoddy work, use inferior materials to those they charge you for. They ‘go to see the supplier’ then spend four hours having lunch. They sit on top of scaffolding where they cannot be seen reading the Sun*. They fiddle their tax books and pay people off the cards lower than minimum wage.
My mate who knows a builder told me all this, so it must be true.
*I actually did this when I was a labourer. The trick is to position the ladder so it has to be moved before anyone can climb it, then you know when they’re coming.
I do the lot

But can you deal with an accompanied migrant child who speaks no English or a child who has been removed from an abusive parent, or numerous other kids who have seen more of this so called 'real world' and all of its harms than you will ever see if you lived 10x your number of lives all whilst having to deal with little Jimmy in the corner who's dad is a builder and knows more about education than the teachers in the school and so doesn't feel the need to follow these so called 'rules' that are put in place?
Nothing wrong with digging holes....its strange how you homed in on that aspect...
I'm also deaf and mixed race and grew up on council estate in the 70s so now I must be really in the gutter of your opinions
Yeah your probably right it's wrong of me to tar the school system/teachers...maybe it's just the school my kid goes to...so I apologise to all..peace n love
A Flexible mind cheekyget, that’s something I truly admire. Peace to you too.
As I said when I opened the thread, "it’s a tough job and getting tougher with the lack of respect from pupils and parents alike". Many of the problem kids at my son's school are that way because their parents don't or won't work with the school; at the prospectus evening for the school when we were looking at selections back in 2014, the headmaster talked of a three-way contract between the school, the pupil and the parents, and if any parent thought their job was to drop them off in September and pick them up 5 years later, then he'd be having quite a big falling out with them.
Eldest llama is a teacher. She works hard, cares about her pupils, and makes a difference.
She is also political, because, well it's hard not to be if you care about you pupils and want to make a difference.
Interesting thread this, as a I recently started a teaching career. I used to have a job in the 'real world' using the languages I learnt at school, until I figured I'd rather argue with grumpy teenagers than Tesco buyers...
My working week will start tomorrow, after dinner it will take me about 3-4 hours to prep the 7 lessons I have tomorrow. Most evenings, it will take me from approx 8 until 9/10pm to do the class prep. I get to my classroom at 7:30, teach until 15:00 (apart from tomorrow when it's 17:00). I get home about 17-18:00, eat, try to relax and start lesson prep. Every month or two there's a parents' evening 16:00-19:00. 37 relentless 5 minute Zoom calls with no break, a few meetings and lots of CPD. I've never had the courage to wok out my hourly rate since I took a pay cut from working in the 'real world' but it's bound to be closer to minimum wage than whatever made-up figure gets bandied around the news in the next few weeks.
Some highlights so far in about 5 years of teaching:
Being accused by a parent of beating his child bloody with a pencil case. (I had tapped him on the shoulder to wake him up in an exam and suggested it was a touch rude to be sleeping)
A card from a year 11 student this year saying "eres un profesor increíble" and thanking me, saying she thinks she will get a great grade. Was a bit dusty in my classroom when I opened that.
A year 11 student saying she was going to pick Spanish A level.
And just the other week, discussing the resurrection of Jesus, a student said "Is that when Jesus re-spawned?"
Such a weird profession, almost impossible to describe accurately what it's like to someone without actually living it yourself.