According to this table, what percentage of teachers stay in the profession to the tenth year?
If you had at least a room temperature IQ, you would modify that argument to: "Teachers are adequately compensated." That's at least an arguable point. But then, you would have to admit your earlier position was incorrect. You're much to small to do that.
According to this table, what percentage of teachers stay in the profession to the tenth year?
Pages and pages of nothing. (fires up copy/paste motor)
[redacted as unnecessary]
Last edited by RandomGuy; 05-29-2013 at 11:01 AM. Reason: flow
Reading fail. Look again.
Prove teachers are over-compensated.
Supporting data, and definitions. Your claim, your burden of proof.
Bull has been called. Can you walk the walk, or are you gonna run away from this one?
[8 or 9 more posts from WC]
Finally we get to "they don't really leave the teaching profession in large numbers, so they must be overpaid".
We have a weak sauce attempt now.
Yay.
A reasonably good critical thinker could now identify if this evidence is sufficient to show prove the thesis to any reasonable degree.
How exactly does this support your assertion? Be specific.
Compete with whom?
Do we have a shortage of teachers? Just how is paying them more, going to improve education?
OK then, it's obvious you feel teachers are en led. En led to more than the average parent makes of the students they teach.
How long have you had this en lement mentality?
Why are teachers en led?
I have tempered my argument by stating teachers are overpaid where I live. I will agree that teachers elsewhere don't get paid and compensated as well as those in my state. Still, as long as the union pay scale is such that merit pay is not the primary reason for individual salaries, I will stick with supply and demand for compensation calculations.
You want collective bargaining, then all can receive what the bottom of the barrel gets. Convince the unions to allow pay by merit, and see the pay scales broaden, and see teachers do better to get that higher pay.
Why should the best of them apply themselves when they see coworkers who are lazy get the same pay? Individual bargaining is a better way to raise quality. Pay cannot raise quality when such inequities are real, and its next to impossible to fire the bottom of the barrel.
Where did I make such a claim?
we have shortage of good teachers.
how is paying them less, going to improve education?
So many posts to try to pin that my position of overcompensation is due to the numbers leaving. And i will agree with TB, my argument should be "not under compensated."
Sorry Random. Two different arguments going on.
You can call bull all you want. It will not change my answer that as long as we don't have a shortage of teachers, they are adequately compensated to keep a supply of teachers around. What good is paying them more going to do, but entice even more students to go into the teaching profession? There are only limited numbers of positions, and it will increase the numbers of college graduates who cannot find work in the major.
My other argument was the high numbers of teacher turnout were flat out bogus.
You know...
Some people say the definition of insanity, is repeating the same actions and expecting different results. Are you insane by doing after me over and over, and expect that I will change what I say?
Stop obfuscating and answer the ing question already.
Stop obfuscating and answer the ing question.
Yet you never showed how you arrived at your conclusion that teachers are overpaid in your area. The rest of your post is completely irrelevant bull .
Ready for some facts whenever you can get around to supporting this.
Neither will. As long as we don't pay and fire by merit, we have a lowest common denominator system. You see it all the time in union jobs. Excellent performance until tenure, probation, etc. is made. Then a significant number of workers in any union job start being slackers.
I am all for paying the best, so much more. I am unwilling to pay more on pay scales based time time in service.
You want better teachers? You have to pay by merit, and let that new supply and demand system work.
I have answered the question. Supply of teachers going into the profession is not a shortage of the demand. There is no reason to raise wages under such cir stances.
I'll ask you the same question I asked random.
Are you insane, thinking asking the same question over and over will get a different answer from me?
never ingmind
Last edited by TeyshaBlue; 05-29-2013 at 01:29 PM.
First off, your initial statement literally makes no sense. I'm not exactly sure what the you're trying to say there.
Second statement is a functional non sequitur since the initial statement has no meaning.
Third...I'm just waiting for you to demonstrate why you think "supply and demand" supports your conclusion.
LOL...
Look Jackass, I don't have to explain myself. If you don't understand Supply and Demand, then why should I go farther and waste my time?
Union pay scales are often the pay that the lowest quality worker gets. Just that simple.
I'll throw you a tangent though...
No matter what that pay scale is, you will still have the good teachers resenting the bad teachers who are on the same pay scale. Take away the union protection in some cases, and pay by merit. Keep the bottom of the pay scale where it is, or lower it, and increase the top of the scale...
Look Jackass, you do have to explain yourself since you've yet to make any sense whatsoever with your union drivel. Tell me why my kids teachers are over compensated, or failing that, adequately compensated. Just saying "supply and demand" is not an answer if you cannot construct a cogent illustration or at least cite a study or two underpinning your "facts". If you don't understand your stance, then why should I even consider it?
I'm not a union guy, in any form or fashion. But your reliance on bolstering your position by wagging around your union teddy bear is telling.
I won't act like an insane person, so I will not ask this question over and over.
How is better compensation going to improve education?
Maybe your kids teacher is under compensated in your specific area and job skills. But... union pay is a one-size-fits-all approach. How can you increase their compensation without doing the same to others in the same union?
Some places have an excessively high turnover. Just not the national average. I'll bet new teachers go to the bad schools where openings are always present as teachers exercise their mobility. Would you entertain the idea of higher pay for bad neighborhood schools, without having to increase the compensation of the better job assignments?
I've already illustrated, by cite and actual study, the costs of retraining teachers both economically and by the impact it has on student performance and achievement.
Leave unions out of this already. It has nothing to do with teachers, as a population, being under or over compensated.
Yes, WC, I understand there are abuses of tenure. I also understand that statistically, this number likely never crosses the threshold of noise.
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