Originally posted by cannon999
View Post
Used to, don't now. I worked out how to deliver more than they expected in less time. Maybe teachers need to work on that.
Also if you have 13 weeks of holiday and finish at 3:30 its an interesting conundrum to suggest you are working 60 hours a week. Some of my family were teachers and they were always the ones with spare time.
Some of my wife's customers are teachers and they are the ones that arrive at 3:45 pm the ones in the private sector or health care arrive at 6:15 pm.
according to the beeb
What hours do teachers really work? - BBC News
Teaching hours are a minority of a teachers' workload, according to this survey. A primary school teacher will spend on average 19 hours a week of timetabled teaching. It's similar for secondary school classroom teachers, averaging 19.6 hours.Secondary school head teachers have much lower levels of classroom time, at 2.8 hours per week.
Outside of this there will be time spent in school for lesson preparation, marking, supervising children away from the class and carrying out any other administration.
Outside of this there will be time spent in school for lesson preparation, marking, supervising children away from the class and carrying out any other administration.
So we have lesson preparation surely that is something that should be centralised as we have a national curriculum? Maybe a tool to create the basic bones of a lesson online and the teacher adds a personal touch where needed. Maybe get the teachers at the top schools to share their skills, we could even use educational experts to make sure the lessons reach the target audience based on science not something brewed up by a teacher in their garden shed?
Marking - well Microsoft & CCNE are world experts at creating marking exams electronically, maybe automate a lot of that? Or outsource it? My kids use MyMaths it seems to work well.
At secondary school we marked each others paper at the start of the lesson. Possibly a bit of a challenge with essays but as they too are formulaic but until degree level it could be computerised.
The biggest cause of unnecessary paperwork, the teachers reported, was preparing for an Ofsted inspection. Head teachers also identified changing government policies and guidelines as generating "unnecessary" bureaucracy.
Comment