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Reply to: Civil servants "work" from home
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Previously on "Civil servants "work" from home"
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Exactly what I thought BP. Work from a civil servant when nobody is watching! hahahahahahahahahahahhaha........
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostYou haven't been in a modern school if you think there's no threat of violence
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostOf course, if you educate a child at home you can fit a days teaching into 2 hours. Most of teaching is about controlling the kids. It was much better in the good old days. Teachers get a rough deal these days.
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Of course, if you educate a child at home you can fit a days teaching into 2 hours. Most of teaching is about controlling the kids. It was much better in the good old days. Teachers get a rough deal these days.
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Originally posted by SupremeSpod View PostThem's the choices you make.
Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostThat is what teacher training days are for.
PPA is for lesson planning, which says teachers have to be given some non-teaching time during the working week to plan lessons.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostThe short hours (ha!) and long holidays are reflected in the pay. You start at £20k and reach a ceiling of £30k after 5-6 years, beyond which you need to do more to progress further. And this is not a bog-standard council office job, but one which requires a degree and in many cases a masters or other post-graduate qualification.
To me, that seems a fair trade off... lots of holiday but for a professional job the pay is low as a result. If we say a teacher works 39 weeks and a normal person works 48, then an adjusted salary for someone who reaches the top of the pay scale in their late 20s would be £30k * (48/39) = £37k. Hardly an outrageous salary for a professional, your typical programmer who did a similar amount of education will earn more.
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The short hours (ha!) and long holidays are reflected in the pay. You start at £20k and reach a ceiling of £30k after 5-6 years, beyond which you need to do more to progress further. And this is not a bog-standard council office job, but one which requires a degree and in many cases a masters or other post-graduate qualification.
To me, that seems a fair trade off... lots of holiday but for a professional job the pay is low as a result. If we say a teacher works 39 weeks and a normal person works 48, then an adjusted salary for someone who reaches the top of the pay scale in their late 20s would be £30k * (48/39) = £37k. Hardly an outrageous salary for a professional, your typical programmer who did a similar amount of education will earn more.
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Originally posted by Alf W View PostCan they really not fit it in around their 13 weeks holiday and part time hours?
One day my son's teacher was WFH I bumped into her in Tesco at 3 o'clock in the afternoon.
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Originally posted by SimonMac View PostYeah most weekends they get to work at home planning lessons etc
One day my son's teacher was WFH I bumped into her in Tesco at 3 o'clock in the afternoon.
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Originally posted by SimonMac View PostYeah most weekends they get to work at home planning lessons etc
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Are they not "entitled" to perks that private sector workers enjoy ? If they are not offered these perks, the public sector will lose the highly talented workers to the private sector and the quality of service will go down.
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