Corolinth wrote:
Maybe that sounds like a good idea to you, or maybe it doesn't. How's that current educational plan working out?
I don't see that getting someone who could design missiles for living into high school would improve things any. We don't need that level of knowledge. More importantly, as things stand now, most of those people couldn't teach anyhow because they don't have a degree in education or a teaching certificate. We've previously disucssed here the fact that teachers spend too much time learning "Education" and not enough time on the subject matter.
Teachers are also needed in large numbers. We don't have enough qualified people to both do things like design missiles or skyscrapers or whatever AND go teach high school math, and we aren't likely to ever GET that many people qualified at that level no matter how good the pay is. Teaching is one of those jobs well-suited to people that can get a college degree but who are not prepared (for whatever reason) to go through a program of study as rigorous as engineering. Those people are quite plentiful compared to the ones that can handle engineering. Some teachers are there because teaching is what they truly love and care about, but that is the exception; for most teachers it's job and kids for them range from "likeable enough" to "tolerable only because I'm getting paid." This is more true (in general) in the most urbanized areas.
Third, the issue is not teacher pay in and of itself, but the habit of going on strike to get more pay. This is done at the expense of the kids they claim to care so much about, because while individual teachers care about kids, teachers unions care only about teachers and their unions. When the economy gets bad, and people start losing jobs or taking pay cuts, the unions pull out all the stops to prevent that for
their members because teachers are no more willing than anyone else to take pay cuts when the source of money (tax base) is shrinking, and they are quite willing to force it through by striking and holding children's education hostage, which is particularly effective when directed at juniors and seniors.
Fourth, the systemic education problems in this country are not primarily an issue of pay, or even of money at all. No amount of teacher pay, or even education money in general is going to help until and unless the poorer populations of the country start making their kids perform. That won't happen until and unless those parents stop themselves being poor, uneducated, often much younger than is suitable for parenting, and generally disdainful of the idea of getting an education. In a large part, this circumstance is created by people who
complain about money for education. The excuse "well, the schools we have are underfunded and suck, so why should I go at all?" is all too easy to make, even though it's very much like saying "well, I'm starving, but if I can't have roast beef then I don't want bologna either."
Teachers are paid more than adequately in this country, and have been for a long time. Chicago's teacher pay scales are quite comparable to the pay for teachers back where we lived in Ohio, and that particular city was rife with unemployment, business closures, and all the attendant problems endemic to the rust belt. Chicago does not represent the highest-paid teachers int he country, by any means.
http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/cr_50.htmQuote:
According to the BLS, the average public school teacher in the United States earned $34.06 per hour in 2005.
The average public school teacher was paid 36% more per hour than the average non-sales white-collar worker and 11% more than the average professional specialty and technical worker.
Full-time public school teachers work on average 36.5 hours per week during weeks that they are working. By comparison, white-collar workers (excluding sales) work 39.4 hours, and professional specialty and technical workers work 39.0 hours per week. Private school teachers work 38.3 hours per week.
Compared with public school teachers, editors and reporters earn 24% less; architects, 11% less; psychologists, 9% less; chemists, 5% less; mechanical engineers, 6% less; and economists, 1% less.
Compared with public school teachers, airplane pilots earn 186% more; physicians, 80% more; lawyers, 49% more; nuclear engineers, 17% more; actuaries, 9% more; and physicists, 3% more.
Public school teachers are paid 61% more per hour than private school teachers, on average nationwide.
The Detroit metropolitan area has the highest average public school teacher pay among metropolitan areas for which data are available, at $47.28 per hour, followed by the San Francisco metropolitan area at $46.70 per hour, and the New York metropolitan area at $45.79 per hour.
Somehow I don't think the economy in Detroit justifies the highest teacher salaries in the country, nor does it have educational performance reflective of those salaries. It illustrates just what I'm saying; teacher's unions endlessly demand more money regardless of economic realities or performance.