Comment on Many primary school kids will never have a male teacher, and experts say that's a problem
lobut@lemmy.ca 1 day agoI wanted to be a teacher since I was 6 years old. My brother taught me so much growing up and I realized my peers didn’t know as much. I got a lot of satisfaction from getting my friends - who were trouble makers - into doing well at school. I always got them to a comfort level where they could ask obviously dumb questions. I can’t afford to trade that in, in this economy.
Although, most people say the teachers who are idealistic like myself don’t last. The ones that treat it like a job do.
HalfEarthMedic@slrpnk.net 1 day ago
Idealistic teachers don’t last because they aren’t treated like professionals with judgement and autonomy. In my opinion this is a bigger problem than pay, although better pay would help and be the morally correct thing to do for such a vital profession.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 5 hours ago
100% this. I am not myself a teacher, but I’m very close to a large number of teachers, and I don’t think pay would rank in even the top 5 problems with the job. I’m not going to claim my list is comprehensive (there may be other equally- or more-important factors beyond the 5 I name), and it’s not necessarily in any particular order (except that each of these is more of a problem than pay):
Teachers I know regularly spend their own money on stationary for their classrooms, on print-outs of worksheets, on posters and other educational decorations around the classroom. Some schools do better than others in this regard, but it’s not uncommon for teachers to be given “print budgets” which are wildly unrealistic with respect to how much printing they need for their classes.
A common refrain from people opposing the increase of teachers’ pay is how short the hours they work are. This could not be further from the truth. In my job, I work 9–5 and never think about it outside of that. I have never met a teacher who can say the same. They bring it home with them, constantly, and it becomes even worse around report card time or parent-teacher meetings.
Class sizes in Australia seem to have a limit or average hovering around 24–28 depend on age and state. That is much too large to be effective, and only adds to the amount of their burden with many of these other factors.
Teachers should be able to spend their time teaching. It is not in their core job to manage the behaviour of naughty children. And yet all too often, that is what they are expected to do. The extent of bad behaviour in classrooms is a huge indictment on the parenting and on broader cultural/societal factors. And it is not fair to expect teachers to fix this, or to the other students to have their learning interrupted because of this.
Being forced to teach to a curriculum can kill a teacher’s love of their subject and of teaching it. It can stifle their ability to tailor lessons to what works best for their students, which in turn kills their ability to inspire a love of the subject in their kids. On top of that, they’re often forced to do all sorts of useless administrative tasks
It all comes back to the same thing: that society does not treat teachers with the respect they deserve. Students don’t respect their teachers. Parents certainly don’t treat them with respect. The government screws them around on working conditions and classroom funding. Which is all so frustrating, because teachers are, bar none, the most important occupation we have.