Stacyhs
Penultimate Amazing
This seems to insinuate they teach because they have no choice. This is WRONG.
I am personal friends with most of our teachers- even ones that have since left the school or retired. (they do have health ins. and retirement plan). Most have been with our school for 10+ years and believe in our program. (Our teacher has been there 30 years!) It is more of a vocation than a 'job'. Almost all of the newer ones switched from public schools for a better teaching environment. Kids that have learning disabilities do so great! (mainly because each kid is able to work at their own pace to master a skill- they are not left behind and the class is not slowed down)
All the teachers I have communicated with could not wait to get back to having the kids back on campus back in June. They arent even required to teach in the summer. Each teacher teaches the same students for 3 years so we all become like family after a while. We all paid in during the lockdown to keep the staff there.
It is a different culture.
There are things more valuable than 'more money'. My Catholic school teachers said the same thing waaaay back when.
It depends on what type of private school you're talking about. The fancy, expensive private schools that celebrities', millionaires' and politicians' kids go to or the much less expensive private schools that middle class parents struggle to send their kids to because their local public schools are crap or because their child is struggling in public school. Those schools do not have retirement plans for their teachers. When I taught in a private school (and I did have a teaching credential) we were not offered health insurance or a retirement option.
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