Guest guest Posted March 4, 2009 Report Share Posted March 4, 2009 I suppose they figure kids don't care about school anyway, so why keep good teachers on the payroll. Having trained to be a teacher, I will say that what they save in money, they lose in skill. New teachers that start with low pay may save money, but the training they get in college is NOT sufficient to get them through the first few years of teaching. If becoming a teacher were like whittling, college carves out the general shape, and experience is what finishes the carving with the fine details. Administrator http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_11831138 SD's experienced teachers encouraged to retire The Associated Press Posted: 03/03/2009 10:07:32 PM PST SAN DIEGO—The San Diego school board has approved a plan to encourage the district's most experienced teachers to retire early to save the district millions of dollars and avoid layoffs. The plan negotiated by the teachers' union includes retirement incentives and was approved by the school board Tuesday. School officials say the plan could save the district more than $7.6 million in the next few years. On average, about 250 teachers retire per year. The plan would need 633 teachers to volunteer for early retirement. The district faces a $77 million deficit in next year's budget. The district has already committed to $45.3 million in cuts through hiring and spending freezes and consolidating school bus routes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2009 Report Share Posted March 4, 2009 This is always the case in any venue. You might save money in one way by firing the more expensive experienced people, but you will lose more in terms of quality of product. NASA learned this the hard way when they fired so many senior engineers with decades of experience. The result was that a number of mission during the Clinton years failed because of silly errors and mistakes a more seasoned staff probably would have caught or known how to deal with. Sounds to me like a call for more charter schools. The good teachers would surely be snapped up, even if they didn't get paid as much as they did in public schools. They would get a better cut of student and would have more discipline in the classroom, probably even being able to get rid of the worst students. That's not a bad idea really: let the best students go to the private system and the troublemakers can stay on the government dime. Very symbolic actually. In a message dated 3/4/2009 2:41:44 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, no_reply writes: Having trained to be a teacher, I will say that what they save in money, they lose in skill. New teachers that start with low pay may save money, but the training they get in college is NOT sufficient to get them through the first few years of teaching. If becoming a teacher were like whittling, college carves out the general shape, and experience is what finishes the carving with the fine details.Administrator Need a job? Find employment help in your area. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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