joescrivens
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ding76uk said:What job do you have where you "work with more teachers than anyone else on this forum?"
I work with schools, a recent school paid for me to come in for educational consultancy to work through government documents and to prepare for their ofsted inspection.
For all those who say I speak rubbish, On average I visit 2 schools a week and have door 8 years. I work with the senior management team, head or whole staff. I do a lot of looking at the effectiveness of teaching and often hear the phrase 'they are retiring soon when talking about teachers with poor performance.
There might be procedures in place,but you will find that a lot of heads find it difficult to get rid of troublesome members of staff.
I am not saying that their aren't hardworking teachers, but there are more who don't work hard and are lazy teachers who are far far far from effective.
There are lots of jobs available in teaching. It might not be in your local area,but there are lots due to the number of older teachers retiring each year.
The salary I was refering to was the London wages and although might only go up to 36,000 out of London without responsibilities, it is hard not to take on these responsibilities as it is expected of you, so they will end up on more.
Do not think I am nieve when it comes to teachers. My mum was a teacher for 30 years and my wife was an assistant head. My company and my whole life is education. I have a dim of teachers because I come across so many bad teachers. My wife cannot believe the things said to me by teachers or the lack of knowledge/sense some teachers have.
You may be a good teacher or your partner may be a good teacher, you may be at an excellent school, do not be fooled in to thinking all schools are like this.
I aplogise I am using the android app and not double checking my spelling.
I work with schools, a recent school paid for me to come in for educational consultancy to work through government documents and to prepare for their ofsted inspection.
For all those who say I speak rubbish, On average I visit 2 schools a week and have door 8 years. I work with the senior management team, head or whole staff. I do a lot of looking at the effectiveness of teaching and often hear the phrase 'they are retiring soon when talking about teachers with poor performance.
There might be procedures in place,but you will find that a lot of heads find it difficult to get rid of troublesome members of staff.
I am not saying that their aren't hardworking teachers, but there are more who don't work hard and are lazy teachers who are far far far from effective.
There are lots of jobs available in teaching. It might not be in your local area,but there are lots due to the number of older teachers retiring each year.
The salary I was refering to was the London wages and although might only go up to 36,000 out of London without responsibilities, it is hard not to take on these responsibilities as it is expected of you, so they will end up on more.
Do not think I am nieve when it comes to teachers. My mum was a teacher for 30 years and my wife was an assistant head. My company and my whole life is education. I have a dim of teachers because I come across so many bad teachers. My wife cannot believe the things said to me by teachers or the lack of knowledge/sense some teachers have.
You may be a good teacher or your partner may be a good teacher, you may be at an excellent school, do not be fooled in to thinking all schools are like this.
maybe the union leaders should have a go at running the country and balancing the books...
Whoops, forgot, we had Labour in last time for a couple of terms... and look where they left us. Don't forget it was Labour that raided everyone's pensions... I don't hear the union leaders moaning too much about that (did they forget)?
Whoops I forgot, that's "old" Labour. New Labour partially ditched the unions.. I wonder why?
By the way, what does your average union leader earn, and what is their pension arrangement?
Going back a few years, does any one remember the winter of 1978/1979?
The basic problem here is that as a country, and as individuals, we have all lived beyond our means for too long. On top of that, we have let our interpretation of the stupid European legislation allow other countries to flourish and make stuff (Germany) while we roll over and send contracts for our own trains planes and boats abroad. Not so many years ago, our order books were full, the bank balance was good and growth came internally and externally. Why does Germany have so much money - because it still makes stuff> Saying that, the German Pension system needed massive re-alignment. Ironically. Germany is still doing well, despite the combination of East and West Germany
I am not on strike....yet !
Our union (fbu, fire brigades union) has not balloted for it yet but rest assured if and when they do, I will be supporting it 110% !!!
gramps said:FBU had a large contingent out in Bristol today.
I work with schools, a recent school paid for me to come in for educational consultancy to work through government documents and to prepare for their ofsted inspection.
For all those who say I speak rubbish, On average I visit 2 schools a week and have door 8 years. I work with the senior management team, head or whole staff. I do a lot of looking at the effectiveness of teaching and often hear the phrase 'they are retiring soon when talking about teachers with poor performance.
There might be procedures in place,but you will find that a lot of heads find it difficult to get rid of troublesome members of staff.
I am not saying that their aren't hardworking teachers, but there are more who don't work hard and are lazy teachers who are far far far from effective.
There are lots of jobs available in teaching. It might not be in your local area,but there are lots due to the number of older teachers retiring each year.
The salary I was refering to was the London wages and although might only go up to 36,000 out of London without responsibilities, it is hard not to take on these responsibilities as it is expected of you, so they will end up on more.
Do not think I am nieve when it comes to teachers. My mum was a teacher for 30 years and my wife was an assistant head. My company and my whole life is education. I have a dim of teachers because I come across so many bad teachers. My wife cannot believe the things said to me by teachers or the lack of knowledge/sense some teachers have.
You may be a good teacher or your partner may be a good teacher, you may be at an excellent school, do not be fooled in to thinking all schools are like this.
ding76uk said:That's not when I question you. Your comment all teachers have to pay in to a pension is rubbish.
Those who have it easiest are the ones who come into school sell their services, usually very poorly, and then leave people to it walking away with a big fat cheque.
See how easy it is to tar everyone with the same brush? To back this up I have had some wonderful people work with me in schools, and I have had people paid a nice sum to teach photoshop to the art staff who "Only knew how to use elements, and I struggle with that".
You can tar everyone with the same brush, but it doesn't work. If it is so easy to being a teacher, why not do it yourself? Possibly because you get paid a lot more to go into schools and tell them what to do I would guess.
They agree with me.
My mum took her money out of her pension when we were born and only paid in for 12 years after this. She has a £6,000 a year pension for the rest of her life. She loves it.
My mum agrees with me on how teachers are and it gets her very angry. She gets on her soapbox....
My wife can't believe the stuff teachers say and do. she is shocked but she has seen first hand what they are like when she has done work for the company.
Why do they get angry and on their soapboxes when they are teachers themselves? Are they shouting and lecturing each other?
How come your wife gets angry at what teaches say and do? Isn't she angry about what she says and does too?
You are protected by the law just the same as anyone else. Use it.:shrug:[/QUOTE
+1 ....simples is it not :shrug:
ding76uk said:Surely you would have made the most difference in schools though, but hey you know better than teachers even though you have no direct experience of being one.
Notice you do not deny you get paid a lot more than the average teacher salary for giving your advice. I would wager that going into a school and telling them how to correct paperwork on SEN and inclusion is a lot easier than teaching 6 periods in an urban setting with pupils who have violent tendencies.
Defiance said:Equally don't be fooled into thinking all schools or teachers are bad because you spend more of your time dealing with schools in need of help. In my experience, consultants are normally employed by those who need help and not those who dont and normally those that need help are the minority.
Defiance said:In any profession and walk of life there are people who excel at their job, there are those content to do the job well, and those who underperform. Teachers do not deserve to be singled out in this regard.
They must be the only two decent teachers in the whole wide world.....he's very lucky indeed to be involved with both of them!!
Seriously.....what are the odds?!!![]()
Absolutely, I'm sure the performance of teachers falls within a bell curve just like employees within any other profession but is it right that students should have to be burdened with teachers who aren't able to teach?
Teachers are there to do the job of teaching. If they can't produce the results they should pursue a different career. I don't understand why the under-performance of teachers should be treated any differently to under-performing employees in any other industry. If anything I'd say it should be a priority to ensure future generations receive the very best standard of teaching they can, not just settling for current staff and being unable to remove them from their job because all they're guilty of is not being able to teach very well and nothing more serious.
I'll repeat that I am very aware the general standard of teaching is good and there a few teachers that are below par, I just think those below par teachers shouldn't be allowed to continue holding back pupil's education.
A large number of schools that use us are rated as outstanding by ofsted, and our product directly effects how they are judged in some of the areas. Some authorities have standardised on our product across all schools. We are used in Beacon schools (not sure if that project is still going on] and centres of excellence where teachers go to learn new initiatives and methods.
So as you see we work with a large range of schools.
Dale_d3100 said:I aplogise I am using the android app and not double checking my spelling.

Defiance said:If I read this right you are saying that you work with high performing schools and not schools that simply have fancy labels attached.
By definition, schools cannot be high performing without good teachers and good management unless headteachers have a magic wand or the children educate themselves. I doubt very much that these good teachers are the minority in these schools. As said above, there will always be a mix of performance but that is not unique in any way to the teaching industry or something to only beat up teachers over.
By definition, schools cannot be high performing without good teachers and good management unless headteachers have a magic wand or the children educate themselves.
Surely it is purely down to his services? No wonder he is in such high demand!
People say they want only outstanding people to teach future generations, yet you charge them a 27k debt to train, freeze their pay for 2-3 years and then make them contribute more to their pensions when they get a 1% pay rise (effectively cutting their salary by 2%). Making them work til 70. Can you not see the irony in this whole thing?
Ask a 70 year old how it feels chasing one grandchild around all day, let alone a class of 30.
Splog said:How is asking you to contribute more to a pension cutting salary? Your paid the same but you are investing for your future. If you don't like it, opt out of the pension and start your own.
that argument makes very limited sense.
Jeez, so my (and your) taxes pay for teachers, firefighters, police, NHS staff......so what. You think its just creating jobs for the boys that you're paying for and getting nothing back from it?
I feel your pain. You'd think I was a five-year-old with the way my spelling comes out
Despite coming in with an inflammatory first post, don't hate Dale for his views ad someone who exposed to schooling, regardless of how good they are.
This thread has turned into a tit-for-tat argument about who is worse off, who knows most about education, and who has a right to comment because they know someone in education. Some of you would argue with yourselves in an empty room. What is the point in trying to price each other wrong? Oneupmanship is vile in real life and even more distasteful on a forum where everyone turns into an expert.
would that be a bit like a lot of the private sector who started off on final salaries to have them slashed to money purchase schemes? :shrug: - not arguing with you, just pointing out it's happened everywhere...