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by fnordfnordfnord 3889 days ago
>This claim does seem to be a bit disingenuous and exaggerated. Sure teachers cover an unfair amount of supplies and get paid very little. Do they really rent their classrooms, buy their own computers, and pay for 100% of everything out of pocket?

It was exaggerated a bit!

>Do they really rent their classrooms,

Of course not, but increasingly, my own resources are being put to use on behalf of my / my employer's students. Furthermore, remuneration in my field is easily several times what it is in education; and I think that's true for a lot of teachers. Sure, there are other benefits, but the pay is poor, approaching minimal, and that's not going to get you the best teachers.

>buy their own computers

Often enough, yes.

> and pay for 100% of everything out of pocket?

Far, far too much out of pocket.

1 comments

I think we went of the tracks a few posts ago. I was saying that entrepreneurs take significant personal and financial risks and there is a high rate of attrition for even good businesses. My point was that after a physically, emotionally, and financial draining 5 year period there is a high probability that you end up with significant debt and no source of income (lol kind of like my college experience I guess). I know that teachers get crapped on and are underpaid. I get that it's unfair and it sucks.
Yeah, I probably should have used /s after that line.

> I was saying that entrepreneurs take significant personal and financial risks and there is a high rate of attrition for even good businesses.

I agree, and I think it's may just be a nasty feature of our country's demographics and the law of supply and demand.

I'm reminded of a post from a few years ago (I think I saw it here) examining someone's observation that a lot of engineering types were packing up and moving to Germany to start their company because failure would mean less financial hardship (that's not a great summary of the article). Here is an article in a similar vein (vane?). http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/10/think-we...