|
|
|
|
|
by buck4roo
1195 days ago
|
|
Yes on the current facts, but good luck to any district that thinks it'll be attracting new qualified teachers in that scenario. Current Los Angeles teachers' wage penalty is 25% vs neighbors with same college degrees. [1] One only need look at the current starvation in teacher training programs' rosters to see the coming implosion of supply of new teachers. Paper with methodology and citations: https://utla.net/app/uploads/2022/08/UTLA_ShortageReport.pdf |
|
Wages are falling really far behind even the kinds of careers HN types joke about, the ones that humanities and liberal arts majors end up in if they don't just work at Starbucks—and guess what sorts of jobs the top 20% or so of teachers with some years of experience can walk straight into? Yep, exactly those jobs. Hell, the comp at one gas station chain around here is on par with a mid-career teacher in the area, after you've been there a couple years, and you don't need a degree to get that job. If you're an assistant manager by five years in (and if you're bright enough to be someone we want teaching, you will be) you'll be out-earning local teachers with more experience than that. W. T. F.
So, good for the upcoming crop of students, they shouldn't get a teaching degree, it's an astonishingly horrible deal and unlikely to get better.