Bill Gates Out to Lower Teacher Salaries
Bill Gates compared paying teachers more money for their experience to paying someone who mows lawns more money for their experience.
Bill Gates compared paying teachers more money for their experience to paying someone who mows lawns more money for their experience.
AFT and WVSSPA-AFT Monongalia
Media-Week in Review
HEADLINES news articles, TV COVERAGE, THE STORY UNFOLDS
Devono pay hike irks AFT
Superintendent to get $32K in raises
WSSPA/AFT and AFT form Action Plan
Counties are cutting teachers and school service personnel at one board of education meeting and then handing out enormous pay raises to administrators at the very next meeting. Over 70 employees that work in board of education offices across the state making over $90,000 a year, with 15 earning over $100,000. Just this week in Monongalia County, Superintendent Devono had his contract extended 3 years. During these three years, his salary will go from $125,000 to $157,000. This occurred after the Monongalia County Board of Education recently laid off 70 teachers and service personnel who work directly with children.
Rather than listen to veteran teachers, the majority party is listening to someone who wasn't in a classroom long enough to get a Professional Services Contract.
This article reviews claims that Rhee made about her student's learning gains.
US-UNM partners with" Keep the Promise for New Mexico's Future." This is an organization of parents, students, workers, leaders, churches and unions that want to see the NM legislature restore revenues to education.
This is another example of the success of our public school system. When students come to class prepared with the proper support system at home and engage with a strong curriculum with teahers who are properly trained, the sky is the limit.
This is an amazing story from Illinois about how a challenging workout before reading and math classes has increased student learning.
Despite the fact that Florida's average teacher salary is $7,000 below the national average that's not good enough for the majority party in Tallahassee. Now, they want public employees to take a 5 percent cut in pay to fund the Florida Retirement System. There is no mention of state legislators or other elected officials being asked to make the same sacrifice.
The same legislators who want to cut your salary by 5 percent have given staffers 6 figure salaries.
Want to know the reality of charter schools? Read this story from the Orlando Sentinel.