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Anyway, they can always go to the US or one of the other Canadian provinces. They don't have to come here, if it's that bad. |
^^ That's your problem right there -- local Chinese news feeding the mostly conservative Chinese parents. I am also willing to be that the vast majority of them have no idea what the core issues of this labour dispute is all about. Class size, composition, and ruling from Supreme Court? They have no idea what those things mean in this labour conflict. |
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No more international students! They can just go somewhere else! International students in awkward spot thanks to teachers? strike | News1130 |
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By deferring to the courts, and insisting that the language of the new contract reflect what the courts have already determined (or by requesting binding arbitration--which must follow the letter of legal rulings to date), they are doing exactly what you said: looking out for the best interests of kids. Do I think the teachers' pay and signing bonus requests are entirely reasonable? Nope. But that's what you do when you negotiate. You never start where you want to finish, you start where there's a middle between you both. |
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I would say a teacher's key performance indicator is their students' performance. They are paid a market value in private sector for this. Ur stupid example is bunk. Gm and Hyundai do not have 'produce expensive higher margin cars' as their KPI, theirs is more a mass market product, so low cost, healthy margin is what they're after. Ferrari, Mclaren produce niche products, their focus is on amazing engineering, continuation of a legacy, soul of the car, new tech development and implementation, etc. margins come with that. Apples to oranges in all senses |
Can someone in the sector explain how principal's and vp's add value to elementary/high school? I understand they are the "general manager" of the school, but what is their function/purpose? |
Um...... They can like make or break a school. They decide on the direction of the school. They work with parents. Man, if I had to list their duties, I would need a hundred pages. Wow. |
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What do you mean by "direction of the school"? |
Obviously roles like that are just cushy union positions. All throughout highschool our principle never dealt with any single issue personally it was always the vice principle. He was there to hand out diplomas etc but never once did I witness them handing out discipline, making announcements, etc Pay your dues as a vice principle then sit back when you get promoted |
Um.......... principals don't belong to the union. They have an association perhaps (depending on the school district), but they, of all people are the least protected. They can be fired just like that. As for doing nothing but handing out certificates and diplomas at the grad ceremonies, that's what people see. A helluva lot more happens behind the scenes. Like i've mentioned before, everyone is an expert when it comes to education, because everyone went to school. You base everything from your perspective. That's okay, I used to be just like that in my younger days. Actually still am, LOL. god bless |
The principal of a school is similar to the CEO of the company. They have to meet with parents similar to shareholders of a company. They have to meet with the government. They have to set the vision and culture and direction of the school and the education approach and method that the school takes and uses that is a good fit for both the students and the teachers of the school. They have to have the ability to see what is working or not and make necessary changes. They have to have plans to hire the best teachers and understand what motivates them so that the school can best retain them especially in competition with private schools who would offer more money for the same position. |
I've dealt with a lot of administrators over the years. From primary and elementary to middle and secondary schools. A not so effective administator can kill a school in a matter of months. I think principals in larger secondary schools, where three to four vice principals are working below the principal, the principal tends to be less effective and ends up hiding in their office. The most important trait of an effective principal is their educational leadership. Without that, the grounds keeper might as well be the principal (okay, no Star Fleet Academy references here). My kids' secondary school had a wonderful principal. She was very uptodate with the latest in pedagogical research, brain development research, etc. She was always out there engaged with the students and supported any teacher who had a passion they wanted to share. Worked tirelessly and selflessly. Don't know how she did it. She left the school and it was never the same. It affected the teachers greatly, as well. A school with an ineffective pricipal would be one where the staff are fighting all the time with each other (no cohesion), there's no focus or energy, the parents have little to no input, and most importantly, the students are miserable. It all trickles down from the top. No different than any other organization. |
Based on the comments in this thread, what I've learned in this thread is that: - Teachers are really just glorified babysitters that should be compensated similarly to the babysitter next door ($14/hour) - Public schooling in BC is a shambles, so too bad for all of the poor people that have to use it - People who do other jobs don't add value because my job is more important than everyone else's and adds far more value to the world - My opinions are correct and hold more weight because I believe them to be so - Because I work with money, I am inherently smarter than you - Because I bust my balls working 14 hours a day, I am inherently smarter than you too |
^I'm sorry to hear that. RS threads, FTW! |
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...No. Nevermind. Not RS. The Internets. |
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Soundy: "Excessive" is a relative term, and if you had gotten no raises, or raises below the rate of inflation you would probably be asking for a bit more after nearly a decade. Whatever is outside the government's "Affordability zone" is considered excessive. Whatever the government budgets is what it wants to spend, regardless of the economic situation. Which, as a sidenote, is surprisingly good. Normally I'm not a fan of hack-and-slash budgets, especially with tax drops, but the Government itself announced a $200-someodd million surplus to date in the quarter just a bit ago. Affordable is, as always, a relative term. And I absolutely agree: there is nothing in the court decisions that say that staffing levels must return to exactly pre-2002 levels. What the judgement says is that the government unfairly and unilaterally stripped those levels, and as a result they must be negotiated between the teachers and Government. The Government says that they should negotiate based on today's staffing levels. The Teachers say that they should negotiate based on 2002's levels. The fact that they need to be negotiated at all is a factor, as the government has essentially turned their negotiation on the subject into the argument: "Well, classrooms are still passing students, so it must be doing a good enough job!" As for the difference in where the money is going, I'm kind of split 50/50. I feel that there are some situations in which certified teachers are a necessity, but at the same time that there are plenty of options for non-BCTF support workers that would easily bolster the effectiveness and efficiency of teachers. The long and the short of it is, I think that a compromise is in due order. Sadly, at this point, neither side seems to be interested. I'll be honest: I think that binding arbitration is the best option at this point. Whatever they say, we can pretty much guarantee that BOTH sides will be unhappy. And if that's true, then we can pretty much agree that everyone got the least-worst deal. |
In for a long one - no surprise. Fassbender just formally rejected the arbritration idea. Bust the union has always been the prime directive and they're getting closer. The longer this goes on, the more people will side with the government, because people, by nature, don't give a shit about anyone else except themselves. Iker and the BCTF must have known this. Both sides are digging in. Like with any war, there will be casualties. Of all the parties involved, the government will come out on top with the children and teachers being the casualties. The government has the responsibility to provide education to the children of this province, but they don't want to legislate the teachers back to work. |
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The massage allowance outrage confuses me. When I was working as a basic associate in a retail store, my medical coverage gave me up to $5000 in coverage for massages/physical therapy. Currently I don't get that much of a coverage for it, but who cares? I don't get the mentality of, "If I don't get those benefits at my job, why should you?" |
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$3,000 massage allowance was under doctor's orders, so that teachers who had been placed under physical strain (I'll admit, I can't remember a time I've seen a teacher overly physically strained) wouldn't have to be out of pocket if they needed treatment. It wasn't an "Oh look, I can get massages once a week 'cause I'll never spend more than the $3,000 cap!" The negotiations sometimes remind me a bit of an interview I once saw with Seth Macfarlane on fighting with the censorship people at Fox. There were a bunch of jokes they threw into the scripts for the specific purpose of being able to throw them out. If they just presented the script as they wanted it, the censors would pick the most outrageous (funniest) jokes and say "nope, not happening". Instead, they found the disposable jokes and got rid of them, allowing what they originally wanted to be kept. Quote:
And yes, I'm very well aware that it's taxpayer money--mine included--that's being spent. I'll be honest with you. I'm on my way up in the earnings ways. I'm currently earning more than I have before, and I'll be earning more in the next coming few years than I am now. And despite that, I'm in favour of raising taxes. Hospital wait times, swamped teachers, unfixed potholes, insufficient traffic infrastructure and the list goes on. While I'm all for having my own money, I'm also for making sure that the greater whole is served as well. As an aside to all this, I find it frustrating that most of these negotiations are actually being held like this. How many other situations are negotiations and back-and-forths held in the public? How many times have you negotiated with your boss only to have him put up an office memo insisting that the raise you want is too high and disproportionate to the other workers, and that you need to understand that you don't necessarily add value where others do? Negotiations should be held privately, and if there's no resolution, then be damned with it and just leave it at that. |
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We pay enough taxes they are just allocated piss poorly with to much waste. |
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