judeboy101 wrote: » Because the gov have no intention of giving us equality, they keep pushing it out stringing it out til we give up like good little boys and girls.
SligoBrewer wrote: » It's striking time.
deiseindublin wrote: » Maybe Sir123 is an LPT that is sick of partial restoration. I'd vote NO if I were an LPT. As someone on the old payscale I'd be torn about what best to do for my colleagues tbh . No doubt the unions won't put it to us though, they'll just keep putting up posts online about the great victories they've had so far, albeit still being unequal.
Ace2007 wrote: » There is never going to be equality in teaching, so when do you stop striking? Like what do you call equality in teaching?
ThePiedPiper wrote: » Although there’s been so much fobbing off of the inequality issue from government, I felt this time may actually be different. Politically, it’s become a major headache for the government, with Fianna Fáil practically insisting on it being addressed this year as part of the Confidence and Supply agreement.
27061986a wrote: » ...considering the fact it was a fianna fail government that started the wave of public sector pay cuts back in 2009. (pension levy in march 2009 and 5% cut in all public sector pay in budget 2010 and also 10% reduction in pay for all new public sector workers recruited after 1st january 2011)
mtoutlemonde wrote: » I hope people remember that if a general election is called.
27061986a wrote: » And I also forgot to mention Brendan (the wee man) Howlin (Mr labour Party) who abolished most allowances in 2011 for new entrants to the public sector. Seems you can trust nobody.
judeboy101 wrote: » Every teacher on the same scale, same access to allowances and has access to the same pension
Avatar MIA wrote: » Have ye no shame, using kids as leverage. A post previously saying exam kids should be weaponised. FFS, do ye remember being exam students yourselves? Teachers are not badly paid. Should they be on the same scale? Yes, but why do ye think everyone should be brought UP, would ye not be reasonable and request everyone be put on the same scale at no extra cost? Another point, kids could still get the same summer holidays, teachers could be redeployed within the civil service during the period they are not teaching. They work 183 days a year compared to most others on 251.
Emmett Tall Resistor wrote: » How do you see this impacting on the rapidly growing crisis in recruitment and retention of teachers?
limnam wrote: » Where are the teachers leaving to go to teach considering they're one of the highest paid in the OECD. Or are they leaving the teaching profession ? any stats ?
ThePiedPiper wrote: » No stats to hand, just what I see all around me. Mostly they’re going to the UAE, although the Far East and Australia are getting more common too. To be honest, if we didn’t have four children, two already in school, my wife and I, both post 2011 pay scales, would be gone.
Sunny Disposition wrote: » Another pay increase, it’s some job!
Avatar MIA wrote: » Are you thinking of retraining as a teacher then? Are you thinking of Primary or secondary teaching?
Sunny Disposition wrote: » Have a mortgage to pay which is an obstacle, is there a part time post grad option or is it gone? Primary would be best I suppose but secondary okay too.
km79 wrote: » Luckily no teachers at all have mortgages to pay This 1% will be used by every teacher to fund their many holidays
Avatar MIA wrote: » If you have honours Irish in the LC you can pass an entrance exam and join as a mature student. Usually 4 years full time study to become a primary school teacher. Or if you have a relevant primary degree you can get accreditation from the teaching council and take a two-year post grad training to become a secondary school teacher. That you may have financial commitments is irrelevant, those that chose to prioritise their career rightly get rewarded.