De Dannan wrote: » I believe that this is one of the most important jobs in the world. A good teacher is worth their weight in gold and should be paid a lot more than they are imo. By the same token a bad teacher can destroy a childs interest in learning forever and should be not be allowed to continue How many poor teachers have been removed from their posts, and if not, why not ??
parker kent wrote: » It is extremely difficult to define what a bad teacher is. I'm sure everybody has stories of a teacher who they found to be poor, but that does not necessarily mean they were a bad teacher either. There is no guaranteed way to decide who is or is not a bad teacher. You can't go by leaving cert results for obvious reasons. Any league tables people may suggest are subject to dozens of issues. A good teacher can have students with poor results and a bad teacher can have students with good results. Then there are always people who just have issues with teachers and naturally side against them. If people knew that complaining would get a teacher sacked, it would be open to malicious abuse. Often stories of bad teachers are really stories of kids (or more often parents) who have a gripe with a teacher for a number of reasons. The "my little angel is being held back by that teacher" attitude would come out in force. So who exactly would decide who is or is not a good teacher? Would young teachers who struggle early in their career be fired, thus not giving them the chance to improve? Would personal grudges cause sackings? Would a teacher with a poorly performing class through no fault of their own be sacked? It sounds great to say lets sack the bad teachers, but it is very difficult to do in reality. It would be great if poor teachers could be weeded out, but it is not as easy as it sounds. And that is not taking into account the unions who proudly state their love of striking should somebody be sacked. One of the senior figures in SIPTU gave us a talk in college and seriously annoyed me with his BS.
steddyeddy wrote: » Easy enough in some cases, someone humiliates the children and doesnt turn up half the time is a bad teacher
liah wrote: » I think it's more a case of the position not being enticing enough, in terms of hours or pay or treatment or whatever else, to attract people to the profession.
parker kent wrote: » That is one extreme example, hardly representative of the majority.
liah wrote: » Wait, so there are no Rate Your Teachers websites for Ireland? They've been around for awhile in the States/Canada/other places.
parker kent wrote: » It sounds great to say lets sack the bad teachers, but it is very difficult to do in reality. It would be great if poor teachers could be weeded out, but it is not as easy as it sounds. And that is not taking into account the unions who proudly state their love of striking should somebody be sacked. One of the senior figures in SIPTU gave us a talk in college and seriously annoyed me with his BS.
steddyeddy wrote: » True but this woman and other bad teachers still work. One is too much.
parker kent wrote: » Like I said, that is caused by overly strong Unions. I'd also like to know how often people complain about that teacher. If a teacher was regularly 20 minutes late, it deserves more than just a mention to the class teacher. That sort of thing should be common knowledge and easy to organise wider protests to the principal or school board.
parker kent wrote: » There is one but it is trolled to death. I checked my old school and there were teachers listed on it who don't even exist. Then the usual "she was hot" or random abusive comments.
steddyeddy wrote: » Well I totally accept that most teachers work hard there are definatly exceptions. Im not sure how much students complain now a days to be honest but i know our complaints fell on deaf ears.