Not exact matches
But the main important thing is that the kids in these
classrooms have a full tummy, with foods that are healthy and nutritious for them, and we know they are
going to be able
to learn, and
pay attention, and when they
go home at night they don't have
to worry about whether they will have breakfast the next morning because they will have it in their
classroom.
Many teachers even
go into their own pocket
to pay for food and supplies for the students in their
classroom.
Berkman adds, «Science organizations and people who are concerned about instruction in biology should be
paying attention
to what's actually
going on in the
classrooms.»
«We study teacher effectiveness, where teachers
went to ed school, we know what their SAT scores were, but we
pay no attention
to what materials they're using in the
classroom,» Sahm observes.
Last but not least, here's NYT columnist Joe Nocera's piece on the book (Zuckerberg's Expensive Lesson), which notes among other things that «almost half» of the Zuckerberg effort
went to Newark teachers in the form of back
pay, salaries for teachers who weren't assigned
to a
classroom, and bonuses.
Put bluntly, why should a tenured
classroom teacher
go to the effort of altering her long - standing instructional protocols
to adopt new technologies when her
pay, professional status, and job security are only remotely related
to improving her effectiveness or her clients» satisfaction?
That's good for creativity and experimentation in
classrooms, but if teachers are allowed
to decide what they teach as well as how they teach it, students are
going to emerge from high school with Swiss cheese holes in their knowledge and skills, and they'll
pay the price later on.
We'll
pay the extra costs that are involved, we'll keep you on your salary schedule, and you
go back
to the
classroom when you're ready»» Berliner said.
The NUT recognises that we still have a long way
to go to achieve equality for women and women teachers — whether that be through tackling the gender
pay gap in schools or challenging the routine sexism that affects women teachers in the
classroom and many young women students and girls too.
If we have $ 200 million
to give,
pay teachers
to stay after school longer... I'm upset because we as a legislative body, we can sit here and make these type of policies and make these type of assumptions that this would work, when in reality many of you have not stepped a foot in a
classroom... let's be honest, just because you bring in a different entity you're
going to change the dynamic?
-- Mississippi only
pays for 65 percent of what a school district needs
to operate, but 85 percent of district costs
go towards the
classroom.
Money
goes from the
classrooms to instead
pay for rent and building maintenance.
While their involvement was once intricately linked
to teacher professionalism and school success, today they are locked in a mindset that is focused almost entirely on protecting collective bargaining rights and ensuring that tenure, seniority and uniform
pay scales dictate who gets
paid what, and who stays and
goes in the
classroom.
All of the different companies who are offering incentives and sponsorship this year have
paid to take part; that funding keeps NaNoWriMo in action and
goes to support the
classroom programs under the Young Writer's Program.
Whether you enroll for an 8 - hour
classroom course where you have
to go to the traffic school and attend classes, or whether you opt for an online course that you can complete at your convenience in the comfort of your home, you can expect
to pay fees.
If you choose
to take a
classroom course, ask
to see a copy of their state license before
going agreeing
to pay for your class.
Just step right up,
pay for your ticket
to ride, spend a few weeks in a
classroom, memorize enough stuff
to get seventy - five percent on an exam, jump on the merry -
go - round that has no safety belts, and try not
to get flung off as it picks up speed and jettisons its next eighty percent round of chumps.