Beatsong wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Beatsong wrote:I take it you haven't met many real estate agents then.

I have, and those that make good money work hard for their money. A real estate agent making $76,000 a year plus paying for their own benefits, etc., is among the top of their profession -- very few make that much -- and such a person doesn't get summers off, works odd hours to work around other people's schedules, often on weekends, and show houses many times without selling them. Median income for real estate agents in the US --
http://www1.salary.com/real-estate-agent-Salary.html -- about $37,0000. The median income for teachers in the US is about $51,000
http://www.bls.gov/ooh/Education-Traini ... achers.htm
:-)
It's funny though. When it comes to real estate agents, and other professions like small business owners where every hour worked it not accountable to somebody's timesheet, you're lavish in your admiration of "odd hours; working on weekends" etc.
I haven't been lavish. On average, they make less than teachers, and work more hours to earn less, and they aren't striking and asking for everyone else's solidarity. I specifically said that if they were striking for the same reasons the Chicago teachers are striking, I would be 4 square against them too. I also said that I don't care what the Chicago teachers make, a million dollars a minute would be fine - what I object to is them claiming injustice and demanding that we all be in solidarity with them.
I have not said that teachers have it easy, but that doesn't stop you folks from constantly repeating that mantra. Anyone earning $76,000 a year SHOULD be working pretty darn hard, and they are. But, that's fitting.
Beatsong wrote:
You're convinced that ANYONE earning decent money must be working their arse off and you swallow without reservation the general claims about hours outside of those specified to be at the office, for all of them.
Did you miss the part about real estate agents earning an average of $37K to the teacher average of $51k and the Chicago teacher average of $76k? Who is earning the more decent money?
Beatsong wrote:
This despite the fact that you have provided no evidence to that effect and you (presumeably) have not personally met every single real estate agent in America.
You haven't met every single teacher in America, yet that doesn't stop you from claiming they are overworked and underpaid.
Beatsong wrote:
But when it comes to teachers, your loose anecdotal experience to the contrary of "empty parking lots" outweighs everything else.
No, it just goes to show that they're not toiling away in the schools for 12 hours a day, generally speaking. We all know that they're not.
Beatsong wrote:
You convince yourself that if the minimum specified in their contract says they turn up half an hour before the first class and leave half an hour after the last one, and doesn't specify exactly what they have to do in the holidays, that MUST be all they're doing, and it's SO much less than everyone else.
I haven't said anything of the kind.
Beatsong wrote:
So why the double standard?
It's not. I haven't interposed a double standard.
Beatsong wrote:
Since you were so keen for evidence that teachers are working as much as other people, how about we take this back to first principles. Since you started it all with the assertion that they are not, how about you provide the evidence of that?
They aren't working as many hours as the average person because they get 2+ months off in the summer and have a 180 day school year. Give a ditch digger two months less to work out of the year, and unless he is adding 336 hours to his other days during the year, then he's working less. It stands to reason.
Beatsong wrote:
And just to
be clear - focusing in isolation on ONE aspect of their working year (the long summer holiday) on the false assumption that all else must be equal, doesn't cut it.
All else is still not equal -- teachers get more holidays than everyone else too, and have a school year of about 180 days. Add to that about 10 days before and after the school year, and you get 190. Assume 8 hours a day and that's about 1500 hours a year where everyone else working a 40 hour week works 2050 a year. Add to that that most people making $76k have to work a lot more than 40 hours in a week to make that much....
Beatsong wrote:
Teachers are no different from real estate agents,
Other than making more money on average, you mean?
Beatsong wrote:
sales reps, people in arts-oriented fields or the like: they have a certain number of hours specified that they have to be on site (usually fairly modest, determined by the needs of working with other people) and a whole lot more hours they have to do around that where they're paid for the job; not for the number of hours. A real estate agent is paid to sell houses, a business owner is paid to return a profit on their business; a teacher is paid (outside of contact hours) to plan, prepare and evaluate effective lessons, to mark work, to liase with everyone else in the school, to liase with parents, to complete all kinds of government-required paperwork (and probably other stuff I've forgotten). Nobody specifies the number of hours that has to take, just as nobody specifies how many hours a travelling salesman has to spend on the road. They need to get the job done, to the standard required.
Sure, but you'll need to present some evidence that they're working 10-12 hours a day during the school year. In Chicago, the school day is 5 hours and 45 minutes long. That leaves 2 hours and 15 minutes to do non-school day work. If the claim is that teachers are so overworked that they're working 3 and 4 hours a day, regularly, beyond the school day, then I'd love to see the evidence of it.
Beatsong wrote:
Which is all fine and dandy as far as I'm concerned, since I'm not the one insisting that there's some massive difference between them, you are.
I haven't insisted there is a massive difference, except that the teachers are the one's claiming they are being given the shaft.
Beatsong wrote:
Since we're clearly not going to get anywhere comparing anecdotes, how about you provide some evidence for that claim, showing that the majority of teachers work significantly less than 2050 hours a year - taking into account ALL the work they do?
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics only 30% of teachers self-report as doing work at home. So, the idea that all or even most teachers are toiling away at home is bunk. Period. Only 30% of teachers report bringing any work home, let alone a lot of work. A Bureau of Labor Statistics study that said that, on average, teachers work fewer hours per week than people in other professions. The BLS research found that teachers, on average, worked just over seven hours a day during the week, and another two hours or so over the weekend (and that doesn't take into account the 0 school work done over the summers).
http://stateimpact.npr.org/ohio/2011/10 ... vacations/
National data shows that on average teachers work fewer hours per week than people in other professions–nearly three hours a week less. That’s according to this 2008 analysis from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (brought to our attention by the Buckeye Institute). The analysis is based on interviews from 2003–2006 conducted as part of the American Time Use Survey.
Beatsong wrote:
Then we can attach some credibility to your assertion and satisfy ourselves that it's not just some random claim pulled out of your arse based on your own prejudices.
My experience is in line with the Bureau of Labor Statistics data. The only one pulling anything out of his arse is you, buddy.
Beatsong wrote:
I'm not even trying to get into this comparison bit.
That's rich.

I wasn't. I didn't bring up real estate agents. But, since someone did, I pointed out that they get paid on average a lot less than teachers. They do work hard, as do teachers. But, the fact that teachers work hard is merely a statement that they are doing what they're supposed to do. Most people making $76k or even $51k are "working hard" for that money, and the statistics show that most people making that kind of money are working many more hours than teachers.