Beatsong wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:It all depends how the resources are going to be spent. Just paying a teacher more money isn't going to make them teach better, is it?
Well according economic mantra that we need low tax and deregulation so that companies can be free to pay enough to attract "the best people", sure, it should mean precisely that.
Offering a higher salary may attract a better qualified person (someone who could command a higher salary elsewhere), but it doesn't make the current teachers better.
Well that's a pretty tenuous difference. The point stands that after several decades of being told that businesses need freedom from pesky regulations and unions so they can spend as much as possible on motivating their directors, that rich people need to be taxed as little as possible to make it worth their while to run companies - indeed, to prevent them from launching a mass exodus from the country - it always seems ironic that when it comes to anyone else, what they get paid apparently has no effect on their motivation to work
Again, you oversimplify and strawman. One, most people who run businesses are not rich. The person who owns the average store in a strip mall in the United States, or a pizza restaurant, etc., makes a middle class income when it's all said and done, and works twice the normal working hours. Those are the people that get taxed when we raise taxes, not just "the rich" (millionaires and billionaires).
And, sure, money is a good motivator, nobody said it wasn't. And, I haven't objected to reasonable wages. What I'm saying is that in total, teachers in Chicago are doing quite well. 1.6 times the average is darn good, plus their better than average benefits, and nice working conditions, and union representation with job security that most other workers don't get, massive vacation time, and 2+ months off in the summer.
Beatsong wrote:
And, if you reject the "economic mantra" then why would you assert it as a reason for paying more money?
Because I'm having a conversation with someone who regularly voices support of that economic mantra and whose opinions in threads such as this one are largely informed by it. So I'm interested to see if he's willing to see it applied with any consistency, or whether it's really just a smokescreen to argue for the economic privilege of the rich at everybody else's expense.
I've not voiced support for the "mantra" you described. Yours is just a strawman mischaracterization of my view, if you're trying to attribute that to me.
I don't argue for privilege for the rich and never have. You suggest that I'm in favor of tax breaks for the rich, when I'm not. I'm in favor of, during a recession or tough economic times, that we not saddle small business with more taxes, because I know how hard it is to take the plunge to hire people. Making it more expensive doesn't help.
I also really don't care too much how much Chicago decides to pay its teachers. That's up to the collective bargaining process. There is a union, and management. They negotiate. Whatever comes of it, comes of it. But, in my opinion, everything the teachers are demanding is excessive under the circumstances, particularly given the poor results of Chicago schools and the dearth of funds available to fund the demands.
Beatsong wrote:
Beatsong wrote:
Oh but hang on, I forgot. Financial incentives are only necessary for the super-rich. The motivation for quality work that we're supposed to take for granted in their case doesn't apply to everyone else.
Straw man. Like I said, the financial incentives work, but you can't view them as simplistically as you are casting them. If I higher a person at work, more money will be an incentive to work more hours or work a little harder, but that doesn't mean that if you pay someone a million dollars more that you will get a million dollars worth of benefit from them.
Sure. But noone is suggesting paying them a million dollars more. In fact I wasn't suggesting paying them any more at all than has already been agreed. What "financial incentives work" certainly DOESN'T mean is that you can expect to get better results by paying LESS - which is what you implied earlier that kicked all this off.
So, there is a point at which you would object to additional money, right? Where is your line, then?
I did not imply that earlier in this thread. I stated that given the piss poor results, we could probably achieve the same results with less expensive teachers. I stand by that. But, that is different than what you just tried to attribute to me.
Beatsong wrote:
Also, I suspect your financial comparisons are bunk. According to
this site the figure of $47,000 is the MEDIAN household income in Chicago. I'm not sure but every reference I can find to the compared figure of 76K describes it as the AVERAGE or MEAN teacher's salary. These are of course two completely different things, and not in any way comparable. Not that that's going to matter to lunatic right wing propaganda sites. Furthermore - and I'm not sure about this in terms of how American demographic statistics are gathered, so am happy to admit if I'm wrong - but wouldn't "household income" include people with no or only part-time income? The retired, unemployed, students etc?
So, show me the real statistic, then? Unless you're suggesting that some small number of teachers are making hundreds of thousands of dollars per year, and the bulk of the teachers are making like $40,000 a year, your criticism doesn't make any sense. But, if you think that the the average of $76k doesn't reflect what the average teacher makes, then show me some source to back you up. If you think that the average income earner earns a lot more than $47,000 a year, then back that up to.
I did actually try and search for what the median income of Chicago teachers was, to make a direct comparison, but that information doesn't seem to be available anywhere. Neither could I find average or median earnings of full-time employed professionals in Chicago, though I expect that probably is available somewhere.
But there's no use pretending that the solution to incomplete data is just to use unmatching and incomparable data without caring. Even a statistics amateur like me can tell you that a median is not an average, and that in most cases regarding income, the median is significantly lower than the average. (What's the average income of you and Bill Gates, I wonder? WOW - THAT MUCH??? What do
you two do to deserve THAT?!)
That is exactly the point I made. There isn't a teacher in the Chicago school system making all the money, and the rest of the teachers make a pittance, thereby skewing the average up in the way you describe between me and Bill Gates. They're a union, and the salaries go on a scale based on seniority. To suggest that there is some whacked out and skewed salary dispersion will require, I think, some evidence to back it up. Otherwise, in a union model, salaries are normally disbursed pretty normally.
Beatsong wrote:
In the case of the teachers I don't know who's included when calculating the averages. If it includes headteachers and people in positions of senior leadership then yes, a few outliers earning much more than everyone else could skew the average considerably. In the UK for example the starting salary for a teacher is about £22,000, but senior leadership can be on several times that and some headteachers on over 100K.
It wouldn't include management - but, I would expect that if it was in the union's interest to point out that the $76k was not indicative of what rank-and-file teachers make, then they would point that out. And, the union would certainly have those numbers. Since they are in possession of that information, if they are choosing not to make it public, then I expect that it isn't as dramatic as you suggest.
Beatsong wrote:
Really though, I just don't know. I am however happy to compare any genuinely comparable statistics.
Like I said, if union could show the $76k was grossly distorted, then they would. It would make their position much more sympathetic to many, many people.
Beatsong wrote:
The fact remains, though, that making over $75k per year puts one in the top 10% of income earners. Not too shabby, ay? Or are you now going to pretend that $75k is not a lot of money to earn?
It doesn't sound like a fortune to me, but then I'm comparing it by conversion to UK income and your cost of living is a lot lower than ours. More to the point though, I expect the majority of the teachers aren't earning that much.
Well, if it's an average salary with a normal distribution, I would expect a pretty even distribution. If, for some reason, a few high seniority teachers are raking in a million a year each, or something like that, then there will be a skewed system. Again, that would be something the union would really love to have out there, because it would make their position more sympathetic.
what are the odds, though, of teachers in Chicago earning more than $100,000 per year, even with, say 20 years experience? I mean -- $100,000 per year is in the top 5% of the entire population. So, if there are a bunch of teachers skewing the average, say, making $150,000 and up, then they'd be near the top 1%. Occupy Chicago ought be shitting on their cars in the teacher parking lots, if they're making that much.
Beatsong wrote:
Beatsong wrote:Wouldn't it be more meaningful to compare teachers' salaries with those in other jobs requiring similar qualifications, expected to work similar hours with similar levels of responsibility?
Yes!
And, that would show them to be even more overpaid, because other jobs requiring similar qualifications have to work a minim of 2050 hours a year, normally, and often more than that when they work overtime. Teachers put in far fewer hours in a year than that, because they get about 500 hours fewer just because they don't
work most of the summer and get huge numbers of vacation days that nobody else gets.
Well I have to state upfront that there's a potential for cultural miunderstanding here, as I'm going by what I know of teaching in the UK. So I'm happy to be corrected if anything I say doesn't apply - but going by previous comments in this thread by teachers in the USA, I suspect we're in a pretty similar ballpark.
Over here, state schools are in session for about 39 weeks of the year. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that we call that 40 to account for teachers doing a few days work either end of each term and assume they take the rest of the summer off (which is probably a massive underestimate and wrong assumption, but it will at least get us started).
My calculations say that to put in 2050 hours a year within 40 weeks, a teacher would have to be working 51.25 hours a week. I think I can say with some confidence that the majority of teachers work at least that many hours.
i would love to see the evidence, but in the US when working a job making $76k a year with the benefits they get, I think people are working 60+ normally. The public schools anywhere I've lived have empty parking lots long before rush hour (when most others are returning home from work).
Beatsong wrote:
In the primary school where I currently work in a non-class-teaching role, for example, when I turn up just before class starts and sign the register, most of them are signed in from about 7.30 AM. And on the odd days I have to stay late, most of them are still there at 5 - 5.30. That's a 9 and a half to ten hour day right there,
Big deal -- take out an hour for lunch and a 9 hour day is a normal day. That's an 8 hour day. We all work from 8 to 5, with an hour for lunch, or something like that. That's minimum, for what secretaries making $40,000 a year work.
Beatsong wrote:
or say 9 hours if you allow for lunch (I don't know if that's included in your 2050 hours).
definitely not included.
Beatsong wrote:
THEN they have to take work home several times a week and often on weekends, which would get their total hours well above your figure. Then there's the fact that standing in front of a large group of challenging teenagers most of the day and trying to hold their behaviour and concentration together while meeing very exacting government targets is an incredibly stressful and emotionally draining job - just ask anyone who has done teaching and something else. And the intensity of focus and challenge of a job is normally taken into account when deciding how well people deserve to be renumerated for it per hour.
Well, that would seem to make it reasonable to pay them a decent wage, which they get, plus really good benefits, and job security (most people in the US can be fired if their boss doesn't like their attitude or something -- teachers have "just cause" employment and recourse to appeal discipline) -- all that is worth something.
Beatsong wrote:
Rough figures, and as I say they may well be different for this case. Not that different by the sound of things though, and I've been pretty careful to err on the side of generosity. I think the reality is that you just have no idea how hard teachers work. You look at the long summer break and that's all you see. But really that's just the one perk to having a job that is fucking ball-breaking night and day the rest of the time.
I know quite a bit. Don't assume I'm unfamiliar with teachers and schools. I'm quite familiar with them.
Everyone who gets paid good money works ball-breaking work. You don't get paid in the top 10% or 15% or even 20% of the population for doing an easy job.
Beatsong wrote:
But, let's run that analysis. Give me your idea of a job with similar qualifications, expecting similar hours, and with similar levels of responsibility.
Tricky - there are so many variables to any job. I'll think about it...
Very tricky.