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Bellevue Teachers Union: “We aren’t going back to work”
Comments
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TruthRaceBannon said:Its HARD to go back to work after 8 months of raging alcoholism
I know -
It just goes to show you that this locked down forced the people who aren't miserable and like to actually live their life were forced to join the miserable hermits who never had any intention of going outside to begin with. Now that things are starting to try and open up again, these faux "I can't wait until the lockdown is over" hacks are getting anxiety that people are going to start enjoying life and having fun again while they continue to stay at home and rot away with their overrated Netflix shows, cheap wine, and overpriced Uber Eats junk food.
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Because we all had teachers who no to half assed it, those that were good, those that made learning worse, and that many of the things we were taught provided little value than the ability to sit quietly for 50 minutes at a time.UWerentThereMan said: -
Teachers Union knows that when the Doors Open, the student counts won’t be anywhere near pre-Covid and that means Staffing Cuts.
That means for every student who found an alternative to full time in person return to school the district loses $11,500 -
Source?doogie said:Teachers Union knows that when the Doors Open, the student counts won’t be anywhere near pre-Covid and that means Staffing Cuts.
That means for every student who found an alternative to full time in person return to school the district loses $11,500 -
Washington's public schools serve over 1.1 million students, and the state is responsible for funding the public education of each of those students. Although there are variances across school districts and grade levels, the state spent an average of $11,500 per student in basic education funding in 2019.
https://www.k12.wa.us/policy-funding
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I can't validate the $11,500 but my wife does work in an admissions office for a local school here and they take every possible measure to prevent withdrawals as it financially makes a huge difference to them. When WA State offered an "online option" which was centralized and not tied to the school, they lost students and called each and every one of them to try to sway them back due to finances.
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more FTE=more moneyDoogieMcDoogerson said:I can't validate the $11,500 but my wife does work in an admissions office for a local school here and they take every possible measure to prevent withdrawals as it financially makes a huge difference to them. When WA State offered an "online option" which was centralized and not tied to the school, they lost students and called each and every one of them to try to sway them back due to finances.
Centralized teaching....like a call center?






