
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 8:21 am
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 8:34 am
dedja wrote:Yes I suspect you're right about the high fives.
Funny how quick unionists are to call strike action when they know that their members will be docked pay whilst their own pay is safe and secure during a strike.
by Ian » Sun Feb 14, 2010 9:26 am
LoudEagleHooligan wrote:I know plenty of Plumbers, Sparkies & Chippies (4 yr TAFE course NOT Uni) that are making s***loads more than your so called $80K for "baby sitting"
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 9:49 am
Mic wrote:Regarding the comments that the Union has stuffed this up, how exactly? What should they have done instead?
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 9:58 am
Mic wrote:dedja wrote:Yes I suspect you're right about the high fives.
Funny how quick unionists are to call strike action when they know that their members will be docked pay whilst their own pay is safe and secure during a strike.
No AEU member is forced to strike. The way it works is that if there is a majority of votes from sub-branches (union members of a school) for the strike to occur on the date proposed by the Union, only then will it take place. Then union members choose whether they themselves want to strike.
It's not like the Union just decides all members will strike and then they are forced to do so.
Plus all AEU unionists are ex-teachers, many who have family members who are teachers. To suggest they don't care about teachers losing some of their wage is ridiculous.
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 10:34 am
dedja wrote:Mic wrote:Regarding the comments that the Union has stuffed this up, how exactly? What should they have done instead?
Start with a more realistic claim and stop being so billigerent at the start of the negotiations, stop playing media games to cloud a wages claim with other classroom conditions, stop alienating parents by conducting rolling strikes (which were later deemed illegal), stop comparing SA wages to other states when clearly there is cost of living difference, stop claiming that teachers will cross the border into other states in droves when clearly this is ridiculous, accept the decision of the arbitration commission ... all that would be a good start.
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 10:41 am
dedja wrote:Mic wrote:dedja wrote:Yes I suspect you're right about the high fives.
Funny how quick unionists are to call strike action when they know that their members will be docked pay whilst their own pay is safe and secure during a strike.
No AEU member is forced to strike. The way it works is that if there is a majority of votes from sub-branches (union members of a school) for the strike to occur on the date proposed by the Union, only then will it take place. Then union members choose whether they themselves want to strike.
It's not like the Union just decides all members will strike and then they are forced to do so.
Plus all AEU unionists are ex-teachers, many who have family members who are teachers. To suggest they don't care about teachers losing some of their wage is ridiculous.
Yes, very true ... but you can't tell me there isn't pressure to conform?
Even those that do turn up tend to not conduct normal classroom activities on the day so it ends up being a protest anyway. There is no coincidence that unions are suffering that fate of the dinosaur when their tactics haven't changed for many, many years.
Maybe the school that my kids go to isn't representative of others ... maybe my sister with 35 years teaching experience doesn't know what she's talking about ... maybe the principal at my kids school is clueless. That's all quite possbile but I highly doubt it.
by FlyingHigh » Sun Feb 14, 2010 10:57 am
Ian wrote:LoudEagleHooligan wrote:I know plenty of Plumbers, Sparkies & Chippies (4 yr TAFE course NOT Uni) that are making s***loads more than your so called $80K for "baby sitting"
How many hours are those tradies putting in to earn more than a teacher?
How many thousands of dollars do they have to outlay and then try and get a return on for tools, equipement and vehicles?
I work in a role where you have to be a tradesperson first, then they expect 5-10 years experience, then to earn the same as a first year teacher you have to have completed a cert. IV. The government gave us a rise as well 2.5% a year for 3 years, 1/2 what you lot got, don't think you are hard done by compared to trades or a lot of other occupations.
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 11:04 am
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 11:27 am
dedja wrote:They have now accepted the arbitration commission determination but in the early negotiation they disregarded recommendations to continue to negotiate and not strike. They only stopped the rolling strikes when threatened with legal action.
Let me clarify that I think teaching can be a very tough gig and the expectations now are far greater than in the past.
As in all professions, there is a combination of outstanding, very good, good, average and below par performances. The principal at my girls primary school is an absolute legend and he would put in 10-12 hour days doing everything from running the strategy and budget to putting out and taking in the bins at the start and end of the day. In my opinion he is grossly underpaid. The reason he does this is that he has a co-principal (who is really his deputy) who doesn't put in anywhere near as much as him, and the fact he is so passionate about the teaching standards and the school.
There other thing that is quite unfair is the lack of stability and continuity for many teachers who have to move regularly between schools, sometimes with little notice.
Not withstanding all that teachers do have unique conditions and some of them really do get it easy. Yes, teachers do put in more hours sometimes for such activities such as preparing for lessons, doing marking, co-ordinating sports or other extra-curricular activities, but they sometimes only have to be there from 8:30am-4:00pm, have 12 weeks leave, and student free days. There is no way known that the vast majority of teachers perform 8 weeks of extra work each year to compensate for their generous leave.
There are many, many other professions where people do more than their contracted hours so teachers using this to justify their leave doesn't wash.
Also, there seems to be great resistance to be tranparent in measuring teacher's performance. There are now 9 steps and the first 8 are automatic and every teacher will achieve these without performance reviews but just turning up. This is not the modern way that businesses (public and private) incent their employees. The pay for performance can be managed very easily with indivudal KPIs and performance measures negotiated between the teacher and the principal ... this does not infer that performance is linked to NAPLAN scores or gross student results, but by measuring curriculum development, relative student performance, issues management, etc. This is what is now acceptable in the workplace, including most if not all other State Government employees.
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 11:56 am
Mic wrote:There is certainly no easy way of measuring a teacher's performance, the role for a teacher is far too complicated (especially when that role keeps expanding). I don't know how you could measure it. I also don't know who would do the measuring - Principals, DPs, APs are too busy already. Politicians in this country have proposed this idea in the past, none have have been able to explain how it would be done.
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:25 pm
dedja wrote:Mic wrote:There is certainly no easy way of measuring a teacher's performance, the role for a teacher is far too complicated (especially when that role keeps expanding). I don't know how you could measure it. I also don't know who would do the measuring - Principals, DPs, APs are too busy already. Politicians in this country have proposed this idea in the past, none have have been able to explain how it would be done.
I think you'll find there is ... every profession has to work under the governance of strategic and operational planning. There are set goals and outcomes that the organisation is trying to achieve. The Education Department will set the strategic goals and the Principal will set operational goals in line with departmental strategy. Under this framework, it is very easy to determine KPIs and agree to measures. The KPIs and measures would be individually tailored for each teacher, and measured by the Principal and/or Deputies. Everyone else seems to be able to manage it! What makes education so unique in this regard?
So you are suggesting is that it's all too hard and can't be done. If so, how do we currently ensure consistency in curriculm, school virtues & values, etc? Are there no targets being set by the teacher in his/her role in the classroom? The Principals and Deputies don't have a say in all this?
Or it currently just a free for all? I'm sorry, I just can't buy that argument.
May I politely suggest that this a public service legacy issue and resistance from a union that has fallen behind modern times.
Again for context, I have spend 2 stints working for the State Government. The first was 8 years as a public servant on enterprise bargaining (under the Public Service Management Act), and the second was 3 years on a performance based contract with yearly performance reviews.
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:30 pm
by RustyCage » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:40 pm
dedja wrote:OK, all good stuff, but would you personally like to see a perfomance based component in addition to your salary to reward achievement?
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:44 pm
dedja wrote:OK, all good stuff, but would you personally like to see a perfomance based component in addition to your salary to reward achievement?
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:56 pm
pafc1870 wrote:Also for non teachers out there, what is you view on the new Myschool website?
by FlyingHigh » Sun Feb 14, 2010 1:01 pm
Mic wrote:dedja wrote:OK, all good stuff, but would you personally like to see a perfomance based component in addition to your salary to reward achievement?
Even though I believe I would do pretty good with a system like that, no.
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 1:04 pm
pafc1870 wrote:Thats all good to say, but exactly how would you determine a teachers performance? What factors would you consider, and as importantly, what factors would you disregard?
And in regard to the strikes, everyone I know who didnt want to strike was forced to do so by the school being closed down for each of the strikes.
Also for non teachers out there, what is you view on the new Myschool website?
by dedja » Sun Feb 14, 2010 1:08 pm
FlyingHigh wrote:Mic wrote:dedja wrote:OK, all good stuff, but would you personally like to see a perfomance based component in addition to your salary to reward achievement?
Even though I believe I would do pretty good with a system like that, no.
Pretty well??
by Mic » Sun Feb 14, 2010 1:13 pm
dedja wrote:FlyingHigh wrote:Mic wrote:dedja wrote:OK, all good stuff, but would you personally like to see a perfomance based component in addition to your salary to reward achievement?
Even though I believe I would do pretty good with a system like that, no.
Pretty well??
LOL
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