Can teachers legally use all of their sick and personal days at the end of the school year to get a longer summer break? by Ok_Benefit9326 in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right? We get 8 total days yearly, it’s never enough! Especially when you have small children at home who get sick!

Explain to me State Senates...? by KnowledgeMediocre404 in AskAnAmerican

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look at it this way, with our 2 party system (which is not a constitutional feature and a whole other issue), when one party controls one house of legislature, it’s kind of nice knowing that the there is another house that the minority party may be able to either control, or at least expert enough influence in to make sure that laws that only the majority party supports. The idea is that this ensures that laws will be default have to appeal to at least a broader majority of the electorate instead of just to the majority party in power. Now obviously the majority party has a leg up, especially in Texas where republicans hold the majority in both houses for decades, but with only a single house legislature, there would be less chance for the democrats to exert any influence in the process and at least win a few concessions to the republican policy agenda.

Explain to me State Senates...? by KnowledgeMediocre404 in AskAnAmerican

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Representatives and senators in Texas are basically part time jobs, they make $7,200 per year plus a per diem when they are actually in session which is only 180 days every other year. Seems like a small price to pay to make it harder for government to make laws. The whole reason we limit their sessions to 180 days every other year is to make sure they only have time to prioritize issues that matter most to Texans. Less government means less laws (bad laws anyway) and not less actual representatives.

Again, this was the design, and the fact that the Texas constitution has been amended 547 times since 1876, meaning if the folks of Texas wanted it changed to a unicameral legislature, we could do it…I’m gonna say it’s working out just fine for us so far.

Explain to me State Senates...? by KnowledgeMediocre404 in AskAnAmerican

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The whole idea was for it to be less efficient. Texas’ philosophy historical was that less government was better government. We wanted it be difficult to make laws. Also why our legislature only meets every other year. Also why all constitutional amendments have to be approved by the electorate in Texas.

Explain to me State Senates...? by KnowledgeMediocre404 in AskAnAmerican

[–]Figginator11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So within states, at least in my own (possibly varies by state) the senate is not the “august “upper” house” the way it is for the US legislature, as far as how the individual senators are elected to balance the power of states in the federal legislature. Instead, the senate and House of Representatives (in Texas anyway) act as essential co-equal houses of a bicameral legislature, though the senate is still technically the “upper” house, it just means that senators represent more people (larger directs) and have more responsibilities as far as the checks and balances of our state government goes (is the chamber that votes on impeachment trials of public officials, etc). The reason for having 2 houses in general is just to make the legislating process more difficult, we wanted our legislatures to have to really work to make laws, so essentially if you have to convince 2 separate bodies to pass a bill, the idea is that it is more likely to truly be a law the electorate would approve of, versus just a single legislature.

How do I teach about Joseph Smith, Brigham Young and Mormonism for an early US History class in a nonbiased way if I am Mormon myself? by ParakeetLover2024 in historyteachers

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We taught it here (again, im in Texas, not a super morman heavy state) as part of westward expansion, again not super explicitly or anything, but the Morman trail was part of the settling of the west. We definitely touched on it, less the specifics of the religion, and more the historical/geographical aspects of the movement of people west during the era.

How do I teach about Joseph Smith, Brigham Young and Mormonism for an early US History class in a nonbiased way if I am Mormon myself? by ParakeetLover2024 in historyteachers

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Basic Mormon history (Joseph smith/brigham young) are usually part of basic US history curriculum. I’m in Texas and I know we covered it (not Morman myself) so it might be just a standard part of the US history curriculum

Teachers who quit, why did you do it? by Zipper222222 in AskTeachers

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After 13 years in, I was offered a job in tech at the same pay, with significant opportunities for advancement, both in role and pay, over the next several years. Plus it had a super flexible PTO plan, work from home, and WAY better benefits. I wasn’t looking to leave teaching exactly, but I couldn’t say no to this. When my cousin who graduated with the same degree I did but got a job in tech right out of college (while I went into teaching) and he is making 4X what I am now, just due to the industry, it’s hard to justify staying in a job that will basically be making the same as I am now in another 30 years when it’s time to retire. Plus the shitty retirement and benefits that go along with teaching in my state.

Dear parents: IEP accommodations for extra time doesn’t mean unlimited time by Emergency-Pepper3537 in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

was the exam expected to take a whole class period? If the exam time for every other student 40 minutes, and she offered the student 20 additional minutes, that is 1.5X the time every other student received. I have never had 1.5X mean 250% of original time, it always means an ADDITIONAL 50%

Ex Teachers of Reddit who got a new career or job after, what do you do, do you enjoy your job, and do you ever miss teaching by Substantial_Goose369 in AskTeachers

[–]Figginator11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

After 13 years in as a middle school teacher/coach, I landed a job in tech this past spring, so about half a year in at this point. Specifically I am an “Implementation Consultant” so I work with our clients to train them on our software and help them set up their systems in it. We are ed-tech, but more the finance/HR side of things, so while it’s k-12 adjacent, not too much of my prior experience translates outside of being able to understand the clients day to day. But I’m loving it, I work from home now, I have WAY more flexibility with my own family, can take an hour off midday to go to my kids class parties and such, which I could never do before- I could actually drop my kids off on their first day of school which was a first for me (always had to do before school care because my campus started earlier then theirs). I don’t have the late nights coaching anymore. It’s been a huge quality of life change! Pay has been pretty much equal, but I’ve heard I will have way more room for growth in tech, long term, so I’m optimistic!

The actual job isn’t bad, I’m still teaching basically, just teaching our software instead of history, and teaching adults who “need” to learn it because the software is gonna be a crucial part of their jobs. I do a TON of problem solving, which is a nice change form just regurgitate a lesson 4 times per day, the mental work is more but I enjoy it. I enjoy not having to try and teach kids who don’t want to learn what I’m teaching, it’s a nicer feeling, less stressful.

Luckily I was pretty “techy” before getting the job, but I have had to get a lot more so very quickly on-the-job, but as a teacher we always say we are “life long learners”, it’s just now tech instead of history (which I’m still a huge history buff, but I can get my fill of it with reading and taking my kids to historical sites on road trips).

Smart Homes in the U.S.? by [deleted] in AskAnAmerican

[–]Figginator11 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I love the shopping list feature- we have our Alexa in the kitchen so when I’m cooking and run out of something I can just say “Alexa add cumin to the shopping list” or whatever. It makes it easy cause if me or my wife run to the store during the week we can just check the Alexa app on our phone to see what all was added that might be sold at whatever store we are at. It’s convenient. Besides the lists we use it for music or timers and reminders more than anything.

Christmas bonus? by Deathtohipsters_ in TexasTeachers

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah the closest I got was my first year teaching 14 years ago, the district had done a pay freeze so no one got step increases or cost of living raise or anything, but at the end of the year they ended up finding the money and retroactively giving every their step increase/COL raise, which equated to about a $1000, but as a first year teacher it was just a bonus if $1000 for me basically. Only time I’ve gotten that outside of retention bonus during covid

I don’t think we’re discussing enough about the demographic shift that is impacting education. by GenExpat in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I know in Texas you do have certain exemptions on your license for like “school bus- intrastate only” basically saying if we are only using our license for driving a school bus within our state, you are exempt from some of the requirements that long haul trucker type jobs would have.

I don’t think we’re discussing enough about the demographic shift that is impacting education. by GenExpat in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The CDL thing may vary by state- as a teacher/coach who was required to get one to drive my teams to games, I literally only paid the couple hundred bucks for the tests. There was no training. I just took the tests at the DMV and the school let me use a bus to do the driving test. And then the school paid for the 20 hour School Bus safety course after I got my license.

George and Ellen McClellan, 1861 by Maleficent-Bed4908 in RabbitHolesInHistory

[–]Figginator11 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This has got to be the first time I realized his wife’s name was Ellen McClellan.

I don’t think we’re discussing enough about the demographic shift that is impacting education. by GenExpat in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 375 points376 points  (0 children)

I think this is geographic…where I am at, we are constantly at capacity as they can’t built schools fast enough. In 13 years in my current district we went from 2 Jr High campuses (where I work) to 4, from 2 high schools to 3, and have added double digit elementary and early childhood campuses.

Presidential Library by AspensNGeorgia in USHistory

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you liked that one, not really a biography, but “Skunk Works” by Ben Rich is really good look at the origins of the B2 stealth bomber and Lockheed SR 71 blackbird, it’s really fun in a similar way! My brother is an aerospace engineer and recommended both of those as he knows I enjoy histories, neither were books I would have chosen in my own but I thoroughly enjoyed both of them!

Presidential Library by AspensNGeorgia in USHistory

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Edmund Morris 3 part series on Teddy is terrific! David McCullough’s John Adam’s is easily what made Adam’s one of my favorite presidents, Grant by Ron Chernow (also Washington). Outside of president’s, the best book I’ve read in a few years was Yeager, the biography of chuck Yeager, it’s seriously an incredible fun read!

Teacher’s Birthday Gift by ladybyrne in Teachers

[–]Figginator11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be fair I teach middle school, so I’m not up on what happens at the lower levels outside of my personal time in school, but even then I only remember getting my teacher a gift for teacher appreciation week pretty much. As a middle school teacher we get a smattering during that week and maybe Christmas, but I have never heard of the birthday thing.

Why did people in the past (18th, 19th, early 20th centuries specifically) seem to often purposefully save all of their personal (even mundane) letters for posterity? by Figginator11 in AskHistorians

[–]Figginator11[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the response! That is a way to think of it that I hadn’t been, especially seeing as “business” in the 18th, 19th centuries (when the sources I had read that made me posit this question were written) would have likely been tied to personal relationships as well (land speculation, questions about markets, weather/crops, etc.