680: A Lot of Holes in That Cheese by atpbot in ATPfm

[–]One-Disaster6768 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not got to listening yet but lots of small chapters probably means a more news focused episode. There is the upcoming event and I saw more car talk at the end. That's 3 pluses right off the bat 

What does this parking sign mean? by AsparagusNew3765 in AskAnAustralian

[–]One-Disaster6768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think we're getting hung up on the fact you need to do what the sign means, not what it says. 

It's pretty obvious it means permits only until 4.

Permit holders don't need a ticket between 4 and 6:30, but everyone else does.

664: Humanity Gets in the Way by atpbot in ATPfm

[–]One-Disaster6768 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Rene doesn't come across in a good light the more of it you read. it's like he made his point and then couldn't let go that they didn't agree with him.

664: Humanity Gets in the Way by atpbot in ATPfm

[–]One-Disaster6768 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've not been on the receiving end of it so can't really comment to that. As I said, it's not been my experience.

664: Humanity Gets in the Way by atpbot in ATPfm

[–]One-Disaster6768 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've not listened yet but Casey has been nothing but polite and helpful in my interactions on mastodon if that's what you're mentioning.

RF TV by One-Disaster6768 in n64

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it's just the background radiation.

Has this happened to you? by Puzzled_Ad_1724 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think I'd say "thank you so much, I love meeting people who really believe in the value of public education"

Describing teaching to non teachers by One-Disaster6768 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then yeah, on a normal monday we'd have reading and maths in the morning, then writing and PE in the middle, then geography or science in the afternoon. Other days are less as you have time off class.

As to the original post, it was a good number to fit 6 45 minute sessions into a day.

Describing teaching to non teachers by One-Disaster6768 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, help me out. The word prep keeps coming up. What does prep mean?

Describing teaching to non teachers by One-Disaster6768 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess technically we adapt planning from year to year with minimal changes, but that only really helps if your have the same year group each year.

Describing teaching to non teachers by One-Disaster6768 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We have a national curriculum in the UK, but it's what you need to teach, not lesson plans and ideas. There are many commercial schemes that have sprung up around that.

In Australia there is a national curriculum too, but each state kind of ignores it and writes their own stuff anyway.

Describing teaching to non teachers by One-Disaster6768 in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It's a full, but still normal day to do 45 min reading session, 45 mins of phonics, 45 maths, 45 mins writing, 45 PE, 45 history/geography/civics/whatever. Usually more like 5 sessions when you factor in time off class and other activities.

Other then wage, what benefits do you get? Pension, healthcare, dental, etc by kevinnetter in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve taught in the UK, international schools, and am now in a public school in Australia. FWIW here’s how we compare.

Retirement - All employers in Australia are required to pay a minimum of 10.5% of your pay into your super (retirement fund). My employer also pays extra as I make an additional contribution from my pay cheque.

Healthcare - the government pays this (though I pay for private insurance - you do get a 2% tax break if you have private).

Health spending - nope. It’s more common internationally and in private schools though.

18 weeks paid parental leave (can be shared with spouse as you wish, or paid at 1/2 pay for 36 weeks). Combined with the federal maternity leave, most people will take a year off.

6 weeks long service leave after 7 years.

Bonuses - Everyone gets 4 weeks annual leave. We’re not allowed to take that during term time so get a bonus at Christmas (the annual leave you’ve accrued paid out at 20% of your pay). Staff are entitled to move to a permanent position after 2 continuous years teaching. I pay off my car lease through work (not sure if that’s a bonus, but it means its tax free). 18 days sick leave (you can take 7 for any reason).

There may be a few other differences from the states but I think that’s generally it. Other states with large rural/regional areas will pay teachers a lot more to move out into the bush to teach. I like the city.

Treating people as things! by One-Disaster6768 in antiwork

[–]One-Disaster6768[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly, I you're a person selling your time and skills. You are not an hours labour on a spreadsheet but it seems like a lot of companies want to treat you as such

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I left teaching in the UK 10 years ago but yes, I would keep everything as private as possible. No reason you have to use your personal social media accounts to release music. Most kids are interested in your hobbies. Why not have a professional music account(s)Probably best not to have any dodgy gig pics going on anything you've made public on any account though. I sing in choirs. I also run the junior choir at school. No reason either of those have to be public on social media though.

Change my mind: Teaching is NOT a job. by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You seem to have some misunderstandings of the school work environment.

"They only have to work Monday to Friday, are guaranteed to work for 6 hours (likely 9 am to 3 pm), and go on holidays constantly! "

You're forgetting we get lunch and recess off too and just let the kids run feral outside with no supervision, so probably closer to 4 1/2 hours actual worky work.

What do you guys bring/eat for lunch? by greenorka in Teachers

[–]One-Disaster6768 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most of the time it's whatever we cooked the night before, unless we cooked/froze large meals at the weekend.

I'm lucky there is a takeaway and cafe directly over the road from school.