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When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
"thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
Calif Bill wrote:
"thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
"H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All Let them defend themselves. Tenure is not a union issue. If they lose the case, they also lose money. If they win, they get reimbursed. same way most of the rest of the jobs are handled. |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
Calif Bill wrote:
"H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All Let them defend themselves. Tenure is not a union issue. If they lose the case, they also lose money. If they win, they get reimbursed. same way most of the rest of the jobs are handled. You think teachers should face a school board's attorneys without representation? And you aren't the bloke who decides what is or what is not a union issue. Sorry,Bilious, but, as usual, you are wrong. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
"H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All Let them defend themselves. Tenure is not a union issue. If they lose the case, they also lose money. If they win, they get reimbursed. same way most of the rest of the jobs are handled. You think teachers should face a school board's attorneys without representation? And you aren't the bloke who decides what is or what is not a union issue. Sorry,Bilious, but, as usual, you are wrong. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All If you assume it is all union issues, then drive a stake through Tenure. |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
Calif Bill wrote:
"H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All Let them defend themselves. Tenure is not a union issue. If they lose the case, they also lose money. If they win, they get reimbursed. same way most of the rest of the jobs are handled. You think teachers should face a school board's attorneys without representation? And you aren't the bloke who decides what is or what is not a union issue. Sorry,Bilious, but, as usual, you are wrong. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All If you assume it is all union issues, then drive a stake through Tenure. Nonsense. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All |
When Bush 41 spoke to kids, Dims howled
"H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "H the K" wrote in message m... Calif Bill wrote: "thunder" wrote in message t... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 12:30:04 -0600, SteveB wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... On Tue, 08 Sep 2009 11:16:40 -0600, SteveB wrote: Personally, I think they should have let the kids have a day off, and have a closed door session with the teachers. And have one in a month and cut about 20% of the dead wood. But that's just me. I know a teacher who's near 30 years service who is retiring because he has to follow a syllabus on what to teach, which includes things that have nothing to do with the subject he is teaching. A loss. I have a son who just graduated college looking for a job, and who I think would make a good teacher. Lots of people who would make good teachers out there, and a lot of tenured POS's who need to be led away from the trough. If they cut the dead weight, believe me, there would be no shortage of applicants. Steve LOL, I haven't heard such a great argument *for* tenure in years. Tenure allows teachers to teach, without having to deal with BS like yours. I'm sorry, but we are talking about two different things. I am talking about teachers. You are talking about slugs who feed at the public trough. My, my, my. The concept of having my children taught by a teacher who doesn't have to deal with the BS of parents. Hmmmmmmmm. Wait, wait, I know the answer to this. Ah, yes, teaching by committee. Outstanding. GB Halsted is just one reason tenure for teachers was spread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._B._Halsted As our friend who is retired from the schools stated, there should be either tenure or unions, but not both. Uh...who do you think pays for the teacher's defense or even counsel in a tenure hearing? The school board? -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All Let them defend themselves. Tenure is not a union issue. If they lose the case, they also lose money. If they win, they get reimbursed. same way most of the rest of the jobs are handled. You think teachers should face a school board's attorneys without representation? And you aren't the bloke who decides what is or what is not a union issue. Sorry,Bilious, but, as usual, you are wrong. -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All If you assume it is all union issues, then drive a stake through Tenure. Nonsense. An another nonsensical reply. |
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