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Tag: public education

  • New York City Teachers Approve Nine-Year Labor Contract

    New York City teachers have voted and approved a nine-year labor contract on Tuesday. The contract states that teachers will be given back pay, and their salaries will be increased by 18 percent. However, questions regarding their health benefits are still left unanswered.

    About 90,000 votes were cast by union members, and out of those, 77 percent were said to have voted in favor of the contract. The negotiators reached a deal on May 1, almost five years after the labor dispute.

    Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers, said “The new agreement gives teachers and parents a larger voice in how their schools are run and how they can better serve their students.”

    Mayor Bill de Blasio said that education determines a child’s destiny, and the contract was sought in order to transform public education.

    Mulgrew also stated that he fought hard in order for the union members to accept the contract. Some of the members had problems with the deal, since the raises would be paid out over the years and not immediately. The deal also promised to lessen health care costs by as much as $1.3 billion, but members said that number can be achieved through other efficient means.

    The United Federation of Teachers only rejected a contract once, when the teachers were asked to take a two-year wage freeze. After a few changes to the contract, they ended up approving the deal.

    The majority of the members agreed with the new contract, since they say that it is the best that they can get. Others also agreed to the contract as a way to support de Blasio, as local residents see him as a friendlier mayor, compared to Bloomberg.

    Suzette Freedman, a third-grade teacher said, “The last mayor was not very pro-teacher and wasn’t interested in our well-being.

    After the results announcement, de Blasio said, “We are going to help good educators stay and grow in this profession, and usher reform that will lift up kids across the whole system.” He continued, “At the same time, we are securing unprecedented health care savings, which makes this a fiscally responsible contract that protects our budgets and our taxpayers.”

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  • Teachers Pay Teachers Allows Educators to Sell Lesson Plans Online

    Having trouble coming up with a lesson plan for your Language Arts class this semester? Wouldn’t it be nice if there was a website where you could purchase and download such materials at your leisure? Teachers Pay Teachers, a company devoted to helping educators fill in the proverbial gaps present in their current curriculum.

    After spending nearly four years in the New York City public school system, Paul Edelman founded Teachers Pay Teachers, a website that offers lesson plans in a wide variety of different subjects to educators around the world. For a small price, of course.

    “I had an insight that the materials teachers created night after night had monetary value, so I set out to create a marketplace called Teachers Pay Teachers,” Edelman explained to Mashable. “Teachers are now making a pretty significant supplemental income and creating higher quality materials.”

    Deanna Jump, a kindergarten teacher from Georgia, started using the service to sell her lesson plans to other education-oriented professionals. Since she began peddling her plans online, Jump has made an estimated $700,000, which is certainly a bit more money than most working teachers see in a decade. Jump also has an official Facebook page with nearly 12,000 followers, who are immediately alerted to any new plans she has for sale.

    Teachers Pay Teachers currently has 700,000 registers used, with 10,000 of those individuals listed as sellers. The price for such materials range from $5 to $10, though Edelman stated that the site also has quite a few plans available for free. Recently, the company launched an option that allows schools to purchase multiple plans for several teachers at once.

    Do you think this concept could work in SA? Would you pay for the use of a lesson plan, created by another teacher? http://t.co/0WGmZxtQ
    7 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    Teaching isn’t known to be a lucrative profession, but online marketplace Teachers Pay Teachers is changing that! http://t.co/zMkMtET3
    1 hour ago via Buffer · powered by @socialditto
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    Wow, K5 teacher makes 0k selling lesson plans online! http://t.co/jhmR4CSl
    22 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
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    I knew teachers were just in it for the money: Kindergarten Teacher Earns 0K Selling Lesson Plans Online http://t.co/MrMO9nzS
    2 days ago via bitly · powered by @socialditto
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