I used to agree, but having dated 2 teachers now... both secondary school teachers I can promise you that the work load is ridiculous. The problem is that unless the school is well off then most teachers will have no assistant, so all jobs have to be done by them. Actual classroom face to face teaching accounts for only about half the actual workload required.
Apart from lesson planning, you have performance and actions plans for EVERY child... you have to sort out problem with disruptive pupils, which can be a nightmare... calling parents, meeting parents... who are often as obnoxious as their spawn!
In an average day they were in at approx. 7.30- 8.00 am just so that they had time to get things sorted for 9am start of the day.... the school day for pupils ends at approx. 3.30 but for teachers its at least 6pm at the very earliest you can get out, as you need to set up tomorrows work, photocopy and mark and so on.... if you left early you would either HAVE to do it at home or in the morning.
Now don't get me wrong they do have more holidays but if my two ex's are any indication of the profession a lot of that time was spent producing next terms lesson plans, research and correlating guidelines to make sure you were not missing anything out. The lesson plans don't just pop up out of nowhere and in all but the very worst schools its something that seems to change year on year.
Living with a teacher I can assure you this is the reality of the situation. The amount of time and stress spent on dealing with abusive parents is another side that nobody seems to realise.
Her school has gone against the union and decided not to strike today for the sake of the children. However they are totally against the proposed government measures.
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