Anyone who loves their profession are faithful to their duty...
2007-02-02 20:04:16
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answer #1
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answered by @rrsu 4
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The way I am feeling your question you seem to have issues with teachers. So lets see...
Teachers are not paid for the amount of education they need to acquire and maintain their licences. Remember my degree costs the same as any other college degree and to add insult to injury people feel teachers do not have families, bills, and financial responsibilities and to LOW salaries we get are too high.
We work long hours our day is seldom over after the kids are dismissed. I know I recently bought a student supplies because her parents chose not to. That was only the tip of the iceberg So now you ask me are teachers still faithful to their duty...
YES, 99% of the teachers I know go above and beyond "duty" whatever that is.
2007-02-03 18:08:48
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answer #2
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answered by vegas mel 2
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Yes, of course, there are teachers who are faithful to their duty. But their number is low, which is an indication of the general degradation of moral values in our society.
2007-02-04 03:53:23
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answer #3
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answered by seema 3
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Nope, we all suck. Hardcore. None of us make any effort to do what's right and to educate the children in our class. We're all total losers.
Come on. What kind of a question is that? Give YOUR reasons for why you think modern teachers suck, and then go spend a day in a classroom and see if you're right.
2007-02-03 17:37:11
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answer #4
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answered by elizabeth_ashley44 7
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All you have to do is watch all the nightly news progams and know the answer to that question.... teachers sleeping with students... funding parties... schools allowing older sex offenders that look younger to enroll themselves into a middle school with fake papers (aren't they qualified to be teaching... sarcasm)... bullies allowed to bully because idiot teachers who play favortism (probably because some regressed high-school memory of wanting to be popular and liked)... if all this isn't enough, look back to your own memories... I'm sure you'll find plenty of painfull, unneceserry events that the crumbling public school system etched into your mind... I know I wasn't popular in school, and I didn't really believe that was what we all were there for... but students and faculty both played the popularity game at expense of those less willing of us wanting to step on someone just for the sake of saying I'm above you... The only "socialization" that student learn in public school system is that it is ok to hurt and manipulate others in an effort to be more popular, and the actual truth in life doesn't matter as long as you can convense the majority of the people otherwise... I FOR ONE REFUSE TO PUT MY CHILDREN THROUGH THAT TYPE OF "LEARNING" ..... I HOMESCHOOL MY CHILDREN. My oldest was in his second year of kindergarten... maybe heading towards his third, and my second child was in a special preschool for little ones that are behind a little... Both boys are ADHD, and at this time they were not diagnosed, and my second may be autistic. The special preschool told him not to stick anything smaller than his elbow in his ear (I guess they were trying to be cute or something, playing on words)... well, with a normal child, let alone one with dissabilities, you don't play on words at that age.... lets just say I had an ER visit with a pop-corn curnel in his ear.. (not to mention the earaser he bit in half and stuck up his nose a couple months earlier at the school)... by this time I was just mad at the way the public school system does things. I decided I would homeschool my children.... a few months shy of a year later I have my eldest caught up to a second grade level, and my second child, that the special preschool couldn't teach his colors to or even get him to color in lines at all, He now can recognize his whole alphabet, numbers to 15, and can verbally spell a variety of small words, and is starting to a budding artist with his coloring skills.... I only have minimal credit hours of collage, and can do sooooo much better that people that were trained for teaching, with years of experience.... oh, and something really strange, that kindergarten teacher of my oldest was my second and fourth grade teacher when I was in elementary school.... she begged me not to choose to homeschool him but I think it was one of the best decisions I have ever made. I feel so accomplished to be teaching them and suceeding so well.... oh, also, I have heard rumers that seem to have a lot of basis about a lot of teachers in the area seem to need random drug testing.... how can these people teach our children when they themselves cannot avoid social ills....
2007-02-04 04:44:31
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answer #5
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answered by Country 4
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I'm sure there will be lot of teachers who are committed to their job.
But, there are black sheep in every community...
You can't put all eggs in the same basket.
You cannot paint all the teachers bad.
2007-02-03 04:06:29
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answer #6
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answered by Batigol 2
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Most teachers are devoted. However you should test a new teacher before believing blindly in him.
2007-02-03 11:13:58
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answer #7
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answered by Ajay D 6
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Yes ,very much so.Teachers work hard to teach the community of the student population.
2007-02-03 14:56:15
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answer #8
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answered by Lindsay Jane 6
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No.They are'nt faithful.They aren't understanding their duties properly.For me teachers proffession is one which can create a revolution in this world.But they're thinking that completing the syllabus,punishing hardly are their jobs.But we've to admit the fact that we're having non interested teachers.only a small proportion of teachers have selected this proffession out of their own interest.Majority of the teachers we have today are who missed their dreams becoming a doctor,engineer or something else.Any job handled without interest will not yield good result.......
2007-02-03 04:25:10
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answer #9
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answered by hari 1
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You need to explain what YOU think their duty is.
2007-02-03 04:04:41
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answer #10
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answered by Superdog 7
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