There is respect, and then there's what I'll call pseudo-respect.
An example of the latter would be the "respect" you give your doctor when you get his bill; or the "respect" you demonstrate whenever you read or hear of the lawyer that just won his client a 2 1/2 million dollar settlement for the clients pain and suffering due to stubbing his toe on a curb stone. As long as teachers believe their "professional" status depends on the $$$ they feel there efforts are worth, and publicly bemoan the fact that they have not reached that artificial $$$ status, they will only receive pseudo-respect from the general public.
Respect, true respect for an individual at any level or status, comes from honest service to mankind and exceptional job performance in the arena of work.
Finally, If you wish to achieve greater respect in the teaching profession, drop the words professional, or professionalism from your vocabulary. It smacks of snobbishness to outsiders.
2007-03-23 17:43:51
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answer #1
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answered by caesar 3
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IF society respected teachers, their assistants and /or aides then we wouldn't have the problems we do in the schools today. Children come to school filled with anger, frustration and hurt every day and teachers must not only address but see beyond all that and still manage to create a safe, happy learning environment for them. Respect is more than dwindling, it is counterclockwise in the basin.
Yes, people are always paying homage to a great teacher and we have many "Teacher of the Week(month, year etc..)incentives but really there is an underlying tone that if the teacher does something you don't like then you can tell them off or even hurt them. PLUS we have all the Mary Kay Latourrno's in the profession making us look bad. Many do it for the love of the children, certainly not the immediate results or the $$.
2007-03-23 01:01:47
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answer #2
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answered by little lu-lu 6
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Well, I think the society does give the right place to teachers. The payment is very low in many countries. It is not seen as an important career. Has anyone considered what would happen without teachers? Who would teach the great professionals in other areas?
2007-03-26 16:40:28
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Humanity has long past via 4 literary levels: Spoken phrase Oral Tradition (memorized spoken phrase, mainly set to song) Written phrase Video generation Poetry has by no means been the equal for the reason that the appearance of PRINT. Now with print at the approach out, the oral culture is being misplaced altogether. Spoken phrase (truth) has reared it is unsightly head with all of it is loss of musicality and prosaic repetitiveness. Sorry however Poetry is a dinosaur in an age while the mammals are loss of life.
2016-09-05 12:53:46
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answer #4
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answered by piekarski 4
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I believe our role in society has been ever so slightly elevated in the past two decades. Certainly more attention has been directed toward us with the advent of NCLB. As far as salary goes- as long as we are reliant on taxpayer dollars, then it will never be commensurate with the private sector.
2007-03-23 00:22:33
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answer #5
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answered by bandit 6
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I don't think they do. If they did, we would make more $$. We are given more responsibility (in the states, anyway, with the No Child Left Behind Act) but not paid more.
2007-03-23 00:07:20
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answer #6
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answered by bibliophile31 6
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