Confessions of one sahm
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Confessions of one sahm
| Fri, 04-03-2009 - 1:58pm |
I've been thinking about this *debate* lately, and I think that many of my
| Fri, 04-03-2009 - 1:58pm |
I've been thinking about this *debate* lately, and I think that many of my
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Why hide your light under a bushel of bears, I ask you?
Why hide your light under a bushel of bears, I ask you?
Do you work for schools of primary and secondary education?
As I've
You can think how you like. I'm just posting my original thoughts based on what people actually wrote, rather than on your interpretation.
Hey, we have a technology directory with very small budget, cut again this year. There are many very talented tech workers in my town who offer time, expertise and equipment to make up for the shortfall in the school tech budget and the school system is much richer for it.
I don't have to be a teacher at all to know that it is not reasonable to *expect* people of any profession to routinely remain at work after their shift is over and they are off-duty/off-call. Heck, even physicians have off-call hours. I don't know what's wrong with sending an email and getting a reply from the teacher once the teacher is back on duty.
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If it happens once or twice, that's an inconvenience. When it's happening every day and people like you believe that it is part of the teacher's job function, that's a problem.
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Why hide your light under a bushel of bears, I ask you?
Why hide your light under a bushel of bears, I ask you?
i'm not good with analogies but i was thinking of it more along the lines of,a doctor who doesn't offer advice for that headache over the phone v a doctor who will offer remedies over the phone for it.
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