give over it was one out all out .
proper solidarity that .
Scousers of the world unite
Now we know both teams are ****e
EDIT
At least Everton put up some fight
give over it was one out all out .
proper solidarity that .
does she get paid for the lunch break ?
err no they don'tYes, everyone does.
What difference does that make?
no were only paid for hours worked .If you're on yearly salary, then yes you do.
well i got that info from Haslam hours ago but thanks anyway.Who's we?
I clearly stated my Mrs is a full time top of grade secondary school teacher.
So yes, she gets 'paid' for lunch breaks, as it all forms part of her salary.
err no they don't
I never was - see earlier post in reply to @haslam
well i got that info from Haslam hours ago but thanks anyway.
i asked because as a civil servant we were not paid for lunch breaks we had 37hr weeks which were hours worked so your time sheet would be something likeI've genuinely no idea what you're on about and what exactly it is you're trying to refute to be honest?
And @haslam has yet to say which countries teachers work fewer hours.
Given that it's seemingly factually incorrect that British teachers do.
I don't know either way tbf, but my own Mrs's hours of seven a day (which, again, is full time) seems quite low to me in the grand scheme of things.
And @haslam has yet to say which countries teachers work fewer hours.
Given that it's seemingly factually incorrect that British teachers do.
I don't know either way tbf, but my own Mrs's hours of seven a day (which, again, is full time) seems quite low to me in the grand scheme of things.
The hours are hard to pin down really, I can only really speak of myself. On site from 815 until 430 ish Monday to Friday but will have 30-40 mins of not working. Worth noting when teaching there aren't gaps for toilet breaks or cups of tea (unlike my previous jobs). The main difference for me is that I used to do a couple of hours each night on top of that and certainly did do 60+ hours each week in my first few years. I don't do over 50 now ever, I'm more efficient and I simply refuse.
I qualified as a solicitor in my 20s and found it very interesting that I did 10 hour days as a solicitor (with regular tea and toilet breaks and an hours lunch break when I used to go and explore Liverpool) and everyone used to assume it was really hard work and I must be tired from all the hours. I worked more hours a week as a trainee and new teacher (by easily 10+ hours per week) and most people I met assumed I left at 3pm and had long evenings of free time. Can only speak for myself though, maybe I'm doing it wrong!
No it's not you, I'm amazed you'd think it was. Literally every teacher I've ever known - even the **** ones or the jobsworths don't just work the directed hours. Near enough every teacher I know takes work home, they'll sit planning and prepping or marking late into the evenings. And at least one of their weekend days will be allocated to school work. It's like most public sector jobs which are under-resourced and under-staffed relying on the goodwill of those working within them to keep them running as best they can. Like saying GP's only do 40 hrs a week or Nurses 37, when the reality (and the demands of the job) is quite different. Carole Malone knows best though.
I agree about the work to rule thing you mentioned earlier. The only thing I'd say though is that teachers do the job and the extra hours because it's a vocation. If you strike it's one day of disruption. But, you do work to rule (and whilst I agree it would really highlight how impossible it would be for the whole educational system to function effectively) the damage it would do to kids' education would be longer lasting and more sustained. Having said that, if it's cutting the fat of all the pointless paperwork and data analysis spreadsheets, then yeh I'm all for that lol.
I managed in a call centre and I done all of that, well not marking but going through reports and my team stats. Just accepted it as part of my job, tbh. I imagine many professions do.2 questions:
a) She doesn't do any work outside those 7 hours? No prepping/marking/meetings/etc
b) Are her school looking for Maths teachers?