Halloween
Day 31 – October 31 – Halloween
Weather – Very
warm and muggy – 85f
Anyway, after an hour or so I had to
meet Katie and Lucy at one of Katie’s friends houses in downtown Deland. The plan
was to trick or treat around their neighbourhood and then go back to hang out.
Most of Katie’s friends here have girls around the same age – so Lucy was part
of a troop of little girls all dressed up, running frantically from house to
house, filling their buckets with sweets, while the parents strolled along with
beers in hand. Not a bad way to spend an evening. Then it was back to one of
Katie’s friend’s house, where the children engaged in what could only be
described as some sort of financial derivatives market, complete with exchange
floor – where they swapped and traded various candies. The market for lollipops
was pretty strong, but there were highs and lows, and some quite shrewd trading
strategies. Judging by Lucy’s bucket – she traded pretty well. It was cool to
see all the kids hanging out and having fun, and it was great for Katie to
spend time with her friends.
I spent a bit of time chatting with one of the
husbands, who is an 11th Grade American History teacher. Fascinating
to listen to the differences and similarities between the two educations systems.
Apparently graduate teachers here have recently received a pay rise to $47k USD
which at the average exchange rate of 75c AUD to the USD is about 10KAUD less
than our graduate teachers, although at the current crappy exchange rate it’s
only a little less, so that's good to hear. However, the disappointing thing is that experienced
teachers didn’t receive the pay increase and are now not paid much more than
graduates. It was interesting to hear about how he felt there is a lack of
support for both schools and teacher’s here in Florida – at least from his perspective.
While at times I feel like teachers back home are undervalued, our pay rates do
reflect our level of expertise and our education system as a whole is reasonably
funded and supported. Given that the class sizes here we much larger – he was
telling me about classes of 35 students – I think we have it a lot better and a
lot easier back home.
Sorry for the lack of photos here - Katie took the best ones and I need to get her to upload them or do another blog post.




Andrew, in your comparison of the teachers you forgot to mention who gets the most holidays (vacation?). I enjoyed the para on how or how not to remove the urine smell from a hire car.
ReplyDeleteHolidays are similar - although they get them all in Summer here - 16 weeks in total. Back home we get 2 and bit at Easter, 2 in winter, 2 in spring and 6 in summer, plus 1 week work public holidays outside of breaks. So 13. Plus you have to consider 1.3 weeks long service, 15 days of personal leave. At private schools you generally get an extra week or 2 for summer and 1 in the year. So it's hard to compare exactly. I'd say USA a little in front for basic vacation breaks for teachers in state schools, but very behind in conditions and pay. You are welcome about the guide to removing wee smell - you never know when you might need that information. You can learn from my failure...
DeleteI should say - most in summer.
DeleteOh well, you could always run, or in QF's case, stuff up an airline. Joyce has been paid almost $80 million over the past 10 years
ReplyDeleteOh yeah - pay is not an indication of quality. But I'm happy with where I'm at. I don't think I could teach in Florida though - at least not in public schools, based on what it's like here. Big classes, no support, pay is too low and there seems to be a political agenda to defund and undermine schools and education. Not ideal.
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