Rare Work and Strike!

Have been a bit slack with updating my blog lately, mainly because nothing has really been happening. I didn’t work last week but the week before that I did two days in the same grade three class. They were a fairly nice class, had a few little challengers but nothing too bad. I had a different mother each morning in the room to help which was nice. My first day I walked into the room and found a very neat teachers desk with absolutely no planning on it! I asked the other grade three teacher who came in and looked around with me, we asked another teacher who didn’t know anything about it and then rang the office who couldn’t help. Eventually (just as the bell rang) the teacher who I was replacing partner came in and gave me the two days plans. Was happy to have it but by this time the bell had gone and all the children are sitting there looking at me while I am quickly trying to read and decode the planning and figure out what needs to be done and where things are. The second day I thought I might have a little free time because the children had PE, Music and Dance lessons and since I have taught at the school and had children go to other lessons and been allowed to have the free time I assumed that was going to be the case, it wasn’t! First I was sent to the library to cover books, something I have never done before and took me half an hour just to do three but I kind of enjoyed the peace. Then I was sent to another grade three class (that I have taught before, were so much better behaved this time!) to watch them read and then I read a book to them. And then after that was sent (felt like I was the parcel in a game of ‘pass the teacher’) to another grade three class where I watched them do a find-a-word, I started doing it myself but those 7/8 year olds are quick at them and beat me to finishing! So then I did good old show and tell with them and the bell rang and so ended my time there.

Just heard on the news today that next Tuesday state teachers are striking because they want better pay! Try being a supply teacher who if she is lucky gets two days work a fortnight and then complain about lack of pay!!! I don’t even get the choice to strike and have my voice heard – I strike I don’t get paid; they strike and still get paid! I am a union member, I am a fully qualified teacher but it feels like I don’t have any rights because the education department won’t/hasn’t given me permanency or a full time job! I am merely an ‘on call casual’ to them, hardly seems fair! But anyway since they are striking I am going to guess that I will get work that day to cover for them. Will be interesting to see what (if anything) happens from it all.
Miss Snix.

3 comments:

Maestro said...

Wow.... two years ago they were talking strike in my district. Now everyone is just happy to have a job (That's how it is in California right now.)

Sharon said...

Good luck with the crowd control.

Can I give you a piece of advice as a former supply teacher? Mensa quiz books. Or anything like them. Logic puzzles (especially if they can be tied to maths or language learning) are a godsend.

Write a puzzle on the board, or say it out-loud to the class/es and let them try to nut it out. Works better with older primary kids and high school students, but it's saved my bacon countless times when I didn't have enough planned work left by the teacher.

You can get a similar effect with younger grades with "easy" paper crafts (like making a paper hat and then decorating it). Just have something up your sleeve you can do at the drop of a hat with a piece of paper.

Also, "throwing words" and "the minister's cat" can keep a class occupied for up to ten minutes each. I probably wouldn't use them in the same lesson, though - that might get a bit dull.

KauaiMark said...

Subs here (Northern Calif)are not union. Schools were offering subs 250% over the standard daily rate to come in and teach.

Downside is when the strike ends. Teachers don't look to kindly on ANYONE crossing the lines.

But...a guy's gotta eat!