How many class periods per week do you have?
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
sid wrote:
> I prefer hours to percentages. Percentage adds in another variable:
> percentage of what? Of a forty hour work week? Of a forty five hour work
> week? Of a thirty five hour work week?
> Or is it a percentage of the available teaching time, which is generally
> less than the total working hours?
> With straight-up hours, we see how much actual contact time people have.
This is true. The % comparison was useful, I felt, as we were looking at two different models for a new year in the same school.
As a way of comparing across schools then I agree that hours/minutes is more helpful.
> I prefer hours to percentages. Percentage adds in another variable:
> percentage of what? Of a forty hour work week? Of a forty five hour work
> week? Of a thirty five hour work week?
> Or is it a percentage of the available teaching time, which is generally
> less than the total working hours?
> With straight-up hours, we see how much actual contact time people have.
This is true. The % comparison was useful, I felt, as we were looking at two different models for a new year in the same school.
As a way of comparing across schools then I agree that hours/minutes is more helpful.
Discussion
I prefer knowing my contracted time and my instructional time in terms of hour and minutes compared to percentages. It makes for easier comparison across positions.
Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
sid wrote:
> Our school defines a FT teaching schedule up to 16.5 hours a week. That
> includes homeroom but not duties, after school activities, etc. Most
> teachers come in around 14 to 15 hours. A couple teachers a year need to go
> a little above, and they don’t have to do duties or after school
> activities.
This sounds almost exactly like my school.
> Our school defines a FT teaching schedule up to 16.5 hours a week. That
> includes homeroom but not duties, after school activities, etc. Most
> teachers come in around 14 to 15 hours. A couple teachers a year need to go
> a little above, and they don’t have to do duties or after school
> activities.
This sounds almost exactly like my school.
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
Illiane_Blues wrote:
> sid wrote:
> > Our school defines a FT teaching schedule up to 16.5 hours a week. That
> > includes homeroom but not duties, after school activities, etc. Most
> > teachers come in around 14 to 15 hours. A couple teachers a year need to go
> > a little above, and they don’t have to do duties or after school
> > activities.
>
> This sounds almost exactly like my school.
Same I got 20 classes a week teaching load, that makes it around the same. With duties its around 20-22 hours a week.
> sid wrote:
> > Our school defines a FT teaching schedule up to 16.5 hours a week. That
> > includes homeroom but not duties, after school activities, etc. Most
> > teachers come in around 14 to 15 hours. A couple teachers a year need to go
> > a little above, and they don’t have to do duties or after school
> > activities.
>
> This sounds almost exactly like my school.
Same I got 20 classes a week teaching load, that makes it around the same. With duties its around 20-22 hours a week.
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
It can be tricky to tabulate when you add in things like seminars or tutor or homeroom or advisory type classes. Is a 10 minute homeroom "teaching" time? Contact time? Is it linked to a weekly or monthly advisory of some kind? Is prep required for such a class? When you are on a rotation schedule you might work more one week and less the next. If you have schedules with once/week shorter periods it can be even more tricky to calculate.
At one school I taught 87% plus a seminar, but only two preps. At another I taught 30% but had significant extra responsibilities (program coordination, administrative duties); normal was about 60%. Those are my extremes. But perhaps my most stressful job was one at which my teaching contact time was average--maybe 60%--because of the number of preps (6), extra responsibilities, and poor administration. My easiest was one at which I taught about 65% with four prepssimply because we were well run and had super support.
I would say in my experience the average is about 2/3.
At one school I taught 87% plus a seminar, but only two preps. At another I taught 30% but had significant extra responsibilities (program coordination, administrative duties); normal was about 60%. Those are my extremes. But perhaps my most stressful job was one at which my teaching contact time was average--maybe 60%--because of the number of preps (6), extra responsibilities, and poor administration. My easiest was one at which I taught about 65% with four prepssimply because we were well run and had super support.
I would say in my experience the average is about 2/3.
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
Just wanted to add that there was a typo in my previous post--77%, not 87%. Apologies if people thought that anyone required that much work!
Discussion
@Thames Pirate
There are some days where your teaching load might be 87% or higher. You have classes all day and only lunch off.
There are some days where your teaching load might be 87% or higher. You have classes all day and only lunch off.
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Re: Discussion
PsyGuy wrote:
> @Thames Pirate
>
> There are some days where your teaching load might be 87% or higher. You
> have classes all day and only lunch off.
It seems likely that @Thames Pirate was referring the her average weekly load and not a specific day, since the topic title mentions 'per week', and @Thames Pirate also refers to a weekly teaching load prior to mentioning that number.
But @Thames Pirate can correct me if I'm wrong.
> @Thames Pirate
>
> There are some days where your teaching load might be 87% or higher. You
> have classes all day and only lunch off.
It seems likely that @Thames Pirate was referring the her average weekly load and not a specific day, since the topic title mentions 'per week', and @Thames Pirate also refers to a weekly teaching load prior to mentioning that number.
But @Thames Pirate can correct me if I'm wrong.
Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
At the moment - 65% + advisory
I've had up to 84% + homeroom
I've had up to 84% + homeroom
Discussion
@Heliotrope
Both of our statements can be equally valid. Im not restricted to commentary that doesnt mean the rigors of your definitions.
@unsure
My highest was 80%
Both of our statements can be equally valid. Im not restricted to commentary that doesnt mean the rigors of your definitions.
@unsure
My highest was 80%
Re: Discussion
> @unsure
>
> My highest was 80%
Mine was at a British state school (US = public school) - so maybe not a good comparison here. During our 'free time' we were also expected to do at least one cover per week, so it was probably closer to 90%. With up to 35 students per class and 6 to 8 preps, I lasted 6 years then fled to IE.
>
> My highest was 80%
Mine was at a British state school (US = public school) - so maybe not a good comparison here. During our 'free time' we were also expected to do at least one cover per week, so it was probably closer to 90%. With up to 35 students per class and 6 to 8 preps, I lasted 6 years then fled to IE.
Reply
@unsure
Mine was in a US public DS (a British maintained DS). I had 4 preps and my classes were at 30 students. So maybe not the best comparison. I never worked harder for so little and was never respected less. I stayed 2 years.
Mine was in a US public DS (a British maintained DS). I had 4 preps and my classes were at 30 students. So maybe not the best comparison. I never worked harder for so little and was never respected less. I stayed 2 years.
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
Does '4 preps' mean four classes to prepare lessons for?
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Re: How many class periods per week do you have?
Yes, I was referring to weekly; at that school we had some weird scheduling quirks that were very hard to quantify, even on a weekly level (rotating ABC schedule with shorter periods but an extra class on Wednesdays).