You know, I hear this over and over and over with regard to the teacher pay issue and it really rubs me the wrong way:
Let's state that correctly: Many teachers CHOOSE to pay for supplies for their own classes.
It may seem like a quibble but it's not. Nobody is forcing teachers to pay out of their own pockets for school supplies and yet on the news you hear this refrain again and again and again ad nauseum.
I want to see one example - just one, bonafide, verified example - of a teacher who was fired, fined, disciplined or otherwise punished because he/she refused to pay out of his/her own pocket for school supplies. That would not only be a violation of the employment contract but it would most likely violate state law as well.
Now, if teachers CHOOSE to spend their own money on certain things because they don't like the ones that are provided by the schools that's their choice, isn't it? And if they feel like they can't afford it then what is stopping them from telling the parents of those students that they, the parents, should be the ones contributing (because really, it's their kids, they ought to be the ones paying for their kids education, shouldn't they?)
And if the response to that is "well, in poor parts of town parent's can't afford to contribute to the school" - well, if that's true then how are they going to be able to afford the higher taxes that will be needed to increase teacher salaries? The money's got to come from somewhere.




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The reason doesn't matter. What I take exception to is this ridiculous claim that teachers "HAVE TO" buy supplies.
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