Teachers deserve SO much more, dealing with hundreds of different kids with such different personalities and learning styles. They are some of the most essential and influential people and get so little credit
What people don’t realize about teacher’s is that they’re always working whether they’re on the clock or not. They spend so much of their own money to help with supplies which are always needed but not available. Both my parent’s are retired teacher’s
Teacher's vs. teachers. Teacher's is a possessive. Teacher's books, car or cat. Father God, does anyone know the difference between a plural and/or a possessive these daZe?
2nd Grade through 6th grade Music Educator here- haha!!! he told ZERO lies!! A student has raised their hand and said to me "Can I twerk?" No sir sit down and get that pencil I gave you back off that floor 😂
Lincoln and Drake!!!! Bwahahahaha Former middle school teacher. It actually saved us money for me to be a full time domestic administrator... saved money on food, child care, education, schooling etc... more than my $2,19.98 a month... daycare alone would have been more than half. That vet teacher was schoolin' him and the kids!
Honey I told my students that were losing a game we were playing in class and exclaiming "It's not FAIR!!" that "Well, the fair comes in October, what month is it now?" it took 'em a minute but they realized it was November and couldn't even say anything else 😆😆
As a former sub and current teacher, my request for subs is that if the teacher leaves enough identifying info for you to figure out kids' names (like a seating chart, especially with pictures) PLEASE write down the names of those who misbehave. I know many teachers don't leave much helpful info like that. 🙃 But I do and plenty of subs still write super-generalized notes without anyone's name. I can't hold my kids responsible for misbehavior if I don't know who did what. If I do, I can, and then they will hopefully be less likely to misbehave for subs in the future.
@Latonia Kimmons I do and I have, but the issue here is the sub leaving me feedback. It's not that I am not providing a head's up to the sub, it's that no notes are left for me once I come back. I have also left my email and even phone number. Rarely will a sub use it. I don't really want to be emailed or called constantly when I am gone, but of it's necessary to prevent a catastrophe, then I'd like them to use the resources I took the time to provide.
@@robbngu2978 she looks like a mix of multiple races and didn't really sound like she spoke English that good and she looks like she had a spray on hand with fake blonde hair and it also looked like she had a nose job and she always looked like she was on the edge all the time but always forced a whole bunch of happiness in her life
I had the best teacher’s in grade school and I still remember what they looked like and taught because of their enthusiasm to uplift every one of us. Now day’s they’re essentially babysitters and when they’re not babysitter’s, the student’s are literally pounding their skulls with their fist’s. I live in North Las Vegas and that’s how it is here. Student’s physical and sexual abuse towards another student or teacher. I’m so grateful my last child had just graduated before all of this was normalized. Biden hasn’t protected our children. They’ve had buildings full of baby formula this whole time at the border’s all the while the American’s are desperately needing it for our own children. Pathetic lies he tells
Private school teachers, sometimes. Public school teachers, essentially never. Regardless, the parents, not the teachers, should be raising the kids; teachers should be ancillary at most. Teachers, in other words, should at most be helpful, not 'most important'.
@@TheAstroflight I almost agree. Remote learning, as somebody who has done it, is far from ideal. In all honesty, homeschooling, if you have the capability to do it, is nearly always the best option. Also, public schools will always be incentivized by their very nature to produce a certain type of student (usually at a certain, predetermined rate): a student who likes the government, trusts its authority, and wants to abdicate his responsibility to it. After all, if they taught something else, they'd be working for their own downfall.
They make much more than they used to. My father struggled as a teacher in the 60s to the 80s. Both my brothers are currently public HS teachers (w masters & 20+years exp) they both make low 6 figures.
Yeah Putting Sub teachers the distance was FUN? Or was it? There's a lot of sub teachers I was mean too and feel bad about. Back Then they didn't scream their Gayness, And No! I'm not GAY.
We really ought not to pay any public school teachers. Private school teachers, meanwhile, ought to be paid according to the free market. Don't know what that rate is, our current market is too warped by the state's influence. College/ 'higher' education professors I don't know about, but given how over-inflated college fees are, I wouldn't be surprised if they're overpaid.
@Jim Allen professors are different than teachers with completely different credentials. You pretty much need to have your doctorates to be a professor,hence why they get paid more. Private school teachers are certified teachers who work for private schools this includes daycares (26k per year) and private schools (day schools,religious schools,etc 36k per year) as opposed to public school teacher who averages 65k per year
@Jim Allen I just think teachers are already underpaid,given their credentials and the expectation of the job,privatization will only lead to less quality teachers. I worked in daycare and some of the teachers should have never been around kids. When I interviewed for the position,they did not initially hire me. When I asked why they said "you are certified in education" I was like that is a good thing,right? They said no because certified teachers expect more money.. The only reason I got the job is I accepted $8.25/hr plus free daycare in 2011. It sounds like colleges are doing the same but they are not passing any of these savings down to the consumer
@Jim Allen sure,but those are public school teachers. Private school teachers never make that much. Yes, privatization leads to more of this "training"
@@ms.c6821 As I said, we can't know the fair rate in the current market. If it ended up being too low to incentivize people taking those jobs, then private schools would go bust; if it didn't, then they'd continue. People in a free market are paid according to the value they deliver to those paying.
I agree with this comment to a point. While I do agree they need to be better, there also needs to be a better vetting process especially when it comes to teaching children
@@grumpyoldguy584 Yes. 3 separate "SAT/ACT" like tests (costing 100-200 bucks each) to prove knowledge of the material (plus 1 for each additional subject matter i.e. biology, world history, etc for secondary). At least 6 months of practicum or "student teaching" (unpaid mind you), which then requires a "portfolio" assessment of sorts (video observations, lesson plans, testing results, efficacy measurements, reflections- this ends up working out to approximately 100 hours of work and costs the candidate hundreds of dollars to get evaluated). Extensive background check through the fed (again paid for by candidate/teacher), I have known people who were denied a teaching license for misdemeanor crimes that were settled a decade prior. Infuriating tbh. All that on top of having a degree, as well as continuing education throughout your career. For example, my state requires at least 150 hours of continuing education/professional development every 5 years. (That the teacher must pay for and attend out of their own pocket and in their free time) I have been teaching in a high-poverty school for a decade now. And I think the barriers to entry are too high.
Teachers deserve SO much more, dealing with hundreds of different kids with such different personalities and learning styles. They are some of the most essential and influential people and get so little credit
Without even watching this vid or hearing the jokes, I already agree that they don't pay teachers enough. Now I'll watch this.
What people don’t realize about teacher’s is that they’re always working whether they’re on the clock or not. They spend so much of their own money to help with supplies which are always needed but not available. Both my parent’s are retired teacher’s
Exactly!! And we always feel like we’re failing at something. It’s not easy!
@@grumpyoldguy584 omg stop lol… this is a comments section, not a dissertation.
@@grumpyoldguy584 bwahahaha
@@grumpyoldguy584 your name is very fitting, there was a more polite way to say this comment. Clearly you never learned any manners
Teacher's vs. teachers.
Teacher's is a possessive.
Teacher's books, car or cat.
Father God, does anyone know the difference between a plural and/or a possessive these daZe?
"Crouching Tiger, Hidden Negro"
That's great🙂😁😂🤣👍✌️
All that was so true! So funny!
2nd Grade through 6th grade Music Educator here- haha!!! he told ZERO lies!! A student has raised their hand and said to me "Can I twerk?" No sir sit down and get that pencil I gave you back off that floor 😂
Teachers Rock ✨️🎉✨️
A COMEDIC GENIUS JOINS THE PANTHEON OF GREATS - AMAZING SIR
😂"Crouching Tiger, Hidden Negro..."
"Drakebraham Lincoln..."😂
& Yes, most teachers don't get the pay or respect they deserve!
Lincoln and Drake!!!! Bwahahahaha
Former middle school teacher. It actually saved us money for me to be a full time domestic administrator... saved money on food, child care, education, schooling etc... more than my $2,19.98 a month... daycare alone would have been more than half.
That vet teacher was schoolin' him and the kids!
This was hilarious!!
Honey I told my students that were losing a game we were playing in class and exclaiming "It's not FAIR!!" that "Well, the fair comes in October, what month is it now?" it took 'em a minute but they realized it was November and couldn't even say anything else 😆😆
That jacket looks like he pulled his pants up over his belly button. 😆
😂 yes it does look hilarious
@@grumpyoldguy584 I'm sure I have, I just wish you were there to point it out 😆
Renard, You are addictively FUNNY! Enjoyed your set! Alas, it was too short...and I want to laugh 😃 some more. 😔
They might post the full special sometime in the future :)
Come on Mrs. Jenkins get 'em right!!!!!
A+
Let's keep seeing more of him!!
Draberham 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Very funny! Thanks!
As a former sub and current teacher, my request for subs is that if the teacher leaves enough identifying info for you to figure out kids' names (like a seating chart, especially with pictures) PLEASE write down the names of those who misbehave. I know many teachers don't leave much helpful info like that. 🙃 But I do and plenty of subs still write super-generalized notes without anyone's name. I can't hold my kids responsible for misbehavior if I don't know who did what. If I do, I can, and then they will hopefully be less likely to misbehave for subs in the future.
@Latonia Kimmons I do and I have, but the issue here is the sub leaving me feedback. It's not that I am not providing a head's up to the sub, it's that no notes are left for me once I come back.
I have also left my email and even phone number. Rarely will a sub use it. I don't really want to be emailed or called constantly when I am gone, but of it's necessary to prevent a catastrophe, then I'd like them to use the resources I took the time to provide.
Classic 😂
I haven't literally laughed at a video in a long time
Very funny!
🤣🤣The truth is so funny 🤣🤣
5:03 Drakebraham 😄😄😄
Fourth grade educator here….He told no lies.😂
kids are nuts, I feel for you lol
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 so hilarious
Lol....this is hilarious!
Brilliant!! Worked for the 1 st semester :)
I used to have a teacher when I was a kid that I was pretty much convinced was part of witness protection she called herself Miss Sunshine
My vice principal in HS wore a vest and was strapped.
That’s frickin hilarious but yeah, some exude a certain behavior which makes us think twice
@@robbngu2978 she looks like a mix of multiple races and didn't really sound like she spoke English that good and she looks like she had a spray on hand with fake blonde hair and it also looked like she had a nose job and she always looked like she was on the edge all the time but always forced a whole bunch of happiness in her life
I had the best teacher’s in grade school and I still remember what they looked like and taught because of their enthusiasm to uplift every one of us. Now day’s they’re essentially babysitters and when they’re not babysitter’s, the student’s are literally pounding their skulls with their fist’s. I live in North Las Vegas and that’s how it is here. Student’s physical and sexual abuse towards another student or teacher. I’m so grateful my last child had just graduated before all of this was normalized. Biden hasn’t protected our children. They’ve had buildings full of baby formula this whole time at the border’s all the while the American’s are desperately needing it for our own children. Pathetic lies he tells
In elementary school I had a teacher who was a very elderly, hunchbacked albino.
And MEAN.
At first I thought his pants were up really high
Teachers are woefully under-appreciated and underpaid. They have one of the most important jobs in the world and our society treats them like garbage.
Private school teachers, sometimes.
Public school teachers, essentially never.
Regardless, the parents, not the teachers, should be raising the kids; teachers should be ancillary at most. Teachers, in other words, should at most be helpful, not 'most important'.
@@TheAstroflight I almost agree.
Remote learning, as somebody who has done it, is far from ideal. In all honesty, homeschooling, if you have the capability to do it, is nearly always the best option. Also, public schools will always be incentivized by their very nature to produce a certain type of student (usually at a certain, predetermined rate): a student who likes the government, trusts its authority, and wants to abdicate his responsibility to it. After all, if they taught something else, they'd be working for their own downfall.
They make much more than they used to. My father struggled as a teacher in the 60s to the 80s.
Both my brothers are currently public HS teachers (w masters & 20+years exp) they both make low 6 figures.
@@TheAstroflight The US has been falling behind scholasticly (sp) for decades.
That was funny
If full time contracted teachers get crummy pay, guess what us substitute teachers make? Yikes.
only good dry bar comedy set ive seen so far
Because teachers have to do virtual learning
A Story that I never told anybody...........
ClickBait.
Why should I tell that story?!
Given what public schools are turning out teachers are over paid.
Yeah Putting Sub teachers the distance was FUN? Or was it? There's a lot of sub teachers I was mean too and feel bad about. Back Then they didn't scream their Gayness, And No! I'm not GAY.
weird shirt
@@grumpyoldguy584 It doesn't match his pants.
This outfit was a poor choice. I keep seeing some high waisted farmer, in his good clothes, with long arms.
Pretty bad when your biggest joke isn't your own, but other than that it was funny.
They pay most teachers FAR MORE than they should....
The more we pay them the worse the students perform, teaching like politicians should not be a life long career
That's an ignorant statement. Teaching is a skill that few posess well. The ones that do wouldn't think of doing anything else ever.
teachers are overpaid. nearly all teachers have never had a job outside of education and have no idea how easy they have it.
We really ought not to pay any public school teachers. Private school teachers, meanwhile, ought to be paid according to the free market. Don't know what that rate is, our current market is too warped by the state's influence. College/ 'higher' education professors I don't know about, but given how over-inflated college fees are, I wouldn't be surprised if they're overpaid.
Private teachers make significantly less than public ones
@Jim Allen professors are different than teachers with completely different credentials. You pretty much need to have your doctorates to be a professor,hence why they get paid more. Private school teachers are certified teachers who work for private schools this includes daycares (26k per year) and private schools (day schools,religious schools,etc 36k per year) as opposed to public school teacher who averages 65k per year
@Jim Allen I just think teachers are already underpaid,given their credentials and the expectation of the job,privatization will only lead to less quality teachers. I worked in daycare and some of the teachers should have never been around kids. When I interviewed for the position,they did not initially hire me. When I asked why they said "you are certified in education" I was like that is a good thing,right? They said no because certified teachers expect more money.. The only reason I got the job is I accepted $8.25/hr plus free daycare in 2011. It sounds like colleges are doing the same but they are not passing any of these savings down to the consumer
@Jim Allen sure,but those are public school teachers. Private school teachers never make that much. Yes, privatization leads to more of this "training"
@@ms.c6821 As I said, we can't know the fair rate in the current market. If it ended up being too low to incentivize people taking those jobs, then private schools would go bust; if it didn't, then they'd continue. People in a free market are paid according to the value they deliver to those paying.
Considering the results teachers are paid too much.
You ever tried teaching?
@@LEP480 he hasn't in a million years
I agree with this comment to a point. While I do agree they need to be better, there also needs to be a better vetting process especially when it comes to teaching children
@@IzzyNChrist you ever been vetted for certification?
@@grumpyoldguy584 Yes. 3 separate "SAT/ACT" like tests (costing 100-200 bucks each) to prove knowledge of the material (plus 1 for each additional subject matter i.e. biology, world history, etc for secondary). At least 6 months of practicum or "student teaching" (unpaid mind you), which then requires a "portfolio" assessment of sorts (video observations, lesson plans, testing results, efficacy measurements, reflections- this ends up working out to approximately 100 hours of work and costs the candidate hundreds of dollars to get evaluated). Extensive background check through the fed (again paid for by candidate/teacher), I have known people who were denied a teaching license for misdemeanor crimes that were settled a decade prior. Infuriating tbh.
All that on top of having a degree, as well as continuing education throughout your career. For example, my state requires at least 150 hours of continuing education/professional development every 5 years. (That the teacher must pay for and attend out of their own pocket and in their free time)
I have been teaching in a high-poverty school for a decade now. And I think the barriers to entry are too high.