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Kevin Ball kball at pathscale.comMon Jan 30 16:02:48 PST 2006
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One thing to note here is that the pay scales in IT are at least somewhat merit based. If you do very well, you will climb the pay scales. In teaching, they are largely seniority based. You get put on a certain initial starting point based on how much schooling you have, and then your pay rises incrementally. I think Milton Friedman put it best when he said (in Capitalism and Freedom) "Poor teachers are grossly overpaid and good teachers grossly underpaid." This has the effect of creating a great discrepancy in teaching... there are the few who are truly driven to become teachers, and become so regardless, and there are the many who are unable to make a better salary somewhere else. The first are the saviors of our education system, and are grossly underpaid. The latter are hiding from capitalism and the idea that one has to be competent to be paid well, and are what drives student after student (including myself in high school) to hate subjects that by all rights are fascinating. We end up driving away everyone in the middle, those who are competent but not so driven to be teachers that they will ignore all else. If you were someone who was smart and talented, would you rather work in a system driven by seniority, or one where your intelligence and talents would be recognized by promotions, raises, and competition for your services? -Kevin > > You're right.. you'll climb the scales faster in IT than in > teaching. However, folks who teach do it for the love of it, not for the > money, so probably, it's not so much that you can earn a better living > being an SA than a teacher, but that the career path for the average IT > person doesn't encourage teaching as a profession. I'll bet the average CS > curriculum doesn't have much content in the "how to teach others to do > computer" area, especially when the teaching target is rookies or 4th > graders (CS grad students do discussion sections for undergrads, but > that's, I'm sure, viewed as penance, dues paying, or something > similar). Likewise engineering, etc. > > Hah.. maybe this is the solution to the world's problems, here on the > Beowulf list: it's not that we need writing classes, or teamwork classes, > or more calculus, etc., it's that we need to encourage more engineering > majors to take up teaching as a job, as opposed to being money grubbers > chasing VCs.
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