Originally posted by Fightingscot82
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I applaud PASSHE for being the first to step up to the plate on this challenge. I would have blown a gasket if we got beat to the punch by Penn State or privates. It won't fix the teacher shortage but it could help. My wife is considering a career pivot to teaching. There is exactly one online program for this in PASSHE and it will cost us about $25,000 total. $1,500 is appreciated but isn't going to move the needle. The state needs loan forgiveness like it has for nurses. Also, its crazy that in 20 years we've gone from an overwhelming surplus of licensed teachers to a deficit.
https://www.post-gazette.com/news/ed...s/202302280139
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This is what happens when education is under funded, districts don't take care of the teachers they have, students are no longer allowed to be disciplined and administrations line their own pockets.Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View PostI applaud PASSHE for being the first to step up to the plate on this challenge. I would have blown a gasket if we got beat to the punch by Penn State or privates. It won't fix the teacher shortage but it could help. My wife is considering a career pivot to teaching. There is exactly one online program for this in PASSHE and it will cost us about $25,000 total. $1,500 is appreciated but isn't going to move the needle. The state needs loan forgiveness like it has for nurses. Also, its crazy that in 20 years we've gone from an overwhelming surplus of licensed teachers to a deficit.
https://www.post-gazette.com/news/ed...s/202302280139
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Yes, and...Originally posted by IUPalum View Post
This is what happens when education is under funded, districts don't take care of the teachers they have, students are no longer allowed to be disciplined and administrations line their own pockets.
There were multiple generations who graduated with education degrees but couldn't find jobs. A lot of students go too far through school with the goal to go back home and teach in the school they attended. The idea of moving to Prince George's County, Maryland isn't attractive to everyone.
Take my first example and combine it with the growing disrespect for teachers (mostly jealousy over their compensation & work schedule), and I think you've got a perfect storm of households where teachers are viewed with contempt. Its probably similar to how some communities view the police.
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All well and good but how do you explain with two graduate degrees, 40-plus years of experience in the field and having taught at two local colleges that when I offered to teach a for-credit class at my local high school without compensation and on their schedule that the superintendent said no? The reason he actually told me was - I am not part of the union. I know others with similar credentials and experience that have offered the same and were told "no thanks" also.
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Kind of a no brainer for schools that came into existence to train teachers…Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View PostI applaud PASSHE for being the first to step up to the plate on this challenge. I would have blown a gasket if we got beat to the punch by Penn State or privates. It won't fix the teacher shortage but it could help. My wife is considering a career pivot to teaching. There is exactly one online program for this in PASSHE and it will cost us about $25,000 total. $1,500 is appreciated but isn't going to move the needle. The state needs loan forgiveness like it has for nurses. Also, its crazy that in 20 years we've gone from an overwhelming surplus of licensed teachers to a deficit.
https://www.post-gazette.com/news/ed...s/202302280139
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I think you answered your own question.Originally posted by GregD View PostAll well and good but how do you explain with two graduate degrees, 40-plus years of experience in the field and having taught at two local colleges that when I offered to teach a for-credit class at my local high school without compensation and on their schedule that the superintendent said no? The reason he actually told me was - I am not part of the union. I know others with similar credentials and experience that have offered the same and were told "no thanks" also.
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New York Times article touching on small college towns in Pa.and shrinking enrollment.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/13/b...s-economy.html
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Article below. Really, the state-related schools' state assistance should be cut in favor of the state-owned schools. It's good to see them receiving some legislative pushback. Their influence in the state budget needs to be thwarted. This is obvious to most of us.
https://therecord-online.com/site/archives/93319
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The Centre County Community College should not get as much as they do.Originally posted by iupgroundhog View PostArticle below. Really, the state-related schools' state assistance should be cut in favor of the state-owned schools. It's good to see them receiving some legislative pushback. Their influence in the state budget needs to be thwarted. This is obvious to most of us.
https://therecord-online.com/site/archives/93319
The line about their endowment money being restricted is bull. They can sit on a mountain of cash but demand more money from Harrisburg and the state system schools get shafted as a result.Last edited by IUPNation; 03-22-2023, 10:59 AM.
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Pitt and Penn State (to a much lesser extent Temple and even lesser extent Lincoln) have such political and social power in this state the general assembly doesn't realize we're funding 2 or 3 competing systems. Our state-run need-based college grant program (PHEAA) actually gives students more money if they attend private schools. How is that even right? Penn State is looking at a $150MM deficit next fiscal year. I think they need to figure it out. Pitt is on a major construction blitz in Oakland: a $255 million student rec center and just announced this week a $240 million mini arena for teams using Fitzgerald Field House. When schools increase their facility footprint, that also increases their expenses on utilities, housekeeping, and maintenance. Then they'll cry poor some more. The number of PASSHE field houses that don't have air conditioning or working hot water would astound the general assembly.Originally posted by iupgroundhog View PostArticle below. Really, the state-related schools' state assistance should be cut in favor of the state-owned schools. It's good to see them receiving some legislative pushback. Their influence in the state budget needs to be thwarted. This is obvious to most of us.
https://therecord-online.com/site/archives/93319
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It’s time to cut the cord on state related.Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
Pitt and Penn State (to a much lesser extent Temple and even lesser extent Lincoln) have such political and social power in this state the general assembly doesn't realize we're funding 2 or 3 competing systems. Our state-run need-based college grant program (PHEAA) actually gives students more money if they attend private schools. How is that even right? Penn State is looking at a $150MM deficit next fiscal year. I think they need to figure it out. Pitt is on a major construction blitz in Oakland: a $255 million student rec center and just announced this week a $240 million mini arena for teams using Fitzgerald Field House. When schools increase their facility footprint, that also increases their expenses on utilities, housekeeping, and maintenance. Then they'll cry poor some more. The number of PASSHE field houses that don't have air conditioning or working hot water would astound the general assembly.
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Gotta love this one letter writer who said students needed to get rid of the "bloated" state universities and attend Penn State or its branch campuses to get a "quality education." What crap. The major problem is the bloated Penn State system, which the divine wisdom of our state legislators allowed to directly compete with our state system. One of my roommates at Ship took summer courses at Penn State and found them easier than the ones he took at Ship. He also got better grades from Penn State.Originally posted by Bart View PostNew York Times article touching on small college towns in Pa.and shrinking enrollment.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/13/b...s-economy.html
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An additional $10 million should be relative chicken feed for a 14-school state university system. Most local K-12 boards have budgets many times that.Originally posted by Fightingscot82 View Post
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