Teaching in the US vs. the rest of the world

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  • Опубликовано: 10 янв 2020
  • Teachers in America have a uniquely tough job. But it doesn't have to be that way.
    *Note: At 1:09, we misspelled "Sweden." We apologize for the error.
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    From hours worked to pay rates, countries like Finland, Japan, and South Korea make teaching a more respected and sustainable profession.
    Sources:
    A Coming Crisis in Teaching?Teacher Supply, Demand, and Shortages in the U.S.-- The Learning Policy Institute
    (learningpolicyinstitute.org/s...)
    OECD Pisa Results: www.oecd.org/education/launch-...
    How teachers in the U.S. and Finland see their jobs-- National Center for Public Education (www.nsba.org/-/media/NSBA/Fil...)
    OECD Education at a Glance (www.oecd.org/education/educat...)
    Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out www.vox.com.
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Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @hanalver
    @hanalver 3 года назад +19997

    Also, Anna starts her life with her own college debt.

    • @Ivari-if2dh
      @Ivari-if2dh 3 года назад +957

      While sofia with zero debt

    • @zt8003
      @zt8003 3 года назад +126

      International school necessary supplies: $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ and more $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

    • @Bruh-mg5ff
      @Bruh-mg5ff 3 года назад +84

      That’s actually not that true most universities pay for the education program for future teachers bc there’s a shortage

    • @instert_very-generic_name8919
      @instert_very-generic_name8919 3 года назад +51

      /Zacky nor says while student debt is at 1 trillion dollars

    • @awseko4732
      @awseko4732 3 года назад +17

      @@black_forest_ You pay the debt back so slowly you wont even notice it

  • @fhaf33z
    @fhaf33z 4 года назад +17077

    Welcome to teaching, where the salaries are low and everything is your fault.

    • @eldour6101
      @eldour6101 4 года назад +345

      I am sure you are a teacher. Bad payment, no recognition, no respect, no job. Thats the conditions in my country. The result is that teacher univercities take the less educated students every year. I can't even imagine what is going to be the level of education in the future. Such mistakes in the education need decades to be fixed.

    • @thewhitewolf58
      @thewhitewolf58 4 года назад +155

      also where students not paying attention in classes of 50 is your fault

    • @eldour6101
      @eldour6101 4 года назад +202

      @@thewhitewolf58 And also students are not interested in education when they see that educated people and jobs (like teaching) have no respect and money. They will prefer other jobs legal or illegal that will give them easy money. Of course, without education and science the world will stop improving. But who cares... Let the future generations find the solution.

    • @maaroofkhan5675
      @maaroofkhan5675 4 года назад +9

      In our country, salary of teachers is more but Everytime it's the students fault.

    • @eldour6101
      @eldour6101 4 года назад +62

      @@maaroofkhan5675 Learning is a compined effort from teachers and students. Good results come when both do their best.

  • @emanuelevacca91
    @emanuelevacca91 Год назад +4472

    In Italy, basically everyone wants to be a teacher because it's one of the last "stable" jobs as private-sector jobs are highly unsafe.
    In US, teaching is so bad that they even made a TV show about a chemistry genius so frustrated to be a teacher that he becomes a drug lord.

    • @AJ12Gamer
      @AJ12Gamer Год назад +130

      Good one lol.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Год назад +45

      That's not what the TV show is about lol
      Teachers in the US get paid more than in Italy

    • @ItssMitch
      @ItssMitch Год назад +310

      @@jsebby2284 teachers in the US may get paid more but the cost of living is 34% higher than in Italy.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 Год назад +16

      @@ItssMitch I would love to know where you got that number from.
      And teachers in the US get paid ~59% more than in Italy according to the OECD

    • @ItssMitch
      @ItssMitch Год назад +67

      @@jsebby2284 since youtube doesn't allow people to send links, you can search something along the lines of "Italy vs US cost of living" and most of the results will give the answer of italy being between 30% and 40% less expensive.

  • @Hyperion_HK
    @Hyperion_HK 3 года назад +8775

    This isn't even talking about how every year, standardized test scores determine how much funding a school gets, which makes schools in poor areas with few resources stay poor. It's an awful system.

    • @simmerke1111
      @simmerke1111 3 года назад +533

      Shouldn't it be the other way around? Even send federal officials to audit the schools and determine where they need funds and how to spend them?
      How in the world is this system a thing?

    • @gameseeker6307
      @gameseeker6307 3 года назад +157

      @@simmerke1111 someone higher up probably keeps it

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 3 года назад +17

      This isnt true lol

    • @Hyperion_HK
      @Hyperion_HK 3 года назад +218

      @@jsebby2284 it is. Schools will get more money if test scores are good

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 3 года назад +10

      @@Hyperion_HK there's no discrepancy in funding for the average poor school vs the average non poor school

  • @owenbush2991
    @owenbush2991 3 года назад +28275

    I remember hearing someone say "there's not a shortage of teachers, there's a shortage of masters level professionals willing to be paid $35,000"

    • @Pineappletaco
      @Pineappletaco 3 года назад +708

      The first time I asked a colleague how hard it was to teach, have a family, and go back for their master's they told me it wasn't that hard, but also warned me that the pittance they made more for both the degree and being head of the department was less than what they had to pay in school costs/loans. Literally, make less for getting that degree and promotion (which is impossible to get without the degree). This is in one of the best paid cities teachers, in a state with one of the lowest CoL ratios in the nation.

    • @chriskelly9476
      @chriskelly9476 3 года назад +894

      My cousin is a high school teacher in the US and I was shocked when she told me how much she earned each year. I earned more as a full-time retail cashier in Australia. Shame.

    • @hanako_4759
      @hanako_4759 3 года назад +194

      My brother attended my old elamentry school and he told me almost all of the teachers left cause my old idiotic elamentery school didnt give the teachers much supplise and low pay DURRING A PENDEMIC :/

    • @hanako_4759
      @hanako_4759 3 года назад +48

      @@chriskelly9476 dang thats tough

    • @zlo8389
      @zlo8389 3 года назад +31

      I could not have said that any better. You are spot on sir.

  • @eiansmemesanddumbstuff9710
    @eiansmemesanddumbstuff9710 4 года назад +29019

    The worst teachers stay, while the fun teachers only stay a year or two

    • @emilygracekun8376
      @emilygracekun8376 4 года назад +2262

      Or maybe because the fun teachers become the worst teachers

    • @bunnyhop9584
      @bunnyhop9584 4 года назад +3221

      It's hard trying to put your all into something for little to no reward every single day.

    • @adlerofrowe9224
      @adlerofrowe9224 4 года назад +225

      That's very true

    • @bmona7550
      @bmona7550 4 года назад +99

      Eian Weaver Nah the cool ones are those before the shortage

    • @ecarpioxp
      @ecarpioxp 4 года назад +428

      A "fun" teacher doesn't equate a good teacher. Learning is not about the fun of the experience although most learners experience fun when they are able to master a piece of knowledge. If learning was about the fun we all would have a doctorate degree.

  • @edwardjones4870
    @edwardjones4870 2 года назад +1213

    I left teaching and became a librarian for less pay because I could no longer deal with the stress of maintaining order in a classroom. I wanted to teach, not spend my time being a disciplinarian. I had to deal with students who were unruly, rude, and disrespectful. I found that school administrators were fearful of parents and did not support teachers. One often hears that the teacher shortage is due to low salaries. This is not the whole story and vastly underestimates the difficulties and problems that one faces in the classroom.

    • @gb-jg1ud
      @gb-jg1ud Год назад +35

      Well said..,the kids in the US and the laws in place are 2/3 of the pribkem

    • @edwardjones4870
      @edwardjones4870 Год назад +66

      @@gb-jg1ud Today in Virginia a six-year-old shot a teacher who is in critical condition. Need I say more?

    • @2wickie686
      @2wickie686 Год назад +23

      @@edwardjones4870 you can blame the parents for that.

    • @edwardjones4870
      @edwardjones4870 Год назад +8

      @@2wickie686 I agree!

    • @domosayain65
      @domosayain65 Год назад +11

      I work as a PE teacher and my word is it difficult at times

  • @artemisglitch_yt
    @artemisglitch_yt Год назад +420

    My math teacher actually decided to quit because our superintendent said they need “Fresh-minded younger teachers” instead of “Old and tired teachers.”
    Smh, my teacher was definitely one of the best and smartest teachers there!
    Now we don’t have a BC Calc teacher… because there aren’t any new teachers coming in..

    • @nicolletrampe29
      @nicolletrampe29 Год назад +75

      AKA they didn’t wanna pay the salary of experienced teachers and instead prey on young ones who haven’t established themselves yet and are made to feel lucky to have a job

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 8 месяцев назад

      Lies again? Work with less hours with higher rates

  • @squite133
    @squite133 3 года назад +5273

    Teachers: being stressed not paid enough = being rude to students = students being rude to others = students becoming stressed = students putting their stress on other kids bullying etc. = not working hard enough = getting bad grades

    • @anotherfluffyninja6903
      @anotherfluffyninja6903 3 года назад +225

      *being rude to students = students being rude to others = students becoming stressed = students putting their stress on other kids bullying etc.* Do i hear pumped up kicks or is it just me?

    • @meshtexture3490
      @meshtexture3490 3 года назад +17

      So we should replace all schools with libraries and parks. Got it clear as day. RUclips videos and book don't have the stress of a real-time performance. Plus I can't help but notice we are all here while the schools had to stop physically running for the pandemic. Clearly teachers are obsolete oppressive destroyers to education, basic human rights, and the basic human right to education they purport to support (ultimately the teachers only care about the paycheck not that their job actually means anything to the kids, especially if OP is right to say teachers are acting out due to pay) and we need guns to stop their evil.

    • @sportdoge1
      @sportdoge1 3 года назад +23

      I agree with this concept but this is a logical fallacy

    • @shawn.spencer
      @shawn.spencer 3 года назад +32

      Bulling doesn't come from mean teacher, that is so false

    • @sportdoge1
      @sportdoge1 3 года назад +4

      @@shawn.spencer could be but almost always it's not so you are right

  • @MrSmitheroons
    @MrSmitheroons 3 года назад +20159

    How to keep teachers and improve education in two steps:
    1) Value and respect them.
    2) Actually pay them.

    • @_Crazyslots
      @_Crazyslots 3 года назад +198

      i felt like as long as wages are high, they will work hard automatically. 🤣

    • @willshearer8907
      @willshearer8907 3 года назад +68

      They don’t deserve more money. They only work 9 hours, 190 days of the year. I work 12 hours a day, 255 days a year.

    • @willshearer8907
      @willshearer8907 3 года назад +18

      Nightingale I’m just saying man. They don’t deserve more money if they don’t even work a full work year

    • @penguinlim
      @penguinlim 3 года назад +828

      @@willshearer8907 they are literally responsible for most of the youth in their country. If they don't do their job well, thousands of kids might grow up and never find a successful and sustainable career.

    • @Nurulain-nq8by
      @Nurulain-nq8by 3 года назад +576

      @@willshearer8907 you think teaching kids is easy?

  • @boki1960
    @boki1960 2 года назад +765

    Having lived and studied in several countries, I have noticed a big challenge for teachers in the US: the students are disrespectful, uncontrollable, and unwilling to study. The teachers are excellent and full of passion to teach, but unable to do anything with a class that has 0 respect. And the faculty support system is not strong enough for the teacher to manage the class. The students will be awful to the teachers, but if the teachers ever slip up under the pressure, they will be punished. The rules for how teachers can interact, or connect with students is extremely strict, giving teachers very little freedom. So basically, teachers are disrespected by their class, by the parents, and do not have a strong support system from the school, who will throw the teachers under the bus if they ever slip up or parents complain. I don't think the issue is with the resources or funding of the schools. Students in Asia work with very little. While in the USA, most teachers have smartboards, access to computer labs, etc. But who wants to work in a job where you are constantly abused by your class, disrespected, and constantly given pressure by your faculty and higher ups? In Asia, teachers are highly respected by students, the parents always take the side of the teacher, and are respected by the school, who supports them. Teachers have much more authority and freedom to discipline, manage and connect with their class. Being a teacher is a highly respected job.

    • @bhaktilata
      @bhaktilata Год назад +24

      Amen to all of this 💯

    • @gb-jg1ud
      @gb-jg1ud Год назад +39

      Yup. Vox did not cover any of this

    • @bbbvas_.
      @bbbvas_. Год назад +51

      I agree with the student part because i went to a school in Asia and then to US the student were very disrespectful to the teachers and would trash the classrooms. But the thing is the teachers give you work after work and tests after tests. There is so much tests in the US at school. And they also teach you very useless things. And some teachers don’t even teach and just give you the worksheets. Most of them just grade and throw away your papers, not really going over it for us to learn from the mistakes we made. I don’t like the student, but the teachers aren’t the best either.

    • @myweirdsecondchannelwithap9070
      @myweirdsecondchannelwithap9070 Год назад +10

      parents always taking the teachers side sounds like a nightmare

    • @kleineente6475
      @kleineente6475 Год назад +1

      That's why U.S need an important subject to be thought to the students = religion subject.

  • @audreymcneal
    @audreymcneal 2 года назад +236

    I had a friend in high school who was a Finnish exchange student. The year she spent here didn’t even count towards her education because the curriculum is so far behind. It was like a gap year for her 😭. Her parents are also both Finnish teachers, and she described it as “paid like doctors”. I think the two are related…

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 2 года назад +1

      Teachers are paid more in the US than Finland lol

    • @Laura-xj8gh
      @Laura-xj8gh 2 года назад +24

      @@jsebby2284 Teachers in US are paid with no tax and teachers in Finland get payed already taxed

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 2 года назад

      @@Laura-xj8gh your comment doesn't change what I said or prove it wrong though

    • @xavier01110
      @xavier01110 2 года назад +23

      @@jsebby2284 what is your point exactly? They might get payed more but it's clear that they don't get any job satisfaction because they all quit. In Europe teachers seem to enjoy teaching. I've spent most of my schooling in France and the UK but I spent a year in the US and it was pretty much a gap. Funnest year of my life because I was ahead of everyone and US schools are not strict and let you do whatever you want. Thr US education system is broken and is far behind Western Europe and Northern Europe.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 2 года назад

      @@xavier01110 what do you mean what is my point? My point is they get paid more.
      You even repeated my point lol

  • @daeunlim3543
    @daeunlim3543 3 года назад +12116

    I went to American international school and my teacher who’s been teaching at states for 13 years cried on her first day of teaching overseas because she never realized how much easier teaching can be.

    • @taejo4975
      @taejo4975 3 года назад +104

      Overseas where?

    • @conorcane1211
      @conorcane1211 3 года назад +511

      YourAsianComrade 27 by her first name I’m guessing South Korea

    • @meking6327
      @meking6327 3 года назад +773

      I taught 18 years in Florida and 3 years at an International School in the Netherlands. So much easier to teach at the International school!
      Best work of my career! And I felt supported.
      And I am going to ignore any elitist comments made towards my original statement. In the US, I taught at a more rural school with a diverse socioeconomic population for a year, 2 different inner city schools with high poverty levels, and an upper middle class suburban school. Each type of school had it's own challenges.

    • @alidamaria6542
      @alidamaria6542 3 года назад +387

      I completely agree. As a history teacher in an international school in the Netherlands, these schools are generally better funded, with less students per class and more time and attention for individual students when compared to other schools.

    • @daeunlim3543
      @daeunlim3543 3 года назад +108

      @@taejo4975 Malaysia.

  • @Hutch2Much
    @Hutch2Much 4 года назад +15649

    “America spends more on security...than other countries”
    gee, i wonder why

    • @jesswinter
      @jesswinter 4 года назад +2199

      Hutch2Much this country is so addicted to its guns. It is a scary place to live right now. My poor little sister is scared to go to school every day and I don’t blame her. I see a guy in a trench coat and my heart stops.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 4 года назад +144

      Don't forget about the Philippines and other countries infected with radicals!!!

    • @julioservantes8242
      @julioservantes8242 4 года назад +630

      @@hackman669 Of course USA is better than most of the asian, african and south-american countries in regards to education and safety, but they are a lot poorer than the US. Comparing USA to Europe or some parts of Asia(Japan, South-Korea, etc) you see that there is a serious problem.

    • @tkokflux6322
      @tkokflux6322 4 года назад +179

      @@jesswinter my friend America has always been a scary place to live its not just right know it depends where you living at also guns are arent necessarily bad there just has to be more regulations on them and they should not give them away like balloons. but on the other hand, there is another side to this story my friend from the USA told me how he just survived being robbed and likely being killed but his gun saved his life. we rest of the world know about your mass shooting which is a horrible thing and it always gets lots of attention obviously but people don't consider how many lives it also saves now you might say that the solution is to ban guns right ? but there are so many guns being produced daily in USA that criminals who want to do harm to you will somehow get his hands on it getting rid of guns may not work for USA but more regulations are definitely needed.

    • @my_quadruple_chin115
      @my_quadruple_chin115 4 года назад +90

      Nevada is one of the states with a lot less gun rules, but we don't go around and shoot people. Everyone here is kinda chill, but they like to party. The only thing I'm concerned is how they drive here

  • @elizabethrobinson7148
    @elizabethrobinson7148 3 года назад +302

    As someone who taught secondary math in the US for two years and then left teaching for good, I can tell you what the problem is.
    Teachers in the US are not expected to teach. They're expected to coddle students, to parent students, to be best friends with all of the other teachers, to manage a bunch of money, to attend a bunch of unnecessary meetings, to create their own curriculum, to personally contact all of their 150 students' parents on a regular basis, to take charge of discipline, to be personally acquainted with every student's emotional, mental, and physical health issues, to adjust their personalities to maximize their likeability, to grade thousands of papers every single week, to be available before AND after school in case students come in for help, and so on and so forth. There is an endless list of things that a "good teacher" does, and they are almost all unattainable, if not contradicting.
    The only teachers I know who can stand to stay more than a couple of years are teachers who are comfortable valuing their own popularity over the students' education. In the US system, bad grades (not poor grasp of content, just bad grades) is 100% the teacher's fault, even if the student has spotty attendance, does 0% of their homework, never asks for help, etc. The only "solution" is to lower standards. I know a lot of teachers that skip up to half of the curriculum, or give points for "trying" even when it's obvious that the student has no idea what they're talking about. I know teachers who literally tell the kids the test answers right before the test, so that they're more likely to "succeed." The way the system is, these teachers are praised; good teachers leave.
    Because, oh yeah, the only thing that matters these days is the students' feeling. Not their competence. Not their learning. Not their character. Just their feelings.

    • @redflamearrow7113
      @redflamearrow7113 2 года назад +38

      So true. It's no wonder the education system is so poor. Teachers are expected to be everything including parents to the children, but they are not allowed to discipline misbehaving children. How can you teach in such an environment? And how can children become decent, responsible adults without learning what is not acceptable behavior? Parents need to actually parent their own children and that includes discipline! When this generation grows up and starts to get jobs, they are going to have a very rude awakening.

    • @sonofben9766
      @sonofben9766 Год назад +12

      When you mentioned giving out test answers right before testing, that’s exactly what my marketing teacher did. I was so shocked when it first happened.

    • @sel3059
      @sel3059 Год назад +10

      that is why all schools need to hire a psychologist

    • @randommonkey4900
      @randommonkey4900 Год назад +8

      It also depends on the culture in the area, where I live education is highly pushed so kids in at least advanced/ap classes tend to behave decently

    • @mrpooppoop420
      @mrpooppoop420 Год назад +10

      When school funding is tied to test scores, it incentivizes this. But also, how many of the people driving education policy even went to public schools?

  • @kristinetorrice7603
    @kristinetorrice7603 2 года назад +110

    Teachers are abused by both students and parents. Unfortunately schools allow this to happen. Back when I was in school if my mom was called in fir a conference with my teacher about my behavior or grades it was “what did my daughter do? Why are you not doing your work in class? You’re going to fail the class if you keep this up.” Nowadays it’s a screaming match where the parent is cussing out the teacher, telling her she’s not teaching her child correctly, that no she’s not going to fail her kid, she doesn’t care if her kid mouths off, etc. The severe level of disrespect from students and parents is a huge issue with teacher retention. School districts aren’t willing to support their teachers. Some are even requiring teachers to give students a passing grade even if they don’t do the work. There was a case recently where a teacher emailed a parents after the parent wasn’t responding to messages left for them regarding their child not showing up for the virtual learning classes. The parents started screaming at the teacher telling her it was her fault her son wasn’t logging on, that it was the teachers responsibility to make sure her son was awake & logged on, that she’s busy at work so it’s not her fault. She told the teacher it was her responsibility to come to her house every day to wake her son up for school each morning. Are you kidding me!!!! Parents are supposed to make sure their children go to school, participate in school, do their homework, etc. Teachers are not babysitters. Parents need to start stepping up and get back to parenting instead of trying to be their kids best friend. Too many parents are expecting the schools to do everything for their children and it’s creating generations of disrespectful, ungrateful, uneducated, entitled little brats who offer zero to the world. It’s time we quit blaming teachers for the failings of students and start putting the responsibility where it belongs: on the parents who aren’t doing their job!!!

  • @Pbdave1092
    @Pbdave1092 4 года назад +4464

    America: Where even in schools, defence spending takes the lead.

    • @allmotorhash
      @allmotorhash 4 года назад +22

      Magats

    • @ab3040
      @ab3040 4 года назад +57

      Ouch. That hurts 😂

    • @jl9554
      @jl9554 4 года назад +91

      Gotta keep the oligarchy alive.

    • @6Wul0Won
      @6Wul0Won 4 года назад +28

      I genuinely laughed aloud. Thanks.

    • @hyouzanren1846
      @hyouzanren1846 4 года назад +2

      Ok! That hurt! 😅😅😅

  • @19MAD95
    @19MAD95 4 года назад +4095

    American Parents leave their kids to be babysat in school.
    Other Countries sent their kids to learn.
    Fundamental cultural issues.

    • @Devi_ka
      @Devi_ka 4 года назад +64

      Sadly France is taking that way too.

    • @mrmacho41
      @mrmacho41 4 года назад +158

      You hit the nail on the head. Before I became a parent I always thought parents should be more involved in the learning process. It really should be a 1 2 punch. BUT i think for that to really work we need smaller class sizes.

    • @aussieendeavor3679
      @aussieendeavor3679 4 года назад +16

      @A.P. X How big are classes in the US? In Sydney they are around the 20-25 mark

    • @mrmacho41
      @mrmacho41 4 года назад +58

      @@aussieendeavor3679 honestly just speaking from my own experience we had 25-30 kids in general classes ( math, English, science, history)

    • @JuniFFXIVChannel
      @JuniFFXIVChannel 4 года назад +72

      @@aussieendeavor3679 Before I finished high school, 30 students per class was the norm. It's usually just enough so that no more desks can fit in the classroom.

  • @samanthabennett2775
    @samanthabennett2775 3 года назад +53

    As a teacher who moved from Texas to Sweden, I really have to say that a change in teaching hours makes the biggest difference. In Texas, I was in front of students 7 hours a day, 35 hours a week. In Sweden, it maxes out at 18 hours a week.

  • @zuzanafertalova3547
    @zuzanafertalova3547 3 года назад +50

    My mom has been a middle school teacher in Slovakia for almost 30 years. It is hard to stay positive and happy teacher when the salary is so poor for the job she is actually doing. But as she once told me - I would quit imidiately if those kids were disrespectful. But I can actually see their thankfulness for all the work I am doing for them. I want them to see that I love them as my own children and somehow they are paying me back with their good grades and respect. Thats why I've stayed for so long, now I teach kids of those kids - And that made my cry actually :D

  • @JM-us3fr
    @JM-us3fr 4 года назад +2649

    And yet, people continue to say "Kids these days are just lazy"

    • @Jason-th2nc
      @Jason-th2nc 4 года назад +52

      I’ve worked with them, and they ARE lazier than ever. A teacher shortage has no effect on how kids act. Their mindset is that no problem is too small, no complaint too trivial, to tell an adult about it.
      That said, the blame should be placed on the system and not the kids... they’re gonna be in for a rough time when they graduate and no one’s there to hold their hand.

    • @prodbyjl488
      @prodbyjl488 4 года назад +23

      Jason where not saying that shortage of teachers cause students to be lazier where saying that we have longer schools days in America and that we do homework after school and studies have found that it can lead to depression

    • @nicobenji0248
      @nicobenji0248 4 года назад +43

      Every older generation talks bad about the next generations. People who grew up without radio and TV often thought it was damaging their children. Don't get me wrong corporations designing every consumer good around bad addictive habbits like food and social media is affecting us. Not making us lazy or dumber but more apathetic and careless. Also the attention spans of people are getting shorter. So their right and wrong. Advancements don't ruin people but predatory uses of those advancements do.
      Don't believe me. People generally say Japan is "smarter" than the US. But the Japanese have higher gambling addictions than people in the US. That behavior was a result of Companies giving more people randomized stuff instead of just buying exactly what you want. For example most vending machines there you have to pay and hopefully get the candy you want. As a result people didn't think they were actually gambling but they got so used to earning things in a randomized way Japanese tend to actually have higher gambling addictions. That's why pachinko is so big over there. Here in the US you just buy what you want at vending machines. Point being are vending machines(tech/advancement) bad or is it how they are used?

    • @brighty-go6nn
      @brighty-go6nn 4 года назад +1

      @Jesire erised And​ it​ breaks its​ crown.

    • @chinchillout3533
      @chinchillout3533 4 года назад +9

      We are lazy, but alot of that is due to the way public institutions have raised us.

  • @Brianab3ar
    @Brianab3ar 4 года назад +4135

    its also interesting how teaching in the us is considered a low level career out of degree required jobs yet in other countries in asia and europe teaching is one of the most respected jobs you can have

    • @jeroenvantellingen5491
      @jeroenvantellingen5491 4 года назад +340

      in a lot of european countries being a teacher is not that respected. i think that that is mostly the case in scandinavia. here in the netherlands there is a big shortage of teachers. they are also often burned out

    • @mhdkuncahyo5815
      @mhdkuncahyo5815 4 года назад +402

      In asia. Generally, teacher is considered as a parents outside home. That's why asian teacher are highly respected by student and society

    • @SA-xt1gd
      @SA-xt1gd 4 года назад +24

      My husband’s side of the family prefer to study education in college to become teachers and they get paid in the summer with respectful paycheck. Especially teaching English.

    • @millminn
      @millminn 4 года назад +79

      even in finland i’d say teachers are respected for the work they do, but there’s still talk about how teachers are only teachers because they couldn’t get a better job that they would actually want to do in the field of their choosing.. i feel like it’s just the mutual respect nordic people have for each other that exists regardless of a person’s level of education or their career path. teachers are a vital part of so many children’s educations, teachers are important!

    • @pola5646
      @pola5646 4 года назад +25

      Brianab3ar not really. Respecting teachers is not really a case in europe. In poland they get really low solary which makes it really hard to do it for a living.

  • @garfieldfan3892
    @garfieldfan3892 2 года назад +90

    Such a gift to be born in Scandinavia or Europe in general.
    I'm born in Finland and like so many of my classmates love and value nearly every teacher that teaches us at the time. My history/social studies teacher makes learning fun with some jokes mixed in (or just being funny in general).

    • @canofcoorslight5746
      @canofcoorslight5746 2 года назад +2

      You're welcome, Russia would have scooped you up decades ago if our military didn't give you our protection.

    • @brandonmathieu1892
      @brandonmathieu1892 Год назад +7

      @@canofcoorslight5746 Finland didn't join NATO until after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, so we didn't give them protection before 1995. And Finland fought about 2-3 wars against the Soviets on their own in the decades before World War 2.

    • @cantbothernaming
      @cantbothernaming 7 месяцев назад

      you are aware that european countries like france and the uk have there own nuclear weapons@@canofcoorslight5746

  • @DanielDavies-StellularNebulla
    @DanielDavies-StellularNebulla Год назад +28

    I honestly don't know how they didn't mention the kind of education system Finland has.
    I mean, that's probably the primary reason why teachers stay, AND ENJOY, teaching in Finland.
    Seriously, look it up, it's fascinating.

  • @Cheese-pt6wp
    @Cheese-pt6wp 4 года назад +4735

    My math teacher quit because the kids in my school were bullying him. I feel really bad about it and hope he’s ok

    • @elizabethwalker174
      @elizabethwalker174 4 года назад +505

      Same thing happened with my science teacher two years ago :( He was so nice and a great teacher
      Edit: Should add that two people made a poem bullying him and sent it to the whole school, which I'm guessing is why he quit. The guy who sent it out only got one single detention, and the other guy who did half of the poem only got a warning.

    • @TheChickenRiceBowl
      @TheChickenRiceBowl 4 года назад +408

      America is such a mess.

    • @afoxnamedangel1577
      @afoxnamedangel1577 4 года назад +18

      Same thing happened with my 7th grade teacher

    • @Eridanus_Nebula
      @Eridanus_Nebula 4 года назад +71

      kid in my grade made a teacher cry, and the entire class didn't do much

    • @wes3438
      @wes3438 4 года назад

      Wait was his name mr crust?

  • @latentspacex
    @latentspacex 4 года назад +3201

    US calls building school sports stadiums “education spending”

    • @robertmerrill8918
      @robertmerrill8918 4 года назад +102

      Bao Vuong it’s actually a really nice part about school for kids, as a student athlete it’s the best part of my day. And most schools manage to put them in the school work anyways so it great for everyone!

    • @bigbusiness7035
      @bigbusiness7035 4 года назад +37

      @@robertmerrill8918 yeah this dude is just a nerd who hates the "jocks" and what not

    • @barcosbanchez6767
      @barcosbanchez6767 4 года назад +332

      @@robertmerrill8918 I think what OP meant to call out is the disproportionate amount of resources spent on sports compared to other extracurriculars that matter to other students just as much as it matters to you

    • @bigbusiness7035
      @bigbusiness7035 4 года назад +5

      @@barcosbanchez6767 now we got another Reddit nerd hear trying be all "oh just be nice I just wanna solve math problems" get out nerd go try and run a mile

    • @bahia5290
      @bahia5290 4 года назад +158

      I definitely agree with you. And as for the other responses to this comment, yes solving math problems really quickly is a better skill than sports are, but that’s just my opinion (and really most European and Asian countries’ as well)

  • @burgerfanman
    @burgerfanman 2 года назад +51

    This whole lack of teachers in the US comes from the stereotype that teaching is as a last-resort job for researchers, mathematicians, and other professionals. This creates the feeling that teaching is an undignified line of work, and also makes them get paid less, similar to how the architects would get paid significantly more than the construction workers on a building project.

    • @tachobrenner
      @tachobrenner 3 месяца назад

      "Those who can't do, teach."

    • @heranalemayehu
      @heranalemayehu 2 месяца назад

      But, the stereotype that teaching is a last resort comes from the fact that teaching is underpaid and anybody who wants a good life would choose the career that would pay better. If teachers were paid as much as researchers or other fields that stereotype would simply stop existing.

    • @burgerfanman
      @burgerfanman 2 месяца назад

      @@heranalemayehu So the symptoms of the stereotype are simultaneously its cause

    • @strategicfooyouagencyfirst8197
      @strategicfooyouagencyfirst8197 2 месяца назад

      All the problems you mentioned also exist in other countries' education systems. But at least teachers are respected. Teachers can be unpolitically correct and can keep their careers by making students uncomfortable.

  • @LadyHurricaneSoccer
    @LadyHurricaneSoccer Год назад +15

    I left American school system as a teacher 6 years ago after teaching for 22 years to teach internationally for the past 6. Absolutely the best decision i've ever made in my life.

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Год назад

      HELP! I cant find better History-Coverage and Flaws-in-School-System Coverage than the CRT- and GOP-Videos of "Some More News", so im at my Mean's End.

  • @anthonymarquez6493
    @anthonymarquez6493 4 года назад +4509

    The quality of education is vastly different from state to state.

    • @gj471
      @gj471 4 года назад +203

      Anthony Marquez right I live in Nevada 😩literally the lowest funded state in mental health and education !!

    • @nikobelic4251
      @nikobelic4251 4 года назад +62

      Garrett Jones Florida man says we are competing for lowest in Florida

    • @5pctLowBattery
      @5pctLowBattery 4 года назад +204

      And county to county. Here in Massachusetts places like Weston and Wayland score way higher than Brockton and Holyoke. Variations depend on demographics and real estate values.

    • @lukewillson2176
      @lukewillson2176 4 года назад +77

      Yeah but the rotten foundation exists everywhere. Standardized testing needs to be abolished

    • @Riipala
      @Riipala 4 года назад +47

      @@gj471 In Finland we have a saying "Huitsin Nevadassa" or "In %#*" Nevada". It roughly means in the furthest place possible from any civilized place. Sorry, nothing against Nevada, I don't know where the saying came from.

  • @HeyMyNameIs...
    @HeyMyNameIs... 4 года назад +4025

    finland's population also see teachers like doctors who cure their symptoms.

    • @christinaroche1327
      @christinaroche1327 4 года назад +146

      That's how it should be in all countries

    • @marialindell9874
      @marialindell9874 4 года назад +83

      For those that are interested. There was a finnish guy doing a TEDtalk (in english) about teaching in Finland and he explained why it is so immensly hard to even start your training to become a teacher. He explained it simply and in an easy way.

    • @apinkcat3766
      @apinkcat3766 4 года назад +89

      Teachers help cure ignorance
      It's best for them to treated like doctors. Education is the biggest tool to a nation's success

    • @LearntoMakeHonestMoneyOnline
      @LearntoMakeHonestMoneyOnline 4 года назад +21

      It's funny to read these myths as a Finnish person. 🤣

    • @saarana
      @saarana 3 года назад

      Lumpperlandia i dont think they’re referring to depression ect

  • @professionalgiraffe
    @professionalgiraffe Год назад +22

    As a millennial, by far the number one reason that I have heard from friends for why they left teaching is the parents. They expect teachers to raise and parent their kids, yet complain when teachers discipline them, and they blame teachers when their kid does not succeed.

  • @rachelbroughton6457
    @rachelbroughton6457 Год назад +13

    I’m a teacher in Australia. Our pay is decent, but the workload is huge, and people outside of the profession think we don’t work hard because the students leave at 3:30 and we have more holidays. We are facing enormous teacher shortages, at least partly because our workload has massively increased over the past couple of decades. Even in the time I’ve been teaching (9 years) it’s increased really significantly. I’m now a relief teacher and have a much better work/life balance.

  • @satriaamiluhur622
    @satriaamiluhur622 4 года назад +1221

    Treat schools as education, not as business
    And treat your teachers as educators, not employees

    • @output5447
      @output5447 4 года назад +25

      And the teachers need to treat students as humans, not slaves.

    • @screaminberries9046
      @screaminberries9046 4 года назад +6

      US: *laughs*
      We want more MONEY

    • @mehmetenescetin2182
      @mehmetenescetin2182 4 года назад +5

      @@output5447 yeah

    • @Lawlietftw30
      @Lawlietftw30 4 года назад +4

      Businesses sometimes have to pay their staff more when there's a shortage of a certain type of employee.
      The American government (and often the American voter, as seen by the part about whether people in the US value teachers) resist that notion and almost treat it like blasphemy.

    • @phanzon
      @phanzon 4 года назад +7

      If schools are like a business, then it's safe to say that it is comparable to that of a prison; where the children are the prisoners, the teachers are the underpaid social workers, and the executive faculty, politicians and police are the guards and warrens

  • @SA-xt1gd
    @SA-xt1gd 4 года назад +3861

    My sister’s HS teachers really don’t care about their jobs anymore because of rude students and low pay. They even get their homework off quizlet and let their students use internet to google their answers.

    • @Nickname006
      @Nickname006 4 года назад +174

      Well, searching for information is an important skill.

    • @WhompingWalrus
      @WhompingWalrus 4 года назад +68

      Quizlet's where students tend to get answers to questions which are often in teachers' editions of textbooks - which is where a lot of these teachers get their homework questions. I don't think the teachers are firing up Quizlet 10 minutes before class to get some homework lol

    • @SA-xt1gd
      @SA-xt1gd 4 года назад +35

      Nimimerkki tbh i dont have a problem with that, i used quizlet myself for an online summer course in college easy A. Its just that imagine some students dont have internet access outside of school. Sometimes work can be done in school but its not like something they can keep up with every day

    • @WhompingWalrus
      @WhompingWalrus 4 года назад +10

      Yeah I definitely used it too. There seems to be a correlation between what's on quizlet and what's just busy work, so it's no real loss imo.

    • @Nickname006
      @Nickname006 4 года назад +12

      @@SA-xt1gd Are there really children with no access to internet in the US? And you call yourself a developed country?

  • @sarahhh9136
    @sarahhh9136 2 года назад +22

    i feel like its even harder for teachers in western countries because the kids dont get taught as much on the respect of teachers. in asian countries kids are taught to respect their elders, including teachers but in western countries its just different and classes are harder to control, and some parents blame everything on you, its a thankless job for the most part honestly.

    • @xavier01110
      @xavier01110 2 года назад +2

      Same thing happens in Europe. US and Canada are the only countries where students are allowed to say and do whatever they want. I've went to school in the UK and France and you must treat the teachers with respect and if you don't then you can lose your place in the school.

    • @EfeFlet
      @EfeFlet Год назад

      I can't speak for everyone in Spain but I've been to 3 schools + college and nobody dared to disrespect the teachers. They were very friendly most of the times, and the kids would behave. I know there are cases of parents being violent to teachers but I think it's not common here.We don't bow or call them "Mr. X", we can just say their first names, but at the same time we listen and behave properly. Again, that's my experience in two public schools and a private one in different parts of the country, but my experience is not universal so...

  • @Gin404
    @Gin404 3 года назад +12

    I live in Finland, and honestly my homeroom teacher is so chill.
    We watch like 2 movies a week and get to use our phones during breaks in middle school (only high school students are allowed to use phones during breaks). I'm kinda sad that he won't be our teacher anymore, because he was honestly the best teacher I had so far. Even the the boys who were normally wild, would respect our teacher. Our teacher even had inside jokes with them

    • @Gin404
      @Gin404 Год назад +1

      @Ludvig Renström SJFe That teacher was only supposed to be a substitute, but ended up being our teacher for the whole year. Our homeroom classes were super chill! Now that it's been two years and I'm in the 8th grade, I'm suprised myself at how much we were spoiled, since watching movies now is really rare (exluding documentaries). Maybe our class boys turned out that rowdy because he was too lax..?

  • @kagome2420
    @kagome2420 3 года назад +8108

    I had a American woman telling me “teacher should be teaching for PASSION not money! Why should they get paid more then they already are being paid! As teacher they shouldn’t be so money minded!”
    This happen I was supporting equal pay for teachers.
    It’s almost like Americans don’t see their teachers as human who need them live.

    • @minam.658
      @minam.658 3 года назад +275

      That's horrible. I feel sorry for teachers.

    • @Achill101
      @Achill101 3 года назад +423

      Tell her that physicians should be healing people for PASSION not for money.
      Who needs those dollars anyhow.

    • @Pineappletaco
      @Pineappletaco 3 года назад +130

      Likely spent their early adult years on parent's dime or came from money and are conservative. Their is a sizable portion of the U.S. that doesn't understand what it is like to actually have to "pull youself up by the bootstraps", and an even bigger portion that simply views anyone making less than upper-class wages as deserving of what would be basic human rights in most other countries.

    • @ErutaniaRose
      @ErutaniaRose 3 года назад +40

      They don't see the students are human either, sadly.

    • @bigmoniesponge
      @bigmoniesponge 3 года назад +19

      I see my teacher as human I dont see what you mean by that. Also I really hope that our government here in the USA will AT LEAST raise my teacher's wages.

  • @Kinsey6King
    @Kinsey6King 3 года назад +3717

    This isn’t a joke.
    Twice in my life I’ve made friends with a new student at school and they were so far ahead in their curriculum it was embarrassing.

    • @ivankoh3779
      @ivankoh3779 3 года назад +146

      I mean it could be due to other factors you know, maybe they were top of their class and you were.... cough...cough, you know what i mean

    • @squidward2448
      @squidward2448 3 года назад +78

      We’re they from other US schools? If so sorry to say your schools just bad

    • @zumiii_
      @zumiii_ 3 года назад +18

      @@ivankoh3779 😂😂😂

    • @Joshua-vf3bm
      @Joshua-vf3bm 3 года назад +39

      Have you ever tried taking your education into your own hands?

    • @stowe5668
      @stowe5668 3 года назад +20

      I was that kid. Until 7th grade all I did in school up until then was read during class and talk to friends

  • @Chepina_tik
    @Chepina_tik Год назад +9

    I'm a teacher, and I've taught in public and private schools in the US and in several other countries, to say the least. The issue about hours, respect and pay are so relative. In the US I worked up to 12 hours a day, with 8 of them being teaching hours. I barely had enough time for taking care of myself. My pay was the lowest in the US, but the highest in my state. Everyone in society respected me for being a teacher, gave me gifts or discounts, and thanked me personally for being a teacher.
    There are lots of other factors that make it difficult to teach in the US. The biggest one I saw is that each school system is run on the whims of a small group of people who mainly concern themselves with state test scores, funding and/or not getting shut down for a failing school grade. Another is the lack of family support that students have outside of school and the trauma they bring into the classroom that supersedes learning. They pack 33 students into a classroom with random educational models, administration and management. So guess who doesn't want to be underpaid, working 12 hours a day, worried about personal safety, struggling with the multitude of students' personal problems , and unappreciated by the admin? The teachers. So they quit after an average of 2 years.

  • @noonemaybesomeone934
    @noonemaybesomeone934 3 года назад +24

    my mom was a teacher in America and she quit because she couldn't take how disrespectful the kids were and how long she had to work.

    • @josem588
      @josem588 2 месяца назад

      As a Mexican I thought that teachers being under paid not happened in usa

  • @nestyie3835
    @nestyie3835 4 года назад +4276

    Teachers are so underrated

    • @rgurung351
      @rgurung351 4 года назад +137

      Me er I think the right word is unappreciated.

    • @cristobalcaro3392
      @cristobalcaro3392 4 года назад +6

      And that is a fact

    • @rahuldhali7681
      @rahuldhali7681 4 года назад +63

      *underpaid

    • @Kazavop
      @Kazavop 4 года назад +31

      Poorly treated

    • @lllool8404
      @lllool8404 4 года назад +21

      USA is a pseudodemocratic corporatocracy.

  • @Laterose15
    @Laterose15 3 года назад +9301

    My mom was a teacher. She thought the system was so bad that she homeschooled me and my sibling from kindergarten through high school.

    • @frogg8319
      @frogg8319 3 года назад +136

      The one thing that confuses me is how would they give you tests?

    • @anthonygifford9494
      @anthonygifford9494 3 года назад +56

      How would you get a diploma or would you just take a GED?

    • @TlalocTemporal
      @TlalocTemporal 3 года назад +369

      @@frogg8319 -- No tests here (Canada). As long as there is a record of learning, you're good to go. You can get a bunch of resources, like textbooks and tests, but you don't have to as long as kids are learning.

    • @kayth1373
      @kayth1373 3 года назад +18

      how does she get an income

    • @babycakelings
      @babycakelings 3 года назад +139

      @@frogg8319 home schooled kids go by whatever standard the parents decide, so no tests unless given by parents

  • @harrypotterisded4522
    @harrypotterisded4522 3 года назад +19

    In Poland begginer teachers earn less than someone who works on cash register (who often wasn't at the university)
    2 years ago there was teachers strike and for more than a month almost every school was closed. Government gave teacher little more money but at the same time they took some "bonuses" (idk how call it) so technically they earn less than before raise

  • @zekailim2546
    @zekailim2546 3 года назад +28

    0:22 ngl I thought she was gonna say Anna is twice as likely to get shot

    • @SR-jr5nh
      @SR-jr5nh 2 года назад +2

      SAME THO

    • @suakeli
      @suakeli 2 года назад +1

      Actually USA has 3.75x more gun deaths per capita compared to Finland
      Gun deaths per 100k people per year: USA 12.21, Finland 3.25

  • @samleheny1429
    @samleheny1429 3 года назад +17796

    In Finland, school teacher is a highly valued occupation. The joke isn't "why aren't you a doctor or a lawyer yet?" it's "why aren't you a teacher yet?"
    In the US... if you're a teacher, it's assumed that that's because your life didn't pan out like you hoped it would.

    • @angelas5099
      @angelas5099 3 года назад +727

      Oh US is like India then. Usually graduates who do badly in school and college go on to get a teaching degree. There are some rare good teachers and I appreciate them though. Teachers are often so bad at teaching in school that parents shell out a huge chunk of their income to send their kids to coaching classes, who hire more educated and skilled teachers and pay them better. Coaching classes are evil though, but pay well.

    • @samoptimus4228
      @samoptimus4228 3 года назад +51

      Same in india

    • @deepanshu564
      @deepanshu564 3 года назад +12

      @@angelas5099 ikr

    • @agent_sus3273
      @agent_sus3273 3 года назад +35

      @@angelas5099 not like India. They just said it was ASSUMED that was what happened. As far as I can tell, that seems to a rare, if at all, case.

    • @angelas5099
      @angelas5099 3 года назад +43

      @@agent_sus3273 "Assume" in this case does not mean the synonym of "Suppose", i.e. speaking of it theoretically like in maths. In the OP's statement it means something similar to the prejudice people have. English is a funny language.
      In Hindi, it would be translated to "US me shikshak ho toh maan liya jata hai ki inki zindagi apne umeed ke hisaab se nahi chali". "Maan liya" is same as "assumed" but definitely denotes the prejudice against them. My Hindi translation will be riddled with some bad grammar and pronunciation errors because my first language is English, not Hindi, but I hope you understand what I mean. 🙂

  • @nanchoparty
    @nanchoparty 4 года назад +2417

    "How can the US keep their teachers from leaving forever?"
    You can start by paying them more...

    • @SgtJoeSmith
      @SgtJoeSmith 4 года назад +52

      If they want more money they can start actually teaching. And $65k for 6 months work is more than some doctors make

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare 4 года назад +131

      You can't solve all the problems with money though. You could have a higher paid teacher, but if they don't fix the toxicity of student culture, no teacher will last.

    • @Schmidty1
      @Schmidty1 4 года назад +126

      @@SgtJoeSmith Most teachers do not make 65k and they work 8-9 months as summer is only 3-4 months.

    • @lycheens
      @lycheens 4 года назад +161

      A lot of US teachers decide to teach abroad, I did it for 15 years. Generally it's better money, better hours, much nicer working conditions and far fewer people like Joe.

    • @SgtJoeSmith
      @SgtJoeSmith 4 года назад +1

      @@triadwarfare well that's the teachers job

  • @jhk.a.281
    @jhk.a.281 3 года назад +37

    After sharing one old math textbook with three kids, not being allowed to take the textbook home, as is "normal" in the U.S., I was shook when I moved to Korea and the principal gave me my grades' text books plus the grade below, "to catch up" and take home.

    • @craig7405
      @craig7405 3 года назад +3

      power hunger. they love the authority to basically play god. lucky u moved to korea.

    • @SpringStarFangirl
      @SpringStarFangirl 2 года назад +4

      They wouldn't allow you to take the books home??? *Stares* What is wrong with the USA??? (Everything, actually, but that's not the point.) Here in Israel, not only are you allowed to take your books home, you're expected to, because more often than not the homework is from the textbook.

    • @nithidesikan6458
      @nithidesikan6458 2 года назад

      @@SpringStarFangirl they do let us take them home (American) but we have to let the teacher know so they can note it down

  • @CriticalComplainer
    @CriticalComplainer 2 года назад +18

    As a US citizen; I constantly hear people complain in conversation about how much teachers get paid and how much time off they get. The public opinion for our educators is grossly lower than it should be and is likely the root of all these cascading problems.

    • @Goldzwiebel
      @Goldzwiebel 2 года назад +5

      it's the same here in germany. people assume that the teachers already know the entire subject matter from their own school days and only repeat it. add a few hours of pedagogy and you're done. but it is also partly true that after 10 years at the latest, the teachers no longer remember what they studied and only know what they tell the students every day. the rest is unimportant. that's why i'm also in favor of shortening the studiying for teachers, because they really don't have to know everything. it is more important to have to take courses to stay up to date.

  • @BD-md6zr
    @BD-md6zr 4 года назад +2945

    One more difference: Anna is 1.000.000 times more likely to get shot

    • @bolt7047
      @bolt7047 4 года назад +11

      W

    • @priii8044
      @priii8044 4 года назад +244

      Why would you say something so controversial....... yet so true? :p

    • @yub2.045
      @yub2.045 4 года назад +134

      How DARE you EXPOSE SOMETHING so TRUE?

    • @fxtshrahm2012
      @fxtshrahm2012 4 года назад +6

      F

    • @truelygreg
      @truelygreg 3 года назад

      Kings 16 W

  • @Thaddeus_Howe
    @Thaddeus_Howe 4 года назад +4184

    Bruh all we need to do is decrease military spending by like 5% and give that money to education. That would be a 50% increase in education spending which could be directed solely towards teacher salaries, classroom materials, and scholarships for teachers.

    • @SaraH-jn5db
      @SaraH-jn5db 4 года назад +827

      Congress only cares about keeping kids alive long enough to send them to Iraq, doesn't matter if they're well educated as long as they can use a gun

    • @rozhin6055
      @rozhin6055 4 года назад +185

      @@SaraH-jn5db That sounds so sad...

    • @Ghost-lk2fc
      @Ghost-lk2fc 4 года назад +483

      @@rozhin6055 And very true. When I was in high school they basically bribed students to serve in the military, offering to pay for their college education as long as it goes towards their future jobs in the army. I live in a community where many people can't afford college, so of course they took the deal if they wanted to get a higher education.
      If our government really cared about our education, they'd take a little bit out of the military's bribing money and give it to the schools.

    • @bulbouspiranha758
      @bulbouspiranha758 3 года назад +45

      These are the kind of Americans that America needs

    • @dangergun2346
      @dangergun2346 3 года назад +4

      You're right

  • @glory5110
    @glory5110 3 года назад +6

    I love the visual presentation of this video. Congrats on whoever made it!

  • @lifes7084
    @lifes7084 Год назад +10

    Sometimes I think socialization in schools is more important in the US, whereas everywhere else it’s more about the actual academics. High School is definitely an important part in American culture and it’s something Americans usually spend a lot of time looking back and reflecting on like how it helped shape them into the adult they are.

  • @rcditti
    @rcditti 3 года назад +4728

    American pride will be the utter downfall of this ‘great’ country

    • @WoogTV
      @WoogTV 3 года назад +63

      It is a great country, proud to live here! 🇺🇸

    • @stanley3642
      @stanley3642 3 года назад +585

      WoogTV You’re the type of people the original commentator was talking about :/

    • @jordinagel1184
      @jordinagel1184 3 года назад +305

      WoogTV a great country in need of dire changes. I don’t doubt its potential for greatness (I used to live in NC), but there are many problems. Keeping in line with this video, for example, teacher salaries are atrocious, especially in NC.

    • @andyh5064
      @andyh5064 3 года назад +20

      Jordi Nagel one thing this video didn’t consider was the pay structure, it’s not just about the average pay. Maybe Finland pays new teachers less and teachers whom are higher in seniority are paid a lot more in Finland( I’m not saying this is true but the video didn’t address this). Maybe Finland has a shorter summer break which allows for shorter work days? These are just a few of many questions the video didn’t address. Nonetheless, our public school structure needs to have a major overhaul.

    • @colintahbaz1292
      @colintahbaz1292 3 года назад +21

      What's wrong with Patriotism?

  • @robertpinto9217
    @robertpinto9217 4 года назад +1377

    Its simple: Give the teachers a fair and livable wage.

    • @angelgjr1999
      @angelgjr1999 4 года назад +33

      Most government workers make hardly any money at all. Only ones that make any serious money are the heads of the board of education. And they really don’t do much at all. You’ll see them actually visit your school once a year. And they run everything.

    • @torimarshall9599
      @torimarshall9599 4 года назад +32

      While this is a big part of it, it's not so "simple" actually. Even if the pay was up to standards, the poor conditions would still cause teachers to leave. Not having enough time to crank out curricula, cutting support staff like paras and counselors, expecting teachers to bring so much work home with them, tight control over when a teacher is "supposed" to use personal days--it's a grindy experience which would push people out even if the pay was excellent.
      (Caveat: my husband's school is particularly bad. But I'm sure it's not the only one.)

    • @freddiesimmons1394
      @freddiesimmons1394 4 года назад +3

      Public school teachers in nyc start at nearly 60k a year. And the results are middling

    • @daniel89123
      @daniel89123 4 года назад +7

      you barely need any education to become a teacher their wage is very fair and livable.

    • @freddiesimmons1394
      @freddiesimmons1394 4 года назад +8

      @@daniel89123 in NYC you need a masters to work in a public school

  • @sonicsupersam7793
    @sonicsupersam7793 Год назад +8

    1:55 as someone from the UK, i can tell you that our teachers actually rarely get free periods, especially maths. If you’re in a primary school, then you’ll be teaching almost non stop for 6 hours since you’re with the same class the whole time.

  • @setablazee3570
    @setablazee3570 Год назад +6

    Moral of the lesson:
    Give respect to your teachers, it's likely better to have them rather than not having the class/activity.

  • @Leokipo
    @Leokipo 4 года назад +5981

    Can we take a moment to appreciate the overall graphics that they used with this video? It's great!

    • @ritwikreddy5670
      @ritwikreddy5670 4 года назад +39

      It is literally the first form of graphics to be invented.

    • @Budder1252
      @Budder1252 4 года назад +71

      Ritwik Reddy it’s nice tho lol

    • @pranav3848
      @pranav3848 4 года назад +22

      It's like 10 fps

    • @zoey8050
      @zoey8050 4 года назад +37

      @@pranav3848 it's stop motion lol

    • @ngut22
      @ngut22 4 года назад +14

      The graphics are beautiful but they don’t help the narrative. Why the minute hands keeps moving all over the place? And what is the comparison between New York and Alaska?

  • @jiimy.
    @jiimy. 4 года назад +2122

    US: everything is business even education
    That’s just sad

    • @sulfur_americium2993
      @sulfur_americium2993 4 года назад +25

      Trump would agree

    • @Lewis64
      @Lewis64 4 года назад +10

      But if there’s no economics and businesses involved, nothing’s gonna last for long

    • @theultimatefreak666
      @theultimatefreak666 4 года назад +51

      Your school sponsored by raid:shadow legends
      My school was sponsored by a insurance company, we actually went to their office and listened to their sales-pitch as 13 years Olds! Isn't Germany great?

    • @kevincardoso6723
      @kevincardoso6723 4 года назад +5

      Jiimy Schools are free in the US so no it’s not a business

    • @amazinghannure6440
      @amazinghannure6440 4 года назад +3

      @@kevincardoso6723 Wow, I wonder why trump has not called it a socialist policy

  • @deniserosalin8681
    @deniserosalin8681 3 года назад +12

    IN PH, SAD TO SAY TEACHERS ARE OVERWORKED AND YET UNDERPAID..THAT'S WHY WE'RE ALSO STRUGGLING WITH THE NUMBER OF THE TEACHERS...BUT THANKS TO OUR FILIPINO TEACHERS EVEN THERE'RE ARE WORKING SO HARD THEY STILL SEE TEACHING AS A WORTHY AND HEROIC PROFESSION..

  • @mieliav
    @mieliav 2 года назад +12

    as an elementary school teacher in israel, I'd point out that selection of teacher candidates is an important element of this problem. I was in teachers' seminar with a lot of people who should not have been in the profession. of course this could be changed only by paying teachers more and thus, being able to select a lot harder.

  • @deintri
    @deintri 4 года назад +2434

    Then you have to go home and prepare lesson plans for the next day because there is no time in school to sit down and prepare...

    • @millealfredsson4014
      @millealfredsson4014 4 года назад +48

      Fact check: this is correct. Even in Europe. My mom is a teacher (since 20+years)

    • @RealMailou
      @RealMailou 4 года назад +61

      Here in finland one of my old teachers told me that she gave some of the students test for her husband to check and rate, even though he wasnt a teacher. But she had to do it bc there just was no time for it.

    • @MBeckers
      @MBeckers 4 года назад +15

      @@RealMailou in the Netherlands many teachers have similar issues

    • @RealMailou
      @RealMailou 4 года назад +16

      @@MBeckers I feel like the left in the US don't understand or just want to see the problems in the *EUROPEAN* stuff. People in the US are talking about their school food being unhealthy, meanwhile many here in Finland just outright do not eat the school food because it's so disgusting. Theres this city called Pori and in there some schools had insects as food. NOT EVEN KIDDING.

    • @Tinker-xr1gi
      @Tinker-xr1gi 4 года назад +42

      Mailou insects are actually very healthy to eat high in protein and it would depend on the culture and people that are eating the food

  • @Kay2be2mr
    @Kay2be2mr 3 года назад +7046

    I left teaching because the stress was causing me to lose my hair. I could no longer tolerate badly behaved kids (I worked at a private elementary school that many times took in kids that were kicked out of public schools) many parents were disrespectful and got angry if you told them that their kids were anything less than perfect. Feeling pressure to decorate my classroom like a "Teachers Pay Teachers" or RUclipsr teacher type person. Cause that's another thing... There's an unspoken competition between teachers over who has the cutest most creative classroom and door. The teachers with the best decorations and creations were seen as the teachers you should strive to be like, and those of us who kept it minimal because we're not as artistic and crafty were seen as the ones who didn't want to try hard enough. I broke down everytime I got blamed for student behavior and grade outcome. I shouldn't be blamed for whether Timmy took his classes seriously and studied for his tests, or whether a child chose to follow my rules of conduct or not. Teachers are expected to be 10 different things at once. We need to be kind and mild mannered while tough and fearsome enough to keep everyone in line. We're to be fun, dynamic and creative like Mary Poppins. As artistic and crafty as the art teacher, know how to handle special cases like a special ed teacher would, know enough about psychology to also be a therapist to your class, have secretarial skills, AND be extremely tech savvy. All without an assistant. It's too much! My dream job is to be left alone in an office cubicle in front of a computer, give me a task and a deadline and don't ever talk to me about kids or parents again!

    • @mikesully110
      @mikesully110 3 года назад +310

      yea man I work in a school too (but not as a teacher, I run the IT for a middle/high school) and my dream job now would be working in an office all alone putting together widgets, where nobody can bother me

    • @bethanybuffington68
      @bethanybuffington68 3 года назад +196

      I'm on my 19th year of teaching and I NEED TO GET OUT. Surprised I've made it this long actually. I say the same thing as you all the time. I want a job where people leave me alone. Curious as to what career you ended up in?

    • @vantestars.v
      @vantestars.v 3 года назад +81

      this is horribly sad

    • @peachkey2
      @peachkey2 3 года назад +126

      This is scary to read since I just graduated with an education degree.....

    • @davidheinzmann4403
      @davidheinzmann4403 3 года назад +10

      My wife is a social worker in New York. She works 12 months/ year for half of what our entitled teachers make. See what nys teachers make in 8 months of work. As a nys taxpayer I disagree with most of your video. What I do agree with is the lack of respect for teachers.

  • @Lew114
    @Lew114 Год назад +5

    Sophia also doesn’t have to worry about school shootings.

  • @kristinhall8435
    @kristinhall8435 2 года назад +8

    I am just finishing my 33rd year and will retire in June. It can’t come soon enough. I am so sick of the disrespect. I am more tired of the complete apathy of parents towards their own children. As the family in the US continues to disappear, the impact of this is profound in the academic classroom. It’s disgusting!

  • @zooer64
    @zooer64 4 года назад +6272

    Also talk about how schools are so quick to throw money at the sports departments while everybody else has to scratch and use their own money
    (Edit: Due to more information provided by the replies, by sports, I mean mostly Football- maybe basketball,volleyball, or baseball)

    • @mirsaes
      @mirsaes 4 года назад +90

      Yes, Thank you!!!

    • @ArchOwl
      @ArchOwl 4 года назад +402

      And by sports you mean football, baseball, and basketball. If you do cross country, swim, lacrosse, wrestling, track and field, water polo, soccer, volleyball, tennis, or golf (what my pretty well-off high school offers), you can ask for something every 15 years or get bent.

    • @Shady22
      @Shady22 4 года назад +39

      Ev hey you ain’t wrong for most sports the team has to do fundraising And the school takes some of the money from “using the name” but don’t worry we get 1 new item a year

    • @ilikemoviesandmore
      @ilikemoviesandmore 4 года назад +148

      Yeah, I never got that about American schools and universities. Seems to favor athletics over intelect.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 4 года назад +69

      @@ilikemoviesandmore Some sports - not all - are actually revenue generators. College football is big business in America. The NCAA, the main college atheletics association, has an annual revenue of eight billion dollars a year - even though it's a non-profit organisation. That's why the athletic scholarship exists: "We'll pay your tuition, because your status as a college sports star will bring in more money than that costs us through ticket sales, broadcast rights and merchandising. Just don't let your grade fall too far, we need to pretend you are here to learn."

  • @blurryink115
    @blurryink115 4 года назад +864

    Teachers or the backbone of literally everything. Your doctors, your engineers, your lawyers, etc... you wouldn’t have them without teachers.

    • @laurent1144
      @laurent1144 4 года назад +59

      Also, with increased education, crime rates are lower, poverty is lower, and the economy is healthier. Even people without kids benefit from paying teachers properly.

    • @mirsaes
      @mirsaes 4 года назад +12

      I agree with your comment, however, I don't believe in public education anymore as our citizens don't appreciate it since so many don't have to pay for it. It's become daycare and an antiquated form of teaching the minds of tomorrow.

    • @lewism.henderson9571
      @lewism.henderson9571 4 года назад +23

      In a developed economy, everybody is the backbone of everybody else. You also wouldn't have teachers without farmers, builders, foresters, miners, etc.

    • @allconsumingchicken9173
      @allconsumingchicken9173 4 года назад +1

      Hi

    • @user-ez5vq9fd2t
      @user-ez5vq9fd2t 4 года назад +20

      @@lewism.henderson9571 I think what the point that the commenter was trying to make is: who taught farmers how to farm? Whether they have the title of "teacher" or not, every profession and skill requires instruction. Even parents are teachers, in addition to so much more. In that sense, teachers ARE the backbone of society.

  • @iCanbEYOURrUKIA
    @iCanbEYOURrUKIA 2 года назад +12

    Unfortunately this happened to my sister and discouraged her from teaching. She was placed in the Teacher's of America program in Mississippi and shared a home with her 3 other roomates, all of whom were teachers as well. Unfortunately, Mississippi's education system (and state tbh) is so backwards it made her job harder, her students were less focused on school, and their parents were less invested in their children's education. She ended up leaving teaching all together and getting her 2nd master's degree is sociology instead where she's doing well in her work.

  • @redflamearrow7113
    @redflamearrow7113 2 года назад +10

    If children were taught how to behave by their parents, teachers would be able to have the time to actually teach their children in school!

  • @TheHuskyK9
    @TheHuskyK9 3 года назад +8728

    Protestors: “We need to defund the police!”
    Righties: “How do you expect them to properly do their jobs without funding??”
    American teachers: *c o u g h s*

    • @tylerchapman7394
      @tylerchapman7394 3 года назад +59

      TheHuskyK9 teachers get paid more in America than they do in Finland...

    • @SoulWingz
      @SoulWingz 3 года назад +673

      @@tylerchapman7394
      But you also need to take into consideration the cost of living, their pay isn't proportionate to their living costs. Many American teachers have to work part time jobs in the side and that's in addition to their nearly 50 hour work weeks when you include the work they have to do outside of school hours

    • @tylerchapman7394
      @tylerchapman7394 3 года назад +75

      SoulWingz cost of living in Finland is also 30% higher than in America. I’m not saying that America is perfect in the way that it treats teachers but I personally don’t think it’s money that’s the issue. Or that Finland teachers are better off financially.

    • @namjoonscrab6929
      @namjoonscrab6929 3 года назад +188

      right? my teachers always complain (i don’t blame them) about them having to buy school supplies with their own money. and school supplies aren’t cheap most of the time. and on top of that they have bills to pay (which are really high if you live in a poor town/city because of public schools) and you also have buy all of your essentials

    • @nick012000
      @nick012000 3 года назад +54

      They don't expect the police to do their jobs. That's why they want them defunded in the first place: so that they can commit crimes without being arrested.

  • @icharcoalz5011
    @icharcoalz5011 4 года назад +4268

    US: *Over works teachers and give them low wages*
    Teachers: *leaves*
    US: This is beyond science

    • @Hirohitorunguard
      @Hirohitorunguard 4 года назад +16

      politics machine broke.

    • @lyndsay4153
      @lyndsay4153 4 года назад +5

      ICharCoalZ do you think 80-100k a year is a low wage?

    • @cambecambe3199
      @cambecambe3199 4 года назад +58

      Lyndsay 415 what the heck are you talking about? most of my teachers from middle and high school were making around 30k and working several jobs in order to afford school supplies and basic living expenses for their families. I have no idea where you live in the US that public school teachers make that much.

    • @rsync9490
      @rsync9490 4 года назад +34

      @@lyndsay4153 Who makes that and doesn't live in the Bay area or manhattan? Teachers I know make 36k. The ones with decades of experience make 55k.

    • @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963
      @bfbvouabeorbvoaervure963 4 года назад +6

      Lyndsay 415
      No teacher makes that.

  • @CCP-Lies
    @CCP-Lies 2 года назад +1

    In my country, school are quiet and students always hear what teacher said. Teachers are very appreciated and well paid here

  • @sehooncheong493
    @sehooncheong493 2 года назад +7

    As a South Korean, I feel the need to revise your data chart about teacher's working time. It is actually more than 9 hours a day at least, And If you are a high school teacher, they have to work more than 12 hours a day for supervising student who study at school for university.
    that makes teacher can't afford to prepare class, and school eduction quality is prett lower than external academy. that is huge problem in Korea.

  • @botanicalbunny
    @botanicalbunny 4 года назад +1446

    _"This is Anna. She just graduated from college in the United States. Anna is in debt up to her EYEBALLS and can no longer financially support herself or her family. Anna's only option is to now drive her car full speed head on into oncoming traffic."_
    Now that's more like it

    • @perisemiotics3204
      @perisemiotics3204 4 года назад +153

      lol yes, the video didn't mention that _Anna_ graduates from college with a 35k USD debt whereas _Sofia_ ...

    • @mauz791
      @mauz791 4 года назад +80

      _She chooses to work, but the wages are so low she tries to dive off a bridge_

    • @embasorangiratina36
      @embasorangiratina36 4 года назад +208

      @@mauz791 Unfortunately she survives and is now being crushed under a mountain of medical debt. In addition to her student loan debt.

    • @Daniel-mq3nf
      @Daniel-mq3nf 4 года назад +10

      Going to college is a choice...take responsibility for your choices, snowflakes

    • @spqr1945
      @spqr1945 4 года назад +75

      @@Daniel-mq3nf then why in Finland colleges are completely free?

  • @yummporridge7800
    @yummporridge7800 4 года назад +2496

    my science teacher told me about this. she doesn’t have kids and she said if she ever did have a kid America wouldn’t be the country she’d raise them in.

    • @yub2.045
      @yub2.045 4 года назад +295

      It's a dangerous environment. Guns everywhere, very few restrictions in many states, poor education system, and the risk of getting involved in a world war

    • @SaraH-jn5db
      @SaraH-jn5db 4 года назад +109

      Smart woman

    • @mangorat5380
      @mangorat5380 4 года назад +13

      What country did she say??

    • @yummporridge7800
      @yummporridge7800 4 года назад +68

      mangorat somewhere in Europe

    • @belgarano4576
      @belgarano4576 4 года назад +9

      Sad

  • @zoebell7601
    @zoebell7601 3 года назад +1

    I would like to say thanks for the very cool animation! Looks like it would have taken a lot of work :)

  • @astralblob
    @astralblob Год назад +1

    Love the visualization of the video! It made understanding the points easier.

  • @kaitlyntaylorhomes
    @kaitlyntaylorhomes 3 года назад +4327

    One time almost our entire math department quit. We had no math teachers for a good few days

  • @elrathJohnson
    @elrathJohnson 3 года назад +3776

    Big point this video doesn't mention is that American teachers have to furnish their own classrooms out of pocket.
    Almost all American students experience bright colors, toys, books, posters, pencils, markers, crayons, often paper, etc in classroom and without the teacher paying out of pocket they would have only bleak cinderblock walls and textbooks to learn from.
    Edit 11/3/2020: I want to clarify that teachers shouldn't have to do this and many other countries don't put this added expense on the teacher, but provide it through public funding.
    Also- to any Americans reading this today: VOTE OH GOD PLEASE VOTE.

    • @finhazel
      @finhazel 3 года назад +36

      unecessary decorations arent required.

    • @elijahstrong3067
      @elijahstrong3067 3 года назад +414

      @@finhazel definitely helps students morale and productivity.

    • @mordorprc1
      @mordorprc1 3 года назад +70

      Is this actually true? Jeez

    • @elrathJohnson
      @elrathJohnson 3 года назад +139

      @@finhazel Required is an interesting word to use, and I think it implies the binary of "educated" or "uneducated".
      All the things I listed aren't "necessary" (for all students) but increase their interest in education, their connection from concepts they learn to concrete understanding, the students happiness, and (most relevant) the teacher's happinesss.
      This video was about teacher retention. Their experience of ease of teaching, joy of teaching, and financial strain are the factors I'm talking about.
      The idea that these things aren't "necessary" is true- for some students- but I view it as missing the point.

    • @elrathJohnson
      @elrathJohnson 3 года назад +29

      @@mordorprc1 Yes.
      As always, reality is more complicated than a quick RUclips comment, but yes.
      The more complicated answer is that teachers can keep their receipt to turn in and try to make a case that it was "needed" for the curriculum. If it fits curriculum and the school has the funding to go around then the teacher could see that money again-weeks or months later.

  • @trishfishseven
    @trishfishseven 2 года назад +6

    My cousins father, who works with technology for Chevron, and has for many years, finished paying off his college depot at age 42. He is 46 as of this year.

  • @christianchellis9057
    @christianchellis9057 6 месяцев назад +3

    Middle school teachers would probably be the most short. No one wants to teach middle school.

  • @bryanpascual3543
    @bryanpascual3543 4 года назад +1710

    USA spends more on “security” but can’t secure enough teachers. 😂

    • @sandorayaki5301
      @sandorayaki5301 4 года назад +5

      True that

    • @aaa-vx8ke
      @aaa-vx8ke 4 года назад +7

      It’s just that schools can’t manage their million a year budget.

    • @aaa-vx8ke
      @aaa-vx8ke 4 года назад +2

      And that’s for an extremely small school

    • @jsuoar6394
      @jsuoar6394 4 года назад +24

      What security? It's so easy to bring a weapon to school

    • @NikonKanava
      @NikonKanava 4 года назад +8

      @@jsuoar6394 Wait, have you tried!?

  • @thehustlinhomemaker1467
    @thehustlinhomemaker1467 3 года назад +1916

    Not to mention... The PARENTS in the US are very unlikely to back you up as a teacher ... You'll get phone calls in the middle of the night about 12th grader Johnny from his mother about why he won't have his project the next day. Most of your day is used up trying to maintain class management because several students have zero expectations from home to respect their teachers.

    • @amywalker7515
      @amywalker7515 3 года назад +60

      My favorite is when the parents in the PTA or the ones who donate a lot have acting up kids and think because they are a presence at the school their kids should get passed on to the next grade or even get awards. Donald Trump and George Bush Jr. come to mind. The buy your kids a degree is a real thing once you get to a certain level of income.

    • @cranjismcbasketball3513
      @cranjismcbasketball3513 3 года назад +54

      I mean yeah I get all A’s and like one B most of the time but my mom knows when I get a B it’s my fault. I hear daily from my English and science teacher about students who have almost no assignments done. It baffles me how bad you can be in a class, even though I spend most of my free time on RUclips or playing video games. If every other student in your child’s class is passing, and your child isn’t, it’s your fault, not the teachers

    • @zjean3417
      @zjean3417 3 года назад +17

      Not to mention you also have to pay extra attention and more time to special need students.

    • @dontkillmyvibe1433
      @dontkillmyvibe1433 3 года назад +14

      actually I think parents all over the world makes excuses for their kids, but in my case,
      i was taught to respect teachers

    • @MrCamara47
      @MrCamara47 2 года назад +26

      I remember my mother got mad at my 4th grade teacher for suggesting that receiving more attention at home would help me not be such a obstructive force in the classroom. She stormed out. As the 25 year old version of that 4th grader, my teacher was absolutely correct.

  • @namjoonsversaceunderwear6503
    @namjoonsversaceunderwear6503 3 года назад +2

    a lot has to do with mutual respect imo. in my old public school teachers were *heavily* disrespected and breakdowns were common but at my current private school basic respect is normal (as it should be). we thank the teachers after class and all of my teachers are the fun teachers because they feel welcomed and wanted

  • @tobiwan001
    @tobiwan001 3 года назад +3

    The US also spends a significant amount of its education budget on school sports. In European countries sports are usually organized in clubs outside the school.

  • @poland657
    @poland657 3 года назад +2371

    In a way, teachers have the most important job In the world?

    • @baranjan6969
      @baranjan6969 3 года назад +113

      Jobs make things happen
      Teachers make jobs happen
      Its like relation between inventor and invention, inventor doesnt need invention to exist but invention needs inventor to exist

    • @palmeramusic4838
      @palmeramusic4838 3 года назад +2

      It is

    • @nerd_nato564
      @nerd_nato564 3 года назад +18

      Well, yeah. They're the ones in charge of transferring our knowledge to the new generations.

    • @poland657
      @poland657 3 года назад +2

      NERD_NATO I don’t think your understanding the bigger picture

    • @Thedeathdump
      @Thedeathdump 3 года назад +6

      Yea its true. Why do you think so many of the severely underfunded states are trump states 🤣🤣🤣

  • @loveyhernandez5203
    @loveyhernandez5203 4 года назад +3231

    How to solve the teacher shortage
    Pay them more

    • @caltherobot720
      @caltherobot720 4 года назад +129

      I work as a teacher in China because I can get the same kind of pay for half the teaching hours.
      I only spend 2 hours and 40 minute each day actually teaching and have time to lesson plan or do whatever I want the rest of the day. I would never go back to the US and spend all day long teaching students and have to lesson plan in the evening after work... That's madness.

    • @Sweet4chokoreeto
      @Sweet4chokoreeto 4 года назад +64

      Let them work less, good health insurance 4 free, a good coffee machine and tea on their offices, every 3 to 5 years take them to a nice touristic city and make them study half the day and let them chill the rest of the day. 2 weeks later everybody come back with a fresh view of the world and their work.
      And stop drinking Gatorade or milk at lunch. Drink water.

    • @sybo59
      @sybo59 4 года назад +9

      Government should have nothing to do with education. Want better education for your kids? “Pay them more” yourself, voluntarily - don’t go forcing everyone else to subsidize your values at the sacrifice of our own.

    • @loveyhernandez5203
      @loveyhernandez5203 4 года назад +80

      sybo59 “gOvErNmeNt sHoULd HaVE nOtHiNg tO dO wiTh eDucAtiOn” do you realize PUBLIC education is payed by the government in general?do you want everyone in the US to go to a private school ?

    • @sybo59
      @sybo59 4 года назад +3

      lovey hernandez And where does the government get its money? Only by using physical force (or the threat thereof) to take it from people against their will. This is obviously evil. I suggest you read Ayn Rand. If educations is so important to you, why would you be unwilling to pay for it yourself and encourage others to VOLUNTARILY do the same?

  • @davidmizak4642
    @davidmizak4642 Год назад

    You deliver excellent content to your audience. It's very interesting material. All of your effort put into creating this video is much appreciated. I'm truly grateful for your help!

  • @winglt3
    @winglt3 6 месяцев назад

    This has been sitting in my watch later playlist for years, its a good video, i actually wish that i watched it earlier

  • @julesmurdock999
    @julesmurdock999 3 года назад +821

    So sad. I’m from Canada & my moms a teacher. While we were on vacation in the states once we were talking to our waiter at a restaurant. He said he quit teaching because he was making more money at his side part-time job (waitressing) than his full-time teaching job. I left feeling so thankful for my mother & really appreciated her

    • @hibiki5743
      @hibiki5743 3 года назад +34

      One of my mothers friends wanted to go into teaching but she also quit because she realized the same thing. She could make more money waiting tables then teaching.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 3 года назад +8

      Teachers get paid more in America than Canada so don't feel bad

    • @lukerickbeil1360
      @lukerickbeil1360 3 года назад +20

      @@jsebby2284 teachers are treated way worse in the states tho.

    • @jsebby2284
      @jsebby2284 3 года назад +2

      @@lukerickbeil1360 you mean by like students and parents? Yeah probably

    • @lukerickbeil1360
      @lukerickbeil1360 3 года назад +11

      @@jsebby2284 well and the system makes them teach in a way that they don’t want to.

  • @scottyj6226
    @scottyj6226 4 года назад +708

    Hey, just like the old soviet citizen said, "they pay me little, I work little."

  • @krmaheshvit
    @krmaheshvit 2 года назад +1

    Great video
    And the animation is outstanding too

  • @CornerTalker
    @CornerTalker 6 месяцев назад +3

    1. It's not about the hours.
    2. It's not about the money.
    It is about:
    1. It's about lack of discipline from admin. Admin is so afraid to ruffle parents' feathers they allow chaos and crime in the schools.
    2. It's about bungled bureaucracy.
    2a They lay out detailed "standards" for us to teach and then give students tests which do not reflect the standards.
    2b They lay out detailed "standards" for us to teach and then excuse any student with a doctor's note from meeting the standards.
    2c The tests are given repeatedly until the students are bored numb. The students are fully aware that the test will be used in our reviews but count for nothing on their side - can't affect their grades, can't affect their sports eligibility, can't effect their college acceptance - click; next question: click; next question: click; next questions: click.
    3 Schools are becoming politicized. `nuff said about that.

  • @giffordscott2599
    @giffordscott2599 3 года назад +585

    *typing on keyboard*
    How to get your government to watch a youtube video

    • @ava4885
      @ava4885 3 года назад +16

      why has no one seen this comment,, it’s gold💀

    • @giffordscott2599
      @giffordscott2599 3 года назад +9

      @@ava4885 aww thank you sooooo much thats so sweet

    • @giffordscott2599
      @giffordscott2599 3 года назад +16

      @@ava4885 i hope you work for the government

    • @Achill101
      @Achill101 3 года назад +5

      Good comment.
      I believe you have to show it to legislators. But they don't listen.

    • @mokbowen37
      @mokbowen37 3 года назад +1

      HAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA

  • @katemurray8201
    @katemurray8201 3 года назад +2896

    My dad used to always say to me growing up: “you shouldn’t want to be a teacher, you’re too smart for that.” Apparently teaching would be settling for an *easy* career smh

    • @EH23831
      @EH23831 3 года назад +191

      I’m currently a teacher- I have had two other careers: research scientist and Naturopath. I can tell you teaching is WAY more complex and demanding than my other two careers (I’ve also worked in retail and restaurants- teaching is harder!)

    • @lexx348
      @lexx348 3 года назад +42

      @@EH23831 Naturopathy is pseudoscientific alternative medicine. How do you combine that with scientific research?

    • @EH23831
      @EH23831 3 года назад +44

      @@lexx348 hmmm - a lot of Naturopathy, particularly the herbal medicine and the nutrition, is founded on and relates to biochemistry and pharmacology - both subjects I did at university... so they complement quite well.

    • @DoABarrelRol1l
      @DoABarrelRol1l 3 года назад +72

      I agree, you're too smart *to make that terrible financial and labor intensive decision*

    • @painted_k9
      @painted_k9 3 года назад +16

      @@EH23831 I've studied pharmacology too-- the link between complementary therapies and that is very very loose. It's very unscientific and unregulated; I guess I don't have to tell you, but it's very difficult to say any of it better than placebo. There are maybe a few exceptions, but it's few and far between. Often there isn't a great incentive for things like double blind RCTs in the first place.

  • @DraDiSe
    @DraDiSe 3 года назад +9

    It's funny even imagine to have a shortage of teachers; here in Spain is quite the opposite. You have to take government exams to get the job since most of the education here is public and we have tons and I mean TONS of teachers overqualified competing against each other for a place.
    A lot of people just do this for the long vacation period and "well paid" and stable government contract, and since its quite easy to access the major in education. Also, a good amount of people don't do this for vocation, just because their notes weren't high enough for something other majors, making teachers a not very respected profesion

    • @EfeFlet
      @EfeFlet Год назад

      La verdad en mi entorno los profesores sí se consideran bastante bien, pero he leído varios comentarios de otros españoles sobre lo que tú dices y me ha llamado la atención. Personalmente, cualquiera que pueda aprobar unas oposiciones ya me parece que merece respeto, y ya te digo que en la vida he oído decir que ser profesor no es una profesión bien valorada. Lo que sí he oído siempre es lo de que tienen muchas vacaciones y tal, pero en realidad el trabajo de los profesores no acaba con el curso escolar, así que supongo que eso tiene más que ver con nuestras percepción de la profesión. De qué parte de España eres? Igual tiene que ver con eso jajajajjaja me llama mucho la atención

  • @fanofipa
    @fanofipa 5 месяцев назад

    This video needs to be longer - there is so much to unpack!

  • @VS-is1gc
    @VS-is1gc 3 года назад +2096

    I was an exchange student in America for a year from Finland. Now at home I'm very average student, but in America I was easily the smartest in the class.

    • @samuelking4723
      @samuelking4723 3 года назад +282

      Careful, there’s a difference between smart and knowledgeable. You may have just had more exposure to that specific material, while the American kids had exposure to different material that would make them seem like the smartest kids if they went to school in Finland for a year. There are a bunch of other confounding variables, but that was the first to come to mind.

    • @slouberiee
      @slouberiee 3 года назад +219

      @@samuelking4723 US kids wouldn't be knowledgeable anywhere... maybe in handling smartphone, camera and editing... but really in OECD stats they are really not doing well in any subject.

    • @samuelking4723
      @samuelking4723 3 года назад +40

      @@slouberiee Well the private and charter school kids certainly are. Maybe the problem is the government, and education should be left to the private sector.

    • @everzubia5860
      @everzubia5860 3 года назад +60

      @@slouberiee OECD has nothing to do with a person's general knowledge, taking into consideration is solely core classes that students are tested on

    • @razvanandreiantonescurogoz4236
      @razvanandreiantonescurogoz4236 3 года назад +157

      @@samuelking4723 Intelligence without knowledge is worthless. Also, how did a person from Finland have more exposure to American school subjects than the American students themselves ?

  • @40wetnoodles
    @40wetnoodles 3 года назад +742

    Literally in school and everywhere else people will tell you not to be a teacher because you wont make any money

    • @sarahsmile777
      @sarahsmile777 3 года назад +22

      like all the time

    • @azuredao2248
      @azuredao2248 3 года назад +2

      Wonder what happens when you run out of teachers

    • @silviaflorentina3685
      @silviaflorentina3685 3 года назад +5

      You're not wrong tho...

    • @kornburg14
      @kornburg14 3 года назад +4

      you make a good amount of money in germany, and you cant fired, its awesome

    • @avinashtyagi2
      @avinashtyagi2 3 года назад

      It's true though, I would dissuade my kids from ever being teachers

  • @marianatrindade2695
    @marianatrindade2695 2 года назад

    this video has so much quality!

  • @user-yj5ph6qs4q
    @user-yj5ph6qs4q 2 года назад +3

    Actually, I was in graduate school of education and have been worked a school in South Korea. When I saw this statistics, I couldn't help to be surprised. That average working time is only "officially (visible) time" in schools of Korea. In fact, most secondary schools of Korea generally open from am.7 to pm.9-10, means teachers also have to work by that time(even if that doesn't need all of teachers). I think the working time and the system of Korean schools are not like other countries you see, that time must be revised into 'real' working time.