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kontiki ) wrote:
: : Exactly... and most Americans are too cheap to pay what it would REALLY : cost to buy food, a home or most other things (except automobiles) if real : actual citizens did the work and got paid a fair wage for the work. : U.S. school teachers are now targets of the Cheap Labor Lobby: http://www.vdare.com/guzzardi/050826_vfl.htm VDARE.com: 08/26/05 - View From Lodi, CA: Look Out Teachers; The H-1B Visa Gang Wants Your Job ``...Rob Sanchez, who tracks non-immigrant visa issues and is the Webmaster for the invaluable www.zazona.com, says school districts fail to look at unemployed local professionals. Many laid off software engineers, for example, have gone back to school to get education degrees. Wrote Sanchez in his August 3rd newsletter: "School districts all over the United States are actively recruiting foreign teachers for our schools. In this case, Filipino math and science teachers on H-1B visas have just arrived in Nevada. I have talked to many engineers and programmers that have been unable to get teaching jobs in math and science, despite the fact that they went back to school to get education degrees. Despite the growing number of desperate unemployed high-tech workers states like Nevada still claim there is a shortage of these types of teachers. This is just another cruel insult to the growing number of highly educated professionals that can't find meaningful work." [snip] If you wonder why the attraction to H-1Bs is so strong, read the 2004 National Education Association report Trends in Foreign Teacher Recruitment. From the NEA report: "...Some foreign teachers receive lower pay than comparable teachers in their schools." And: "...Some school districts pay their nonimmigrant employees as new teachers, regardless of their experience and qualifications."...'' --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
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![]() "leslie" wrote in message .. . kontiki ) wrote: : : Exactly... and most Americans are too cheap to pay what it would REALLY : cost to buy food, a home or most other things (except automobiles) if real : actual citizens did the work and got paid a fair wage for the work. : U.S. school teachers are now targets of the Cheap Labor Lobby: I know here in California we need to get rid of the pensions the teachers fireman and such are getting. They should save like the rest of us, or even have a simple 401k. People are living to long they retire @52 collect 75% of thier pay for 30 years or more. There is no way we can keep asking the normal taxpayer to keep paying more taxes. http://www.vdare.com/guzzardi/050826_vfl.htm VDARE.com: 08/26/05 - View From Lodi, CA: Look Out Teachers; The H-1B Visa Gang Wants Your Job ``...Rob Sanchez, who tracks non-immigrant visa issues and is the Webmaster for the invaluable www.zazona.com, says school districts fail to look at unemployed local professionals. Many laid off software engineers, for example, have gone back to school to get education degrees. Wrote Sanchez in his August 3rd newsletter: "School districts all over the United States are actively recruiting foreign teachers for our schools. In this case, Filipino math and science teachers on H-1B visas have just arrived in Nevada. I have talked to many engineers and programmers that have been unable to get teaching jobs in math and science, despite the fact that they went back to school to get education degrees. Despite the growing number of desperate unemployed high-tech workers states like Nevada still claim there is a shortage of these types of teachers. This is just another cruel insult to the growing number of highly educated professionals that can't find meaningful work." [snip] If you wonder why the attraction to H-1Bs is so strong, read the 2004 National Education Association report Trends in Foreign Teacher Recruitment. From the NEA report: "...Some foreign teachers receive lower pay than comparable teachers in their schools." And: "...Some school districts pay their nonimmigrant employees as new teachers, regardless of their experience and qualifications."...'' --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
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leslie wrote:
``...Rob Sanchez, who tracks non-immigrant visa issues and is the Webmaster for the invaluable www.zazona.com, says school districts fail to look at unemployed local professionals. Many laid off software engineers, for example, have gone back to school to get education degrees. "School districts all over the United States are actively recruiting foreign teachers for our schools. In this case, Filipino math and science teachers on H-1B visas have just arrived in Nevada. Yeah. The teachers' union here in Jersey got certain certification restrictions put in place to reduce competition from computer people. Basically, if you were a computer science major, you can't get a teaching certificate. Math and "hard" science majors get preferrential treatment (they're a bit scarce), but even an art major can get a certificate. CS majors don't qualify as "science" and don't have the credits in education or the arts to qualify. Foreigners with math degrees can walk right in, especially if they can also teach Spanish. The State mandated Spanish classes for all students a few years ago and is still a bit short of certified teachers. There are a few ways around it. A friend of mine is teaching in the prison system. It doesn't pay well, but she doesn't need the certificate she'd need to teach high school (and her students are nicer). I've known other people who worked as "substitute" teachers pretty much full time. Again, they're exempt from the most restrictive regs, and, again, it doesn't pay much. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
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