>Leaf dollars
I don't know but maybe the other guy with 60k paid cops is American.
Cops make $115k a year
Sure, but it's still easier than your typical job. Dealing with angry parents? I've had a call center job. Always dealt with angry people. Skilled work? I'm an electrician and I'm willing to bet this is way harder not just physically, but intellectually. In this one union, electricians still have to go to class in the nights after work for certain days of the week and for every wage increase, you have to take a test. It isn't routine based and everyday is different which to me is very very stressful. Teaching is routine based.
There's nothing wrong with a job being easy. I'm just stating that is what it is. It's just straight up easier than your typical job.
You haven't actually read what I said right? What I meant is it's not a routine based work, children/teens are not robots, classes must be different for each classroom, not on the day-to-day basis but on the planning level. Every class plan must be academically (education theory-wise, not subject) sound and accounted for. I don't doubt being an electrician is hard and all but you're shitting on other people's jobs saying it it's easy. I've worked in so many jobs before landing a teacher job it's not even funny, and the one I've had the most intellectual work, and the most draining by far, is teaching, no doubt. You guys think the skill set for teaching is a high-school level knowledge on the subject and ignore the pedagogical procedures and theory teachers must absolutely master for them to be competent. It's shit that must be updated everytime too and there's obviously no after-hours pay for it. Your opinion is literally Dunning-Kruger syndrome.
Oh well, I wish what I said was actually true for most schools at least. Most schools don' take education seriously and just see their students as clients so, in a way, you're right.