UP IN THE AIR AND SURREAL
TEACHERS' PAY
By Stephen Wilson
Russian teachers like American are under increased pressure to perform. |
I was going on an errand as my eye caught a peculiar poster. It was no
ordinary poster. It was not just another poster encouraging people to
vote in choosing Moscow's mayor in the impending election due on
the 9th September. The poster showed brokers dawning bowler hats
and business suits, all identical, floating in the air. It reminded you of
a surreal painting by either Chagall or Dali. But this poster perhaps best
sums up the unreal atmosphere in which this election is being conducted
and how people are often floating through life in some kind of trance
or living in castles in the air. At first I thought it was an advertisement for
Hugo Boss suits or simply new suits. But then I noticed below an appeal
to vote.
But the unreality of this poster is matched by the hype used to promote
the Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. In one brochure all kinds of unsubstantiated
and inflated claims have been made . For instance, the average school
teacher in Moscow monthly salary rose from 39,000 rubles in 2010, to
70,000 rubles in 2013 to 90,000 in 2018. The leading local education
official claims it is even bigger citing a staggering 110, 000 rubles. So
which is the actual figure- 90,000 or 110,000? Or do men in Hugo
Boss suits float around in the air? In fact, none of those figures are
correct as average salaries often conceal more than they reveal. The
picture is a lot more complex than even we first thought. Second City
Teacher made some inquiries and came across a music teacher who
was working a full time job and receiving 35,000 rubles. One teacher,
who refuses to be named, and knows a lot of teachers who work full
time, believes a more accurate monthly figure is somewhere between
60,000 and 70,000 rubles. But even this figure doesn't do justice to
vast pay differentials between teachers who claim they receive far
less. And often those teachers who obtain this 60,000 rubles are
not working the minimum 18 hour 'stavka' or full time schedule, but
the equivalent of two stavkas. In other words, they are effectively
doing two full-time jobs! Oksana Chebotareva recently met a
school teacher, Olga, who claimed to earn 90,000 rubles a month
in Moscow . "She told me she had to work very long hours for this
salary. But she has to do a lot of paperwork, preparation and reports."
When we go beyond Moscow a more complex picture emerges. For
example, in the Samarskoi region of Russia officials claim that teachers
earn 30,000 rubles a month. Yet a teacher of Social Knowledge, in a rural
village states : "They claim that the average pay of a teacher is 30,000
rubles but this untrue . A full time job amounts to 18 hours . There is a
pay rise out of the school budget . But how can you achieve this ? You
get this extra rise out of the success of students taking Olympiads and high
quality scientific work undertaken by students under the supervision of
teachers . But some of this high quality work goes unrewarded. I do 14
hours and receive 15,000 rubles plus a rise leaves me with 19 to 20,000
rubles. ... They will give you a rise for half a year and afterwards none.
Attaining 30,000 rubles can only be done by doing two jobs. But this is
physically hard and the quality of preparing for lessons suffers."
Natalie , a teacher of Russian from Samara stated : " Young teachers
are running away from schools . Why do such work when a higher
ranking experienced teacher only receives 20,000 rubles even with
extra lessons ? In order to earn your living, you need to do around two
full time jobs - not 18 , but 28-30 hours ".
According to some estimates, a rural
teacher can earn from 9,000 to 13,000 rubles a month.
But if the salaries of school teachers are rising then this is not translated
by increasing satisfaction. On the contrary, a recent survey undertaken
by Rosstat found that while in 2014, 53.2 % of teachers expressed
dissatisfaction with their salaries, in 2016 this rose to 65.3% .
The reasons for this are not hard to find. The rise in teachers' pay has
come at a dreadful price. Because some parents believe that the
teachers are well-paid, they expect them to vastly improve the performance
of their children. Highly unrealistic expectations are placed on teachers.
Classes can be taken from a young teacher on the whim of a complaining
parent. It is as if a consumer model of education has arisen. Instead of
the consumer is always right, the parent is always right. A teacher of
Russian Natalyia stated: "Earlier, parents were the first assistants of
class management. Now a new generation of parents has grown up
who see the role of teacher as an educational servant, forgetting they
are not in the private sector but in a state school. All kinds of invented
complaints are sent to the administration and above".
Russian teachers have never been under more pressure. They have
to work more hours, do more paper work, face more complaints from
parents who are assumed to be always right, and teach pupils who
are also stressed out because they have virtually no free time. And
the curriculum is constantly changing . One history textbook which
history teachers were using can suddenly be removed to be replaced
by a new one. This means all the existing history textbooks which
have been used are simply thrown away even if they are reasonable.
A student of history is expected to learn, in detail, not just the history
of early Russia, but all the periods up to the 21st century and be able
to answer complex questions in the Unitary State Exam on why this
particular Russian white army lost a battle in the Russian Civil War.
School students don't have that much time to cram all those facts
into their brain. Many of them are under pressure to learn two foreign
languages as well as daunting equations in mathematics which are
at times, more appropriate for university students.
If teachers do receive 'higher pay' rises it comes at a price of virtually
being deprived of free time not to mention the negation of their
authority in the classroom by all kinds of officials, parents and
vested interests. Now if a teacher could soar away into the sky without
falling he might just do it!
I would like to acknowledge the assistance of the Journal Russian Reporter
who did a brilliant investigation into the pay and conditions of Russian
school teachers. { issue 17,{456} 27 August - 10 September 2018
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