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Ontario Government (Conservative majority), 2025-29

It was even better if you were a 'shop teacher'. They all came from industry and did a summer course (or maybe two) on 'how to be a teacher'. The professional academics put an end to that. How many high schools have shops now?

It's like when I took 'law enforcement' at community college. All of our profs were retired coppers. Professional academics have pretty much put an end to that. Some colleges still have some ex-coppers as part-time faculty.
Colleges and universities interestingly enough have no formal standards for this and will ‘generally’ hire competent people from the field.

The shops teacher part irks me. I would likely switch to being a shops teacher (red seal machinist, working on getting a red seal millwright ticket too, have the time and signed book, just need to formalize it all), but the year without pay is a deal breaker for me considering I make as much as a top end teacher right now.

Plus starting I would be at the bottom of the scale and likely stay close to the bottom end because I don’t have a degree, and you need those to move up the pay scale.

My 12 years of job experience with a diploma and full apprenticeship isn’t worth anywhere near a fresh out of university teacher who just got a degree and went straight into teaching. Despite the fact I can walk out of there into a 50$+ a hour job without issue.

The difficulty in becoming a shops teacher now makes me question most that do, if you’re such a good tradesperson why take the paycut?
 
Colleges and universities interestingly enough have no formal standards for this and will ‘generally’ hire competent people from the field.

The shops teacher part irks me. I would likely switch to being a shops teacher (red seal machinist, working on getting a red seal millwright ticket too, have the time and signed book, just need to formalize it all), but the year without pay is a deal breaker for me considering I make as much as a top end teacher right now.

Plus starting I would be at the bottom of the scale and likely stay close to the bottom end because I don’t have a degree, and you need those to move up the pay scale.

My 12 years of job experience with a diploma and full apprenticeship isn’t worth anywhere near a fresh out of university teacher who just got a degree and went straight into teaching. Despite the fact I can walk out of there into a 50$+ a hour job without issue.

The difficulty in becoming a shops teacher now makes me question most that do, if you’re such a good tradesperson why take the paycut?
I don't know where he got his engine skills but the chap teaching small engines locally was a history major
 
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