Prince George's County School District in Maryland is closed today for "A Day without a Woman's Day"

ColonelAngus

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Feb 25, 2015
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Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
 
No one is stopping men....no one is even stopping con-servatives from getting into education. In fact elementary education is perfect for both groups because it's simpler.
 
My woman stayed home from work today for that.

She's doing my laundry, washing the dishes, cleaning the house and when I get home, she will have supper ready.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.
 
No one is stopping men....no one is even stopping con-servatives from getting into education. In fact elementary education is perfect for both groups because it's simpler.


There are some really stupid FEMINISTS complaining that STEM careers don't have enough bunny rabbits and tulips and that's why women don't get into STEM careers.

I am relating that FUCKING STUPID analysis and applying it to Primary education, where WOMEN are 80% of teacheras, but only 51% of the population.

That is disproportionate and MUST be changed to accurately reflect our society.

Otherwise, education is a misandrous career.
 
No one is stopping men....no one is even stopping con-servatives from getting into education. In fact elementary education is perfect for both groups because it's simpler.


There are some really stupid FEMINISTS complaining that STEM careers don't have enough bunny rabbits and tulips and that's why women don't get into STEM careers.

I am relating that FUCKING STUPID analysis and applying it to Primary education, where WOMEN are 80% of teacheras, but only 51% of the population.

That is disproportionate and MUST be changed to accurately reflect our society.

Otherwise, education is a misandrous career.
No one is stopping men and con-servatives from getting into Elementary Ed, is there? My brother is a 4th-5th grade teacher...but he's not a con-servative.
 
Education is important in this country...just not the highest priority to snowflakes...not as important as selfishly drawing attention to one's own self...

It is said the meek shall inherit the Earth....Democrats want it NOW until then. Screw the kids! :p
 
Total waste of time and effort and it will change nothing but make a few old hens feel all warm and fuzzy they did something for some stupid "cause"
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.
 
Feminists should be APPALLED by the disparity in gender representation within the teaching profession. It's disgusting and the government should implement lots and lots and lots of new regulations to address it.

There should be no women hired into primary education until all 32 genders are represented in numbers that are representative of our nation.
 
No one is stopping men....no one is even stopping con-servatives from getting into education. In fact elementary education is perfect for both groups because it's simpler.


There are some really stupid FEMINISTS complaining that STEM careers don't have enough bunny rabbits and tulips and that's why women don't get into STEM careers.

I am relating that FUCKING STUPID analysis and applying it to Primary education, where WOMEN are 80% of teacheras, but only 51% of the population.

That is disproportionate and MUST be changed to accurately reflect our society.

Otherwise, education is a misandrous career.

In my high school department, there are three women and two men. Two of the women teach the higher level course and one the lower. Two of the the three science teachers are women. One of two agriculture teachers is a woman. Social studies is dominated by men and language arts is all women.

Elementary education is also not attractive to men because many people who see men in that setting often think they are pedophiles.
 
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Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?






You seem unusually interested in how many nights a week college kids went out to party. Strange.
 
No one is stopping men....no one is even stopping con-servatives from getting into education. In fact elementary education is perfect for both groups because it's simpler.

Exactly.

Just as no one is stopping women from STEM careers.

We agree 100%.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?

I started out as Aerospace Engineering, switched to computer science, but had to get a history degree for my commission because my scholarship was running out. I finished that entire history degree coursework in 3 academic quarters, taking about 21 hours each term.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?

I started out as Aerospace Engineering, switched to computer science, but had to get a history degree for my commission because my scholarship was running out. I finished that entire history degree coursework in 3 academic quarters, taking about 21 hours each term.

This guy must know a ton about Orville and Wilbur.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?






You seem unusually interested in how many nights a week college kids went out to party. Strange.

Considering I was one, and as an Engineer I only usually got out one weeknight and some weekends (went home to make $$ at my dad's handyman business) it is more of nostalgia than anything.
 
Prince George's County Public Schools closing due to lack of staffing on 'A Day Without a Woman'

This proves that the careers in education are too focused on women.

Women say that STEM subjects need to be more WOMEN FRIENDLY.

I say elementary education should be more MAN FRIENDLY.

There is a DISPROPORATIONATE AMOUNT OF WOMEN IN PRIMARY EDUCATION.

Women are 80% of teachers, but 51% of the POPULATION.

WE NEED TO HIRE MORE MEN AS TEACHERS!!

PUT SOME HALF NAKED CHICKS AND EXPLOSIONS AND SPORTS IN THOSE CAREERS!!!
We do need more men as teachers, but men don't choose those jobs because they don't pay enough. They are "pink collar" jobs, as are social workers. Predominantly women, so the pay scale is lower than other occupations requiring 5 years of college and ongoing professional licensure and training. Nursing, teaching, social work. All highly skilled fields with a big investment in education, making nowhere close to male dominated occupations in the private sector with commensurate educational/professional requirements . It is because they are "pink collar." Deny it all you like.

RN's make a ton of money once they get past the "need experience" hump. Teaching and social work often do not require specific degrees, and those that do require education degrees.... Lets just say the education majors at my college were only 2nd to the business majors when it came to going out 4 nights a freaking week.
Engineers, Accountants, Pre-Meds, we were lucks if we got our 2-3, and it was usually on an off night (wednesday) when we didn't have labs on the alternating thursdays.

Pardon me, but your information shows a bias to elementary and middle schools. High school teachers usually have a degree in a topic, and not in education. They take additional education courses for their teacher certifications.

For example, I have an undergraduate degree in one of my subject areas, and did not get my teacher certification in that subject and courses for my second certification until 14 years after that.

So you didn't go out 4 nights a week?

What was your subject area?

I started out as Aerospace Engineering, switched to computer science, but had to get a history degree for my commission because my scholarship was running out. I finished that entire history degree coursework in 3 academic quarters, taking about 21 hours each term.

So, no, you didn't go out 4 nights a week.
 

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