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3 min
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Why Teachers paid so little in Telugu | Why are Teachers Quit in Telugu | by Kiran Varma in Telugu Kiran Varma
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- Vetenskap
Why Teachers paid so little in Telugu
Why are Teachers Quit in Telugu Kiran Varma in Telugu
ఉపాధ్యాయులు ఎందుకు అంత తక్కువ చెల్లించారు ఉపాధ్యాయులు ఎందుకు నిష్క్రమించారు
#KiranVarma #Kiranvarmatelugu #science #telugunews #telugu #teachers #education #schools #students
Audio version of this video available on all platforms : https://anchor.fm/kiranvarma
Follow us on Facebook @ fb.com/kiranvarmaoo/
Watch video on YouTube https://youtu.be/AmnbwFHvuNU
When it comes to choosing a career, you don't have to decide between meaning and money. For example, surgeons earn over $300,000 a year and 96 percent of them say their job makes the world a better place. For many occupations, however, there is a significant disparity between pay and meaning. And because of that disparity, some jobs, like teachers, end up having to leave the profession they felt so driven to go into. PayScale's recent report, The Most and Least Meaningful Jobs, shows that teachers at all levels report consistently high levels of job meaning. But they also report consistently low rates of pay. Ninety-six percent of postsecondary English language and literature teachers reported high job meaning. That's second only to the clergy for high job meaning. Their earnings also hover around clergy level: $43,600 median pay for postsecondary English teachers, and $46,600 for clergy.
Why Teachers paid so little in Telugu
Why are Teachers Quit in Telugu Kiran Varma in Telugu
ఉపాధ్యాయులు ఎందుకు అంత తక్కువ చెల్లించారు ఉపాధ్యాయులు ఎందుకు నిష్క్రమించారు
#KiranVarma #Kiranvarmatelugu #science #telugunews #telugu #teachers #education #schools #students
Audio version of this video available on all platforms : https://anchor.fm/kiranvarma
Follow us on Facebook @ fb.com/kiranvarmaoo/
Watch video on YouTube https://youtu.be/AmnbwFHvuNU
When it comes to choosing a career, you don't have to decide between meaning and money. For example, surgeons earn over $300,000 a year and 96 percent of them say their job makes the world a better place. For many occupations, however, there is a significant disparity between pay and meaning. And because of that disparity, some jobs, like teachers, end up having to leave the profession they felt so driven to go into. PayScale's recent report, The Most and Least Meaningful Jobs, shows that teachers at all levels report consistently high levels of job meaning. But they also report consistently low rates of pay. Ninety-six percent of postsecondary English language and literature teachers reported high job meaning. That's second only to the clergy for high job meaning. Their earnings also hover around clergy level: $43,600 median pay for postsecondary English teachers, and $46,600 for clergy.
3 min