Pinoy teachers in Baltimore may lose jobs
About a dozen Filipino teachers recruited three years ago to public schools in Baltimore are facing displacement after their sponsor has failed to have their work visas renewed.
Baltimore County’s The Examiner reported on Friday that the teachers would have to look for another job in other school districts or go back to the Philippines where they are compensated much less than the minimum $40,000 they get in the US yearly.
School districts in Maryland have been recruiting teachers from the Philippines and other countries to fill an annual shortage of 6,000 to 8,000 teachers for hard-to-fill vacancies for Science and Math subjects.
The report quoted Cheryl Bost, president of the Teachers Association of Baltimore County, as saying that the Baltimore County Public School system could no longer afford to sponsor the next level of the visa process for the Filipino teachers.
“This has been going on for six years and they’re letting go of good teachers who are needed in the areas of math and science," Bost said. “In effect, they’re adding to the teacher-retention problem."
Teachers recruited to Maryland can practice their profession there for six years with temporary citizenship, after which they can either apply for US citizenship or go back to the Philippines. - GMANews.TV
Baltimore County’s The Examiner reported on Friday that the teachers would have to look for another job in other school districts or go back to the Philippines where they are compensated much less than the minimum $40,000 they get in the US yearly.
School districts in Maryland have been recruiting teachers from the Philippines and other countries to fill an annual shortage of 6,000 to 8,000 teachers for hard-to-fill vacancies for Science and Math subjects.
The report quoted Cheryl Bost, president of the Teachers Association of Baltimore County, as saying that the Baltimore County Public School system could no longer afford to sponsor the next level of the visa process for the Filipino teachers.
“This has been going on for six years and they’re letting go of good teachers who are needed in the areas of math and science," Bost said. “In effect, they’re adding to the teacher-retention problem."
Teachers recruited to Maryland can practice their profession there for six years with temporary citizenship, after which they can either apply for US citizenship or go back to the Philippines. - GMANews.TV
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