I hate when people look at the education crisis and think that because schools are failing, teachers don't deserve pay raises. (Hello, maybe the low pay for teachers is why schools are failing!)
Also, back to why I posted that question to begin with: I love what I do, but there's absolutely no reason it needs to be treated like a critical and-of-the-world-if-this-doesn't-get-done thing. I'm not writing software that will prevent the collapse of government, or even anything that's going into a real product yet. Other groups within the company are anxious to get access to our software, though, and so this has led to a lot of pressure to deliver by A Certain Date when all that we had when that date was set was a prototype which runs in an entirely different environment than what they need it on. And, I was hired as a software architect, but instead I'm running boring and slow tests and being constantly pinged for results and having to test other peoples' quick hacks while not getting a chance to actually do my actual job (which is to engineer the version of the system which will actually run on the target platform). It's a stupid situation that I keep getting into.
And, which I'm running late for. Ugh.
Especially when most peoples' vacation time is stated in terms of the number of work hours it replaces to begin with.erik wrote:It's weird to consider that anyone would average their vacation time into their answer to the question "How much do you work a week?"