Student Count. Students who are officially on a class roster on the count day are the only students that may be considered part of the teacher’s class load. Only students who are part of the regularly-attending class can be counted towards overload. Students who have been long-term suspended, expelled or withdrawn (even if their name has not been officially taken off the class list) may not be counted as overload. Students assigned to the classroom to provide assistance to the teacher (e.g., TAs) will not be included in the class counts used to calculate for overload.
Appears in 4 contracts
Samples: Collective Bargaining Agreement, core-docs.s3.amazonaws.com, Bargaining Agreement
Student Count. Students who are officially on a class roster on the count day are the only students that may be considered part of the teacher’s class load. Only students who are part of the regularly-regularly attending class can be counted towards overload. Students who have been long-term suspended, expelled or withdrawn (even if their name has not been officially taken off the class list) may not be counted as overload. Students assigned to the classroom to provide assistance to the teacher (e.g., TAs) will not be included in the class counts used to calculate for overload.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Collective Bargaining Agreement
Student Count. Students who are officially on a class roster on the count day are the only students that may be considered part of the teacher’s teacher‘s class load. Only students who are part of the regularly-attending class can be counted towards overload. Students who have been long-term suspended, expelled or withdrawn (even if their name has not been officially taken off the class list) may not be counted as overload. Students assigned to the classroom to provide assistance to the teacher (e.g., TAs) will not be included in the class counts used to calculate for overload.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Bargaining Agreement