True, however I wouldn’t doubt if some lefty teachers stole it and use it as an assignment. I don’t know about all teachers, but back When I graduated high school in the early/mid 2000s Most teachers made up their own assignments, quizzes, etc. And rarely, if ever relied on premade material.
The few teachers that relied and some sort of premade material are we sure the least interest in caring about teaching and even responding to questions appropriately.
No, she didn't steal it. That site is a compendium of worksheets that teachers can pay a subscription into to have access to worksheets -- that other teachers and curriculum organizations -- have submitted. Some are made by teachers themselves; some are submitted by organizations. There is a problem with relying too heavily on premade material (although I've used other teachers' material that isn't copyrighted myself -- if anything for ideas for teaching an assignment; just like I had to submit my own work to compendiums myself -- yes, had to: when I worked for a private education company that was part of the contract -- any material I made was owned by them). A lot of the younger teachers are told about this -- you don't have to make your own material, just check the copyright laws to make sure you aren't breaking those -- so they don't even look into what they are printing out...if it's on the website, then it must be ok (kinda like how people take in their news).
True, however I wouldn’t doubt if some lefty teachers stole it and use it as an assignment. I don’t know about all teachers, but back When I graduated high school in the early/mid 2000s Most teachers made up their own assignments, quizzes, etc. And rarely, if ever relied on premade material.
The few teachers that relied and some sort of premade material are we sure the least interest in caring about teaching and even responding to questions appropriately.
No, she didn't steal it. That site is a compendium of worksheets that teachers can pay a subscription into to have access to worksheets -- that other teachers and curriculum organizations -- have submitted. Some are made by teachers themselves; some are submitted by organizations. There is a problem with relying too heavily on premade material (although I've used other teachers' material that isn't copyrighted myself -- if anything for ideas for teaching an assignment; just like I had to submit my own work to compendiums myself -- yes, had to: when I worked for a private education company that was part of the contract -- any material I made was owned by them). A lot of the younger teachers are told about this -- you don't have to make your own material, just check the copyright laws to make sure you aren't breaking those -- so they don't even look into what they are printing out...if it's on the website, then it must be ok (kinda like how people take in their news).