I have 2 (public school) teachers around me: both with Master's, both in their 40's and with over 13/15 years' experience, and they get both 2,100 brutto (yes 18 hours teaching but many more hours to attend meetings, to do paperwork, to look after the kids on schooltrips not to mention work at home so very easily 40/hrs per week)
Sorry, but you've been caught lying yet again -
experto24.pl/oswiata/place-i-finanse/bez-podwyzek-dla-nauczycieli-men-chce-utrzymac-obecne-zarobki-nauczycieli.html
The link very clearly shows that the minimum for a teacher with a Masters degree and pedagogical training is 2265 zł. That's for a teacher at the "stażysta" stage - which lasts for one year. It is almost unheard of for a teacher to not move onto the "kontraktowy" stage - at which point, they earn 2331 zł brutto. A teacher in their 40's would be highly unlikely to remain at that stage - mianowany is relatively easy to obtain, which carries a salary of 2647 zł brutto for that 18 academic hours a week. It's also unusual for teachers to do only 18 hours a week - overtime is quite common and nothing out of the ordinary in Polish schools.
Now, if you want to get into the nitty gritty (and I wouldn't - you've been caught lying about basic facts, you're not going to win any sort of debate with me on this topic) - what you say is also nonsense. Yes, there are meetings with parents, but school trips are not compulsory for teachers (indeed, many teachers refuse due to liability issues) - and teachers have very few internal meetings in school. In fact, what's interesting about Polish schools is how little management oversight there is of teachers.
If you want, we can discuss it further - however - given that I work in a semi-public school and know a thing or two about how teaching works in the real world, you might not want to go there. I notice that you've also completely failed to mention many of the benefits we get that most employees in businesses only dream of getting. Trying to quote a salary that isn't even real - schools *cannot* pay someone less than the minimums quoted there - isn't a good way to debate.
I have also mentioned 2,500 brutto because I know 3 girls (aged 32-33) in 2 ministries/government institutions, with Master's and 2-3 years' experience, NOT at the lowest level and that's the pay they get.
I think you're making one big mistake, typical for foreigners in Poland - you believe what Poles tell you when it comes to salaries. Poles are utter liars in my experience when it comes to talking about money - pretending to be poor is almost a national sport here. I think almost everyone on this forum that's lived in Poland has a story or two about "poor Poles" actually earning a significant amount on the side.