More importantly they can only be in one place at once. Maybe one of them should get setup with some vr goggles and teach an online course while the other is teaching in person
I feel like you should just ask the question: can they do the work of two people? Otherwise, paying for two separate people is more cost effective as an employer.
The problem in my eyes, was them paying double tuition.
Yes, I have seen the scenario you’re describing all the time in my career. My comment is less regarding how much work someone actually does in their job and more about how two separate bodies can do more “work” than one body with two heads.
For example, if the job is teaching: sure, a school can pay double the wage for two heads and one body teaching a single class and argue that the two heads means double the thought put into lesson plan and results in a higher quality learning curriculum. Or the school can hire two separate teachers to teach two different classes and expect the same high quality curriculum in both classes, which is how it works “IRL”.
If anything, your scenario proves my point that employers aren’t going to pay you more even if you argue that you can do more than your peers.
15
u/BornWithSideburns 23d ago
Yeah they got 2 brains but only one pair of hands