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Teachers Sound Off on Morale Crisis

It's well known that many teachers feel demoralized, and for some time, educators have been leaving their jobs at an alarming rate. 

In a Washington Post article, education writer Valerie Strauss noted that teachers' satisfaction level has dropped 23 percentage points since 2008. It is also the lowest it's been in 25 years. 

The National Education Association looked at why teachers are leaving, identifying issues such as lack of professional advancement and professional development opportunities, and lack of support and recognition from administration. Other issues--low salaries and professional prestige, frustration over teacher evaluations and unmanageable workloads--emerged as well. 

In Why Are Teachers Leaving the Profession? an EducationWorld poll asked: What is the top reason teachers leave the profession?

This is what our readers shared: 

  • Low pay: 21%
  • Lack of autonomy and influence over work: 38%
  • Lack of support from administration: 38%
  • Little opportunity to collaborate and learn from colleagues: 4%

Coverage of the teacher satisfaction crisis has prompted a great deal of online chatter among educators. Many have expressed grievances regarding their own school systems and American education in general.

Here are some of their comments:

Reader cburris said: "Mr. Duncan, Mr. Gates, Mr. Obama, can you hear us now? For over a year we have been trying to explain why the RTTT policies on teacher evaluation, the Common Core and testing are destroying public schools. The nonsense that teachers just need to get used to being evaluated by test scores, and that we are just 'anxious' ignores the truth. What do you think will happen to student learning as good principals and teachers leave the profession and do all they can do to avoid high-needs schools because of politicians and billionaires who try to micromanage the profession? If your intent was to make the men and women who dedicate their lives to our nation's children miserable, you can put up the banner 'Mission Accomplished.' "

User valdezvaldez chimed in: "I've been a teacher, principal, curriculum director and acting superintendent. Teaching in the classroom has been the most challenges of all my positions. The Common Core is nothing new. Teachers have been practicing those principles for many years. It's basic teaching, nothing else. People taught because they loved teaching and learning. Now they can't wait to get out of teaching, myself included. Don't become a teacher, it is degrading and thankless. Salespeople get more respect."

Said georgia198305: "Teachers have a very demanding and important job. For some strange reason, it is popular to blame teachers for everything that is going wrong in our society. The truth is that teachers work long hours and that many people think they only work when the students are in class. A lot of nonsense is based on the idea that the teacher's workday is the same as the student workday."

Hank53 added: "I just retired after 36 years in the teaching profession. The music department was cut a teacher, so I was doing the job of two teachers. My energy just gave out. No one seems to care about what is going on in public education. My stress level has decreased greatly [since retirement]. I admit that I have tried to discourage my best and brightest students from entering the profession. I once had a student tell me that he would never be able to be a teacher because of all of the 'crap' that they must endure. He has now gone on to higher education and is majoring in math...to be used in the private sector. I agree with georgia that people think teachers are to blame for the ills of society. Most people do not have a clue what goes on with kids in a classroom. I left and am doing my health a big favor. It is time to move on and up!"

Feeling a little depressed at this point? Remember that educators also have many positive things to say about the profession. These EducationWorld readers shared why they couldn't imagine doing anything other than teaching. And be sure to check out our stress-relieving tips below.

Related resource

Four Essential Ways to Avoid Educator Burnout


Article by Kassondra Granata, EducationWorld Contributor
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