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Teaching Profession The State of Teaching

鈥榊ou Don鈥檛 Know Teacher Tired': Educators Sound Off on Misconceptions

By Madeline Will, Elizabeth Heubeck, Ileana Najarro, Arianna Prothero & Sarah Schwartz 鈥 March 15, 2024 1 min read
Frank Rivera teaches 7th grade ELA at Chaparral Star Academy in Austin, Texas, on Nov. 15, 2023.
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The first-ever EdWeek Teacher Morale Index stands at -13, on a scale ranging from -100 to +100, with higher scores indicating more positive feelings about the profession.

The index, a multi-faceted measure of teacher satisfaction, is a central feature of 澳门跑狗论坛鈥檚 new project, The State of Teaching. It gauges teachers鈥 levels of confidence and enthusiasm about their work based on responses to three survey questions that were part of a larger, nationally representative poll of nearly 1,500 teachers last October.

This year鈥檚 score suggests that on average, teachers are feeling more negatively than positively about their jobs. But why exactly is teacher morale so low?

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There are, of course, many reasons, including low salaries, heavy workloads, and a lack of support. The State of Teaching explored many of those themes.

To dig in a little deeper, 澳门跑狗论坛 reporters asked five teachers from across the country to share the hardest parts of teaching in recent years, as well as what they see as the biggest misconceptions about their jobs.

These answers have been edited for length and clarity.

What has been the hardest work-related challenge in the past two years?

   鈥淭his past year, I became a mom. [I pieced together a maternity leave with the limited days off I had accumulated as a new teacher, donated sick leave from other teachers, extra sick days paid at a reduced rate, and unpaid leave.] My maternity leave cost me $4,000.

鈥淎nd then ... Oklahoma gave teachers six weeks [of paid maternity leave]. I was excited鈥攁nd [missing that opportunity] was frustrating, to say the least. It has been financially a stressful year.

鈥淭hrow all of that in with just the learning curve that it is to become a parent, especially a mom. My son is still very much attached to me above anybody else. It made going back to work鈥攆or three weeks until the school year ended鈥攂ittersweet, because I was very much ready to go back to work, but I also wanted to be with my baby. I was stressed about leaving my baby.

鈥淚 invest a lot emotionally into my students鈥攇etting to know them very individually, getting to know their families. I鈥檓 now navigating having your patience bucket for your school life and then turning around to go home and do all that, too, [with my own child]. It鈥檚 challenging. But it鈥檚 worth it.鈥

鈥擲ofia Alvarez-Briglie, a 7th grade science teacher at Alcott Middle School in Norman, Okla.

See also

Marianna Ruggerio, a physics teacher at Auburn High School in Rockford, Ill., is eight months pregnant with her second child. Her school district does not offer paid maternity leave, so she plans to use her sick days, then take unpaid leave.
Marianna Ruggerio, a physics teacher at Auburn High School in Rockford, Ill., is eight months pregnant with her second child. Her school district does not offer paid maternity leave, so she plans to use her sick days, then take unpaid leave.
Alyssa Schukar for 澳门跑狗论坛

   Getting it all in. Time management. Curriculum requirements鈥攎anaging that with classroom management.鈥

鈥擩acqueline Chaney, 2nd grade teacher at New Town Elementary in Owings Mills, Md.

   Not being able to provide my non-English-speaking students with an iPad in grades 3 to 5. I have two students, one in 3rd grade and one in 4th grade, for whom this is their second year for language acquisition. And they didn鈥檛 have any academic experience in their native language.

鈥淵es, they have a computer, they can use Google Translate. But with an iPad, they can take a picture [of a physical resource] and they can translate that text or the instructions given to perform a specific task. I believe that with that tool, it will ease their anxiety. It will make them more independent.鈥

鈥擥riselle Rivera-Martinez, an English-for-speakers-of-other-languages teacher at Enterprise Elementary School in Enterprise, Fla.

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Calendar posted on a bulletin board with sticky notes displaying emojis which become increasingly despondent as the month progresses
Vanessa Solis/澳门跑狗论坛 vis Canva

   Last year, the biggest challenge was dealing with students that still hadn鈥檛 fully recovered from the COVID break鈥攁nd it was a break, fundamentally, for a lot of kids.

鈥淲e had students that came to our school for the first time. [At our charter school, students attend half days in two cohorts so they can pursue other time-intensive pursuits.] ... We鈥檙e operating under the assumption that you can be in some way motivated and self-guided鈥攖o be able to do some of the necessary learning [on your own]. And sometimes these kids are so far behind that even approaching classroom subject matter is difficult for them, let alone in such a quick and vigorous environment.

鈥淭his year, I feel like there鈥檚 a politicization [brewing]. ... Up until this year, I鈥檝e always felt like the political divide and the increasing stratification of the social environment hasn鈥檛 really made it onto our shores. But this year, we started to notice it and be a little bit concerned about it.鈥

鈥擣rank Rivera, a middle and high school English/language arts teacher at Chaparral Star Academy in Austin, Texas

What is one thing the public misunderstands about the work of a teacher?

   I think because everyone has been at school, they feel like, 鈥極h, I was a student once before. Being a teacher is not that hard, because anyone can teach, right?鈥 They always say that quote, 鈥楾hose who can, do; those who can't, teach.鈥 The big misconception is anyone can teach, anyone can be a teacher. It's not difficult to teach a child to learn. And I just don't think the public knows how much work and effort and heart we put into our jobs.鈥

鈥擧elen Chan, a 4th grade math teacher at South Loop Elementary School in Chicago

   What I have heard out there is that teachers have all these days off. And I have heard from family members: 鈥楾hey do field trips. It鈥檚 so fun.鈥 They don鈥檛 know that it鈥檚 so stressful. You鈥檝e got to make sure that all the kids get back to school, that they have to eat lunch.

鈥淓ven on days off, we鈥檙e still working. We鈥檙e working on those lesson plans. In my case, I might be talking to parents and helping [their children] with homework or whatever project that they need to finish. During the summer, we go to training.鈥

鈥搁颈惫别谤补-惭补谤迟颈苍别锄

See also

Jacqueline Chaney ask her 2nd graders a question during class at New Town Elementary School in Owings Mills, Md., on Oct. 25, 2023.
Jacqueline Chaney ask her 2nd graders a question during class at New Town Elementary School in Owings Mills, Md., on Oct. 25, 2023.
Jaclyn Borowski/澳门跑狗论坛

   You don鈥檛 know teacher tired until you are a teacher. You don鈥檛 realize all the things they do until you are a teacher. I feel that very strongly. During fall break, at a watch party for a football game at my house, the joke got made: 鈥極h, I wish my job gave me breaks.鈥 Everybody thought it was funny. I didn鈥檛 appreciate it. I didn鈥檛 think it was funny.

"Y鈥檃ll can joke all you want, and your jobs are hard in their own respective ways, but you don鈥檛 understand how difficult my job is.鈥

鈥擜濒惫补谤别锄-叠谤颈驳濒颈别

   There鈥檚 a lot I think the public doesn鈥檛 understand. Parents are myopic in that they think that the teacher is there for their child. And that鈥檚 true partially, but I am also there for the classroom environment, and I鈥檓 there for the totality of learning that has to happen. And sometimes one child鈥檚 needs鈥攁nd certainly parent wants鈥攃an鈥檛 come at the sacrifice of the full classroom learning environment. Not all parents, but there are some parents that think too much about what their child is experiencing and not how their child fits into the larger educational community.

鈥淚 also think that there鈥檚 this expectation that lesson planning and classroom discussion happens easily, and it does not. It requires a great deal of planning, a great deal of structure and a long time to manipulate and change. One item of discussion can dramatically impact what happens a week, two weeks, three weeks later, if you don鈥檛 present something in the right way when kids are ready to handle it.鈥

鈥搁颈惫别谤补

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