Indiana

Education, From The Capitol To The Classroom

Why So Many Teachers Still Hate Their Jobs Now

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Teachers rally in Chicago in September 2012.

I am beginning to hate getting out of bed each morning to teach.”

So reads one comment on a post we put up around this time last year — a post about the precipitous drop in teacher job satisfaction to a 20-year low as measured by the 2011 MetLife Survey of the American Teacher.

Clearly, this commenter isn’t alone, and not only because many others left similar comments.

The 2012 survey results just came out, and teacher satisfaction fell even further. Thirty-nine percent of teachers told the MetLife Foundation they were “very satisfied” with their jobs.

It’s the lowest job satisfaction number the survey’s recorded since 1986.

Screenshot / MetLife Foundation

Teacher job satisfaction since 1984, according to a survey from the MetLife Foundation and Harris Interactive. Click on the image to enlarge.

The survey’s authors peg the decline, like they did last year, on shrinking budgets, ballooning stress and a drop in professional development and collaboration time.

Or, as an anonymous StateImpact commenter put it:

“Teachers have no support, or even curriculum. I am seriously considering leaving the profession. My work is devalued constantly, parents cannot be bothered to help their children, and the only professional support available comes from overwrought colleagues.”

The Wrong Kind Of ‘Change’?

To go beyond the percentages, let’s highlight a few of the comments we received about last year’s low teacher job satisfaction numbers. From John Holbrook:

Bureaucrats unfairly judge teachers using test scores, tie teacher performance and pay to meaningless test data, ruin careers, and keep termination hanging over the heads of teachers. When you point this out, it’s dismissed with “change is hard.” Not if you’re safe behind your desk at an advocacy group, Sandi Jacobs. More importantly, it’s change that we don’t need. Once you control for poverty, American schools are among the best in the world. Problem is, we have a lot of poor kids. Seems like the “change” bureaucrats and advocacy groups should be making is making sure poor kids are fed and that they’re in school. Instead of legislating test scores, I’d like to see someone legislate that. Then we teachers could shrug our shoulders as these same advocacy groups and bureaucrats cry about the impossibility of their task and reply “Yeah, well, change is hard.”

From SickOfIt:

Teachers do not become teachers for the money. It is truly unfortunate that districts, driven by state mandates, are wasting our energy and time on changes….just to appear as if something is being done. Change….just for the sake of change. Teachers need to be allowed to do their job effectively. Instead we are blamed for the failed system put in place…..the “non negotiables” that we are required to teach, that gives us no time to do what really needs done. The public has no idea what we are asked to do and how bad things are. Teachers are powerless…….we need to stop blaming teachers and unions for the problems created by the distrcis and government. I work a minimum of 60 hours a week and teach my heart out……I am tired if the disrespect we receive in return for what we give of our personal lives on top of work time. Yes…there are horrible teachers….lets stop treating the majority as if they are too. Let’s put the blame where it belongs. The government and districts are ruining our children’s opportunity to receive a quality education.

‘Stop Whining’? A Back-And-Forth In Our Comments

Jason Suggs wrote:

What is it about teachers that they assume they should be immune to the same problems as everyone else. Most people have seen their incomes drop because of the economy. And the worst thing a teacher has gone through is see a collegue lose a job. Give me a break. Teachers are like spoiled children. I saw we just fire the one who complain the most and things will get a lot better.

NoWhiningInSchools added on to Suggs’ comment, saying he (or she) is a third-year teacher, “fairly new to the profession”:

The worst part is the complainers! I am surrounded by teachers who say its impossible and don’t even follow the curriculum and complain about being “spied” on by admin, they say they hate their jobs regularly and I just think THEN LEAVE! I have several qualified young new teacher friends who’d be happy to take their spot! I hear “keep doing all that extra (differentiation) stuff and so much small group and your going to burn out fast!

…to which abrilmonte replied:

Ha! you truly sound like you are in your 3rd year. Stay in the same school for at least 6 years, and then you can talk.

Read the full 2012 MetLife Survey of the American Teacher here — and let’s build on this conversation. Should teachers be more receptive to changes? Are they “whining” too much? Or are policymakers and legislators charting a dangerous course?

Share your thoughts in the comments section — just keep our Mailbag rules in mind.

Comments

  • A View Through My Eyes

    Sadly, I don’t think people on the outside really understand why teachers appear so unhappy.

    The majority of teachers love their job, but many also wish to leave. They love their subjects and they love their students. I rarely hear teachers complain about their actual job. Most people hate their job for the same reasons that I left IPS. The pressure from policy makers and the ever increasing expectations with an ever decreasing level of resources.

    I love my current district, but I have told my wife that if we leave the area I will look at other possibilities before I consider teaching again. The schools hiring are the same schools that are firing. I could not go back to an atmosphere remotely like IPS.

    • kystokes

      Thanks for weighing in. I enjoy reading your blog!

      • http://icebrc.blogspot.com/ A View Through My Eyes

        Thank you for the exposure you have given. Over the past several months I have been wanting to get more involved and I figured the first step would be to start talking to those already on the same page as I am. Keep up the good work.

  • Stu Bloom

    Yes, no and yes.

    Teachers should…and usually are…willing to change. Teachers change every year…there are new laws from the state and federal government, new initiatives from the central office, new curriculum, new teaching methods, and most of all, new students every year.

    The thing that teachers are upset about all over the country is inappropriate change. Change for change’s sake isn’t necessarily good. The privatization which is happening all over the nation is hurting public schools. Money is being drained from the public schools yet the most expensive children to educate are being left for the public schools…since the public schools take every student who walks in their doors.

    Are teachers whining too much? If a complaint is justified it’s not whining. What other profession has its directives issued by those outside of the profession? The loudest voices in the so-called “Reform” movement are not those of teachers…but of hedge fund managers, billionaires and policy wonks. We have education experts working in our schools. They need to be included in the discussion. Did you know that the US Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, the man who is the nation’s representative of the public schools has never attended a public schools…never taught in a public school…and has no educational credentials. He was a professional basketball player and has a degree Sociology. Would we expect the Surgeon General to be a doctor? Of course. Would we expect the Attorney General to be a lawyer? Obviously. The Secretary of Education should be an educator. Educators need to be included in the national discussion about education.

    There are people who object on ideological grounds to public education. There are people who object on economic grounds to public education. There are people who object on political grounds to public education. Those people, along with entrepreneurs, and billionaires with too much time on their hands, are working to privatize the public school system. Vouchers, corporate run charters paid for with public funds and run with no public oversight, are slowly but surely taking public money away from our public schools. In Indiana we elected a super majority in both houses of the legislature and they are doing their best to replace the public schools with private and corporate run charter schools.

    Is this what the public wants? Apparently, because the privatization of public schools is not a partisan issue…it’s being led by Democrats in Washington and Republicans in Indianapolis. I’d like to see public education be supported by the legislature and other public officials instead of shortchanged…

    • http://icebrc.blogspot.com/ A View Through My Eyes

      “The Secretary of Education should be an educator. Educators need to be included in the national discussion about education.”

      If it would do any good, I would scream this from the rooftop. Bureaucrats and billionaires are running our educational system and leaving the experts behind. How are they going to attract the “brightest minds” when those people are the type to first notice this atrocity.

  • SICKOFBULLSHIT

    “Parents can NOT be bothered to help their children” ENOUGH FUCKING SAID!!!

  • Stressed out

    What about the attitude we put up with from nasty children’s parents. The parents are now useless, and school administration just slaps the kids
    on the hand and they come right back into our rooms and are just as disrespectful as they were before you called home! Tired of trying to teach with no support system in place, at home or in the workplace. It is the worst I have seen in 24 years…it is tiring trying to be a ” Highly Effective” teacher under these conditions. I am desperate to quit. It is not so easy, you lose almost all the retirement you have been working so hard for. So how do these people say jus quit….. Are they teachers! Do they have so much money they can just not worry about their retirements. These more I would like to say, but class keeps me from saying it.

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