The school you're alluding to doesn't have faculty leaving mid-year every month. Must be another K-12 school. |
That’s definitely one possibility. Another one is the obnoxious parents that think they know everything about the school. Hard to tell. 🤔 |
No. But it has a troll who’s resorted to starting generic threads like this as a way to try to continue to keep it front and center on this site. |
Some left mid-year. |
The topic is relevant for many schools. Unless of course you are Jeff and can decide what to delete. |
You are the one who brought up that school, not OP. |
| I think there are hypersensitive parents that are bothered by specific topics. They might need some therapy to deal with those issues. |
| I think a music teacher left for health reasons and and a pe teacher left. |
| I spoke with some teachers in my kids school. And more than leaving in middle of the year, the teachers acknowledge some retention issues. But don’t think it’s specific to one school but a nationwide phenomenon. |
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Our school has had excellent retention since 21-22, but this year is a mess. K-8 and there isn’t a single grade without FMLA, a teacher not returning due to what’s obviously a contract non-renewal, and weak teachers left in a lot of grades. I think sometimes things just hit the fan all at once and/or long stretches of conflict or PIPs finally come to their natural conclusions.
It’s unsettling even if it’s normal because I don’t see a huge pool of potential candidates for these jobs stepping up. Some schools will get lucky but everyone else might be playing musical chairs with the B and C teams. |
| Pay is so bad at privates compared to publics. Seems like the only people who stick with it 5+ years have family money or a spouse who makes good money. |
Or a child enrolled at the school. Or they’re kind of mediocre but have a lot of social capital among families and fellow teachers. Lots of possibilities. |
Social capital doesn’t pay the bills. |
Plenty of people have been teaching for 15-20 years, bought a house at a relatively low price, and would rather be comfortable than rich. |
| What school is this about |