I realize that grading is what gets shoved into your off hours but "Grading is what drowns most teachers" makes it sound like the reason stuff is broken now is due to grading. That can't be possible. Teachers have always graded. What needs fixed and pushed back on are whatever all the NEW things are that schools have started to make teachers do that they didn't need to 10/15/20 years ago. The core parts of the job (which grading is) still need captured but surely there's a zillion other things eating time that need to get shoved back off teachers' plates. |
Sure, *the reason* grading is done at night and on weekends is because of tons of other factors. But that doesn’t change the fact the grading itself is the reason I’ll quit. - I used to have smaller classes, so I used to grade 100 papers. Now I grade in stacks of 150. - I used to be able to grade holistically, leaving tons of comments and a number at the top (like my teachers did for me). Now I have to leave tons of comments and align them to a complicated rubric, which takes extra time. And, I suspect, the number would be the same without the wordy rubric. - I put grades into the system, wait 20 minutes, and then check my email. The parents and students asking for more points start to roll in, taking even more time as I have to justify grades (again) in email after email. And, of course, this all happens at home because of the team meetings, the sub duty, the cafeteria duty, the data meetings, the IEP/504 meetings, the disciplinary reports, and the mandatory tutoring/office hours. So grading is why I’m dusting off my resume. It’s what eats up my off hours. |
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Too many pages to read but if you want a perspective from a veteran teacher you can take this at face value.
You want to know why teachers are resentful? Because for years we’ve watched people who couldn’t survive a single chaotic Monday in a classroom act like they’re qualified to question our competence, our motives, and our professionalism. Teachers aren’t resentful—they’re [/b]fed up[b] with a culture that demands educators be superheroes while treating them like disposable background characters. Let’s cut through the nonsense; Teachers hold together a system that is collapsing under political meddling, chronic underfunding, and the refusal of society to take responsibility for the very problems it dumps at our door. And then people have the gall to ask why we’re not beaming with gratitude. Here’s why teachers are resentful: A) Because every time we raise concerns, some armchair critic who hasn’t opened a textbook since high school thinks they know better. B) Because we’re expected to fix educational inequality, childhood trauma, behavioral crises, family instability, and social dysfunction—but God forbid we mention that these things even exist. C) Because the people quickest to judge are the ones who do absolutely nothing to help. D) Because somehow teachers are simultaneously “glorified babysitters” *and* the reason society is falling apart—depending on which excuse is more convenient that day. E) Because our expertise is dismissed by people who couldn’t explain a fraction of the work we do, but sure know how to complain about it. If teachers sound resentful, it’s because they’re tired of being blamed for a system they didn’t design, under conditions no reasonable adult would tolerate, while listening to the loudest critics contribute nothing but noise. And let’s be brutally honest: If more people understood even a tiny fraction of what teachers actually endure, they wouldn’t be asking why teachers are resentful—they’d be asking how teachers haven’t burned the whole system to the ground out of sheer exhaustion. So yes, teachers are resentful. Not because they’re ungrateful or dramatic, but because they’ve spent years being ground down by expectations no other profession on earth would endure. Does this sound harsh? It’s because the truth is. |
You’re resentful because you believe this. Teaching is hard and demanding. It is not the hardest or most demanding work. Constantly telling yourself this is why you feel like such a victim. — close family member of an award winning teacher who is candid about the struggles teachers have but thinks this kind of talk is self indulgent b*llshit especially after 2020. |
Stop blaming covid. Sh!tty parents are why 2020 keeps being used as an excuse. It's not 2020. It's the sh!t entitled parents didn't do in 2019. And 2018. And 2017.... Get the sped and crazies out of gen ed, bring back red ink, and fail the kids that can't keep up. Quit complaining because it's the parents that fked up the schools first. I'm not sure exactly when but it might have been some time in the aughts. If you're complaining about a particularly bad experience with a teacher, (no shade but) it's probably because a more experienced teacher (or two) successively burned out from your neediness. And from experience as a parent pretty involved with volunteering at a couple of schools, most of the relatively better classes seemed to have gotten first dibs'ed according to seniority. The revolving door of burn outs were the newer teachers burdened with the more difficult classes. |
I haven’t had a lunch break for 15 years. I’m not saying a working lunch break. I am saying because of my special population, I am with the kids all day long (minus a 20 minute special). |
Burning out is such a major problem. I’ve lost most of my department. Experienced, strong teachers who are capable of keeping up with the crushing workload have quit. They are replaced by well-meaning people who weren’t prepared for the demands. I’m glad they’re here, but I know it’s temporary. They are one grading weekend or one angry parent away from quitting, too. |
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Former teacher here.
Because the job completely sucks and no, teaching was never one of the best jobs around. |
I started teaching in 2001 and worked pretty much 60+ hours a week. I think teachers tend to have rose colored glasses about “how good it used to be”. |
How is it you weren’t doing these things 20 years ago as well? Teaching has always demanded that teachers spend a good 20+ hours a week outside the classroom doing this stuff. That’s the big problem with teaching. It’s actually two jobs in one. It’s a flaw with the system. |
This was true 20 years ago as well. 20 years ago admin sure as hell didn’t want us teaching out of textbooks either and we were expected to come up with new and engaging lessons and materials daily which required numerous at home hours to come up with. I swear teachershave amnesia. It’s like in order to complain about how crappy teaching is they have to act like it hasn’t been this way for a long, long time. |
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I’m the poster you are responding to. Because I had fewer students, no extra duties, and more planning periods. I figure I had an extra 2 hours a work day to get my tasks done. (New teachers were given preferential schedules at my first school, unlike now. We throw them whatever schedules are left because we are so desperate to get classrooms filled.) Because I had a network of experienced teachers and mentors who helped me plan and streamline my classroom. Now? I’m one of three teachers with experience in my entire department, outnumbered by people in their first two years. We can’t support them all the way I was supported. I had a better curriculum, one that was logical and purposeful. Now? I have a cruddy one and I spend hours enhancing or completely rewriting the lessons I was handed. I can go on. |
And then to add to the fun, teachers have to deal with a-hole parents like the one above. |
Most do it themselves. Testing is so exact and ever changing that it”s not possible to rely on a packaged curriculum - hence a huge reason why teachers spend so many off the clock hours working. |