Because some don’t want to understand and they don’t have any frame of reference anyway. The math has been all over DCUM. At this point, it’s no use. Posters don’t understand that grading and planning can’t get done AT work because teachers are busy with students. It’s a different type of job, one that doesn’t provide the luxury of sitting at a desk getting work done. But if you’ve never experienced that, perhaps it’s hard to imagine. |
And some of us have friends or family that are or were teachers and know that 70 hours a week is absurd hyperbole |
Okay. I can’t believe I’m trying again: 150 essays at 15 minutes each: 37.5 SUSTAINED hours of grading (that means without breaks, like sleeping or checking DCUM). They need to get back in 10 days, so that’s an extra 3.75 hours of work for 10 days straight for that assignment ALONE. That doesn’t include other assignments, emails, meetings, “other duties as assigned,” data collection and analysis, tutoring… most of which has to be done off hours. Because the work day is spent with the students. |
When people hear “teacher,” they often picture a 7:30–3:30 school day. But for many educators, the real hours stretch far beyond the bell. A 70-hour work week isn’t an anomaly—it’s routine. Here's how those hours add up: Grading Isn’t Just Checking Boxes - Essays: 15–20 minutes per essay. A class of 30? That’s 7.5–10 hours for one assignment. Multiply that times 5 (5 classes) for English and humanities teachers. That's up to 50 hours of grading for one essay. - Short Answer Tests: 5–10 minutes per test. Multiply that across multiple classes. Many secondary teachers have 140-160 students, so each test could take several hours to grade. - Feedback: Thoughtful, personalized comments can take 5–10 hours per major assignment. This is where learning deepens—and where time disappears. Lesson Design Is a Daily Marathon - Creating engaging, differentiated, evidence-based lessons takes 2+ hours per day. That’s 10+ hours a week just on planning—before the teaching even begins. Meetings That Matter (and Multiply) - CT (Collaborative Team) Meetings: 1.5–4.5 hours weekly. - IEP/504 Meetings: 1–2 hours monthly, often outside contract hours. - These aren’t optional—they’re essential for supporting diverse learners. The Hidden Time Thieves - Answering parent emails - Writing letters of recommendation - Updating grades and learning platforms - Supervising clubs, sports, or events - Attending professional development - Supporting students in crisis - Rewriting plans after fire drills, assemblies, or snow days Each task may seem small, but together they form a mountain. And teachers climb it daily—not for praise, but for their students. The Takeaway A 70-hour week isn’t a sign of inefficiency—it’s a reflection of how deeply teachers care and how manyntasks they’re juggling. They’re not just delivering content. Yes, there are other professionals who also work an unreasonable number of hous per week. No one is denying that. No one is saying teachers have it worse than other professionals. However, no one has the right to effectively call teachers liars when they say they routinely work 70-hour weeks. Do all teachers work those type of hours? Not even close; some teachers barely work more than 40 hours per week. But many teachers do work 70 hours per week, and they deserve to be believed. |
As an elementary teacher, I never work less than 50 hours, so I can imagine some high and middle school teachers work more hours. For me 40 hours a week in building: teaching, meetings, emails and weekly communication, and photocopying (that’s standard work). At home, every Sunday all day, prep for the week, data tracking, and grading. There are always more hours around interims, report cards, conferences, and other extra work that pops up during the year. |
THANK YOU! |
Because other professions work all year. Teachers have a two week winter break, a spring break, a summer break and huge number of additional days off. No other jobs have that many vacation days. You can’t compare apples and oranges. |
They aren't vacation days. We aren't paid for those days. Are Saturdays and Sundays vacation days for you? Many of us work over the summer, too. We need to maintain certifications, so we take classes. We participate in curriculum writing. We come in early to prep classrooms, prepare content for our initial units, set up what we need for classroom routines. Many of us write dozens of college recommendation letters over the summer, which can take a full work week. Simply put, there's a ton of work, most of which we do because we care and not because we're getting paid. (We often aren't.) |
Stop lying. Teachers definitely get paid the same every month between the start of school and the end of school. Those VERY long breaks are paid vacations. Every school holiday is a paid vacation day. |
Are there still people out there that think those are paid days? |
It is like comparing apples to oranges, some of those jobs get 4-5 weeks off of paid leave. My source is friends/family. |
PP is truly either dumb…or a troll. |
Proof that your 1990s education wasn’t as great as you thought. |
It's astounding how wrong you are. Just amazing. |
Please don't tell me about my job. I know more about it than you. I am paid for 195 days spread from August to June. The pay is SPREAD OUT over 12 months. So no, I am not paid for the summer months. I am contracted for 195 days of work, and I am paid for 195 days of work (even though I work far, far, far, far more). And here's what I'll never understand: if I have it so good, why haven't you joined me already? If teachers have all these glorious perks, why haven't you jumped ship from your job? |