Anonymous wrote:I think evoking a lot of guilt and emotion is just one of many toxic reasons teaching has turned into a hellscape. It's a job. That's all. If the job isn't a fit, then start working on employee retention, but guilt isn't appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:I think evoking a lot of guilt and emotion is just one of many toxic reasons teaching has turned into a hellscape. It's a job. That's all. If the job isn't a fit, then start working on employee retention, but guilt isn't appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:I plan to leave the room tidy, all grades entered, all curriculum and teacher manuals ready for someone else to use and copies made for the week after I leave. I started looking about three weeks ago and have had 4 interviews, 1 offer, a follow up interview for next week and a few initial interviews scheduled for next week.
I applaud your integrity. I also need to point out that if you go this route ... you'll still be teaching. You'll move laterally in within a broken system that is really, really sick. Maybe interview job is incrementally better at the outset --I can see how that would be plausible --but you'll still be a cog in a crumbling system. Sweet new job will reveal its true face several months in.
Are you okay with that?
-- BTDT. Grass isn't likely greener, it's just a different variety. Fescue vs. Kentucky bluegrass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:didn't you sign a contract? I would lose my teaching license if I left mid year.
Does that matter if you have no intention of teaching again?
Anonymous wrote:No, there is absolutely no chance we could hire a replacement within 4 weeks. We’d be very, very lucky if we could find a halfway decent long term substitute within that amount of time.
That being said, 4 weeks is much better than 2 weeks.
I assume you’re okay with breaking your contract and knowing you will not be able to return to teaching again as a result? Will you owe any leave you haven’t yet accrued back to the school district?
I plan to leave the room tidy, all grades entered, all curriculum and teacher manuals ready for someone else to use and copies made for the week after I leave. I started looking about three weeks ago and have had 4 interviews, 1 offer, a follow up interview for next week and a few initial interviews scheduled for next week.
Anonymous wrote:didn't you sign a contract? I would lose my teaching license if I left mid year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most jobs, two weeks notice seems pretty standard. I'm leaving my teaching job. If you are a principal or administrator in a school, does 4 weeks notice seem like enough?
Mid year? Jesus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:didn't you sign a contract? I would lose my teaching license if I left mid year.
Does that matter if you have no intention of teaching again?
Anonymous wrote:didn't you sign a contract? I would lose my teaching license if I left mid year.
Anonymous wrote:No, there is absolutely no chance we could hire a replacement within 4 weeks. We’d be very, very lucky if we could find a halfway decent long term substitute within that amount of time.
That being said, 4 weeks is much better than 2 weeks.
I assume you’re okay with breaking your contract and knowing you will not be able to return to teaching again as a result? Will you owe any leave you haven’t yet accrued back to the school district?