Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
Not PP, but I took some time off from teaching and worked an office job at a university. I made more money and had all of the benefits listed above. Being able to come in an hour late to be able to go to a dentist appointment was amazing. So was the ability to go pick up something for lunch if I didn’t pack my own. And I didn’t have to ration my coffee/water consumption. Perhaps the biggest change was that people trusted me to do my job. I didnt feel questioned by multiple stakeholders at every turn. I ended up missing teaching and returning to the classroom, but if the upcoming year isn’t better, I’m going to quit again. I ran the retirement numbers and it isn’t worth it if working conditions don’t improve.
Interesting. Thank you for sharing. Next year is my 30th year and I’ve also looked at the numbers, trying to decide if I’ll stop after this coming year and do something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think things will be better. There will be too much. To do and not enough time. Admin will continue to expect more and the stress of trying to do it all and being dinged when you can’t will burn us out.
It won’t be better. There are clear steps they could take- pay teachers more to create demand and then hire more of them to shrink class sizes but they’d rather hire more people at gatehouse and create additional APs.
Teachers definitely deserve more pay, but hiring more of them will not solve the issue of class size, unless there’s more classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think things will be better. There will be too much. To do and not enough time. Admin will continue to expect more and the stress of trying to do it all and being dinged when you can’t will burn us out.
It won’t be better. There are clear steps they could take- pay teachers more to create demand and then hire more of them to shrink class sizes but they’d rather hire more people at gatehouse and create additional APs.
Teachers definitely deserve more pay, but hiring more of them will not solve the issue of class size, unless there’s more classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think things will be better. There will be too much. To do and not enough time. Admin will continue to expect more and the stress of trying to do it all and being dinged when you can’t will burn us out.
It won’t be better. There are clear steps they could take- pay teachers more to create demand and then hire more of them to shrink class sizes but they’d rather hire more people at gatehouse and create additional APs.
Teachers definitely deserve more pay, but hiring more of them will not solve the issue of class size, unless there’s more classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think things will be better. There will be too much. To do and not enough time. Admin will continue to expect more and the stress of trying to do it all and being dinged when you can’t will burn us out.
It won’t be better. There are clear steps they could take- pay teachers more to create demand and then hire more of them to shrink class sizes but they’d rather hire more people at gatehouse and create additional APs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is little to no recourse for it, and as someone who is very well educated and accustomed to working with other well educated people, I was surprised at how discourteous, disrespectful, and unprofessional those in the school community can be.
OMG so much this. We work with a lot of rude, stupid people.
Anonymous wrote:There is little to no recourse for it, and as someone who is very well educated and accustomed to working with other well educated people, I was surprised at how discourteous, disrespectful, and unprofessional those in the school community can be.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think things will be better. There will be too much. To do and not enough time. Admin will continue to expect more and the stress of trying to do it all and being dinged when you can’t will burn us out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
Not PP, but I took some time off from teaching and worked an office job at a university. I made more money and had all of the benefits listed above. Being able to come in an hour late to be able to go to a dentist appointment was amazing. So was the ability to go pick up something for lunch if I didn’t pack my own. And I didn’t have to ration my coffee/water consumption. Perhaps the biggest change was that people trusted me to do my job. I didnt feel questioned by multiple stakeholders at every turn. I ended up missing teaching and returning to the classroom, but if the upcoming year isn’t better, I’m going to quit again. I ran the retirement numbers and it isn’t worth it if working conditions don’t improve.
Question for the teachers who are going back next year...do you think/feel the coming year will get better? I took a couple of years off to care for a loved on and I want to go back but I also have a lot of friends who don't feel there will be much change and their stories from this year have me wondering if I should find something else.
Interesting. Thank you for sharing. Next year is my 30th year and I’ve also looked at the numbers, trying to decide if I’ll stop after this coming year and do something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
Not PP, but I took some time off from teaching and worked an office job at a university. I made more money and had all of the benefits listed above. Being able to come in an hour late to be able to go to a dentist appointment was amazing. So was the ability to go pick up something for lunch if I didn’t pack my own. And I didn’t have to ration my coffee/water consumption. Perhaps the biggest change was that people trusted me to do my job. I didnt feel questioned by multiple stakeholders at every turn. I ended up missing teaching and returning to the classroom, but if the upcoming year isn’t better, I’m going to quit again. I ran the retirement numbers and it isn’t worth it if working conditions don’t improve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
I work in a office, doing things. Lol, do you want my address and boss’s name too?
You wrote about a bunch of things you could do now that you couldn't when you were a teacher and I was just curious what type of job allows you to do those things now and to what type of job you were able to transition to out of teaching. No need for such a pissy answer. After all, this is a discussion board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?
I work in a office, doing things. Lol, do you want my address and boss’s name too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to hear from former teachers if there new jobs/careers suck as much as teaching? All jobs are hard.
I can go to the bathroom when I need to, not when I can find someone to watch the room. If I make a doctors appointment, I can just…go. My lunch break is an actual lunch break and—god forbid—nobody cares if I sometimes dare to take longer than 25 minutes. There’s no moratorium on taking personal days on Friday.
Yeah, I’m never going back.
What job do you do now?