Anonymous wrote:I work as a professor at a university that went from taking research and scholarship seriously to basically chasing after the bucks it could make by being open admissions, not academically rigorous and focussed on training rather than on education. We no longer get credit for engaging in scholarship, they took away sabbaticals and conference travel. We have much less freedom than we used to have to define what we teach and how we teach it. The students are often really ill prepared for college and there's not time during the semester to address their deficits nor are there resources for doing so.
I stay because my child has a tuition waiver that can be used at several schools within a pool/consortium and because my wife has a job in the area and those can be tough to come by.
Anonymous wrote:This is a spin-off on the great thread that was posted recently.
If you hate your job, why?
Please identify if you work in the DC area or not.
Anonymous wrote:I teach a class of 2 year olds. After 15 years, I still love the kids, but I'm burnt out, and I long for a job without poop and snot. At this point, if I could make $40k anywhere else, I'd jump ship in a heartbeat...but it seems all the entry level jobs around here want someone to have 5+ years of experience and pay $12/hour. So I'm stuck.
Anonymous wrote:I work in nurse administration. Hate it. Nursing is a 2nd career and didn't like the 1st career either. I always regretted not continuing my violin. Played for 10 years and then stopped. I wanted to be a pit musician or background musician for movies. I had all the right connections and LOVED the music but didn't have the discipline. Now, I go to movies and watch for the credits to see who the conductors are and musicians. I peer into theatre music pits after plays in NYC to see what might have been.
After all these decades, I still feel the music in my heart. I guess that's something. I think I'm going to cry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've had jobs I've hated. It's always been a culture/management issue. Tedious and hard work can be fun if you're with the right people.
This a good culture and group of people can make it worthwhile. Right now in a bad culture and terrible manager. It has taken all of the pleasure out of working.
Totally agree with you.
I love my work as an elementary school teacher but despise the cliquish culture of those colleagues, members of principal’s inner circle, who rejoice in making their less popular colleagues’ life miserable.