7 Reasons You Might Not Want to Teach Anymore (2024)

Today marks exactly one year since I left teaching, a decision dictated by my family's cross-country move. To acknowledge the occasion, let me share with you the top search -- BY FAR -- that brings people to my site:

I don't want to teach anymore.

In the twelve years I was a high school English teacher, I watched people leave the profession in droves. The climate is different. The culture is different. The system is breaking, and educators are scattering to avoid the inevitable crushing debris when it all comes crumbling down.

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I won't go into detail about the budget cuts or the massive class sizes or the average salary, as that's all been discussed ad nauseam. I'm not going to talk about the bone-deep exhaustion that comes from being onstage all day, or the drowning sensation that follows you home on nights and weekends when you have hundreds of papers to grade.

These are the other things -- the stuff you might only understand if you have a key to the teachers' lounge.

1. You are an "authority figure" with no real authority.

A friend once told me, "You have no idea what it's like to have a real job -- something with deadlines and adults breathing down your neck. You get to be your own boss." The sheer ignorance of her declaration has stuck with me for years, and still needles me, mostly because that line of thinking is an extremely common misconception.

When we close our door each day and stride to the front of the classroom, it's easy to fall prey to the illusion that we are in charge. It's your name on that door, after all, so you must be the boss.

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Reality check: you are not the boss.

Parents are the boss of you. The administration is the boss of you. Common Core is the boss of you. The students can sense it, which occasionally leads to comments like, "My parents pay your salary, you know." Truth. And because of that truth, there is often immense pressure to compromise your integrity: to pass a child who has not demonstrated mastery, to allow an extension on a paper you assigned two months ago, to give less homework or different projects or more lenient grades, because sometimes you are expected to avoid rocking the boat.

2. Your day does not resemble that of a typical white-collar professional.

Despite my aforementioned friend's ignorance, I'll give her this: sometimes you are painfully aware that your "real job" does seem suspiciously different from other "real jobs" which require a college degree.

Here are the things your friends can do at work:

1. Pee
2. Get coffee
3. Spend fifteen minutes chatting leisurely with a colleague
4. Go out to lunch
5. Complete paperwork and other job-related tasks during the actual work day
6. Sit down occasionally

I'm pretty sure the real reason summer break exists is because the School Gods counted up all the seconds you don't get to use the bathroom and handed them back to you in one big chunk. Twenty-five-minute lunches are not conducive to nice, relaxing meals beyond the building's walls, and you can only relieve yourself during passing time -- which, unfortunately, is the only opportunity all the OTHER teachers have to take care of business.

Because you know what else is the boss of you? The bell schedule.

3. Everyone thinks they know how to do your job. EVERYONE.

Adding to the sting of your not-in-charge-ness, many people who ARE in charge have literally never taught a day in their lives -- and a lot of them are pretty sure they know how to do it better than you.

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Most people have lights in their home, but that doesn't make them electricians. My husband doesn't know how to manage a restaurant just because we've gone out to eat. Can I profess to be an expert on successful lawyering because I watch Law & Order: SVU once a week?

Surely, teaching is different, though, right? At some point, just about everyone has sat in a classroom. We were all students, after all. Six, seven, eight hours a day, ever since preschool, everyone has seen this job, so everyone is allowed to have an opinion.

But even brand new teachers can tell: the view looks a whole lot different from behind the podium. So when your high, high, highest-ups are committees of people who only know what it's like to be a student, it feels akin to a team of accountants trying to wire a building.

You know what's probably going to happen? That sucker's going up in flames.

4. You wanted to foster imagination, not slaughter it.

For a while now, teachers have been battling an increasing pressure to "teach to the test." Despite our banshee-esque warning cries, this situation is not improving. Courses with "real-world" value (home economics, for example, or shop class) are dying a not-so-gradual death, as there is no "Foods & Nutrition" section on the SAT. Art and music programs are still in grave danger -- and, in some districts, have already been slashed to ribbons.

An elementary school teacher I know -- who is a part of one of the wealthiest, most reputable districts in her state -- attended a recent meeting where staff members were instructed to "drastically limit or entirely eliminate" story time. "It's not differentiated enough," they were told, "and therefore is a waste of valuable class time."

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The kids are in THIRD GRADE. They deserve to gather around a rocking chair and feed their imaginations. They deserve the magic of a captivating story. They deserve to learn that you can read for pleasure instead of strictly for information.

"Core" high school classes aren't immune to the damage, either. English teachers look on helplessly as more and more works of fiction are plucked from the curriculum and replaced by fact-driven nonfiction. Even though we're sometimes invited to join curriculum committees (as I did) under the guise that we might have a say, it's ultimately just a ruse: we have only as much freedom as our national and state standards allow. At the moment, there is a relentless push toward FACTS. DATA. STATISTICS.

That doesn't leave very much room for make-believe.

But here's the thing: discussions about fiction lead to rich discussions about life, which drives something much more important than the growth of a student -- it guides the growth of a human being.

5. The technology obsession is making you CRAZY.

Our beloved works of fiction aren't just getting elbowed aside by facts and figures. They're also being trounced by the frenetic crush of technology. "The children must learn ALL THE TECH!" everyone shouts, flailing their arms and stampeding toward the nearest Apple store. "It is the way of the future!"

Then why are some big-shot technology CEOs sending their kids to computer-free Waldorf Schools? There's an app -- er, a reason -- for that.

This one is tricky. OF COURSE, as teachers, our job is to adapt to the changing times. But I might argue that our job is also to challenge our students with something new -- and, to this generation, technology is not new. In fact, it is all they know. Our kids don't need more of it -- most of them have been swiping and zooming and smartphone-ing since they were toddlers -- and they continue to do it right in the middle of your (probably fact-driven) lecture about some (probably nonfiction) book, by the way. It's incredibly frustrating when all that glorious innovation serves as more of a distraction than a learning tool.

7 Reasons You Might Not Want to Teach Anymore (1)

Though we teachers tend to stick together, I also have a group of friends and family with a wide range of careers -- they run the gamut from successful marketers to mechanical engineers to human resource managers. All of them have interviewed prospective employees for over a decade, and all of them now have a similar complaint: it's becoming close to impossible to find candidates they actually want to hire.

The three C's people suddenly seem to be missing? Curiosity, creativity, and communication skills.

Technology is wonderful -- nay, necessary -- for a plethora of things, but it's killing those beautiful C's. And as a teacher, you don't just witness the death, you are expected to assist in the murder. Because of standardized expectations, you must incorporate more and more tech, even when all you want to do is take a hammer to anything with a screen.

6. All the entitlement and the trophies and the apathy and whatever.

The air inside your classroom walls is probably thick with the stench of "It's not my fault, it's your fault," and it sure seems like the smell is coming from the students.

Ironically, this is not their fault.

Like cigarette smoke, it gets carried in from home, rising from their backpacks, woven through the threads of their clothes and the fibers of their upbringing. Their whole lives, generations of special snowflakes have received copious awards and accolades just for playing -- NOT for excelling -- so it's no wonder kids have come to expect an A "because I tried." But sometimes a D paper is just a D, which doesn't necessarily mean that Johnny has an evil teacher. It means that Johnny might have actually earned a D this time. It means he might not have written a perfect paper. It means he needs to stop waiting until THE VERY LAST SECOND to start an essay he's known about for three weeks.

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But Johnny doesn't know it means all that, because what he hears at the dinner table is that his parents are UNBELIEVABLY ANGRY that his teacher had the nerve -- the nerve! -- to give their baby a D. (Brace yourself for the irate phone call in the morning.)

Of course, for every helicopter parent, there is a devastatingly absentee parent, as well as an equal number who are so remarkably supportive that you wonder if they're even real. They are warm and generous and responsible. You tell them at conferences, You are REALLY doing something right, and you mean it.

I hope I will be that kind of parent.

I became a mother a few years ago, and I must shamefully admit I get it now. My children ARE special. My children DO try. I do not EVER want them to feel like they are anything less than the most important people in the world. When my daughter's preschool note tells me she was not a good listener that day, I feel frustrated and helpless and a little bit sure the teacher is just being too demanding. When she ran her first Toddler Turkey Trot last November, the people in charge asked if I wanted to buy her a medal. "Um, obviously," I said. "She will obviously, absolutely get a medal." Without hesitation, I forked over my money and contributed to the Trophy Generation Fund.

As a parent, I understand.

But as a teacher, this is what you wish you could say: Stop making excuses for your kids. STOP IT. Teach them to earn things, not demand things. Hold them to a higher standard. Challenge them. That way, when I try to challenge them, they'll know we both expect it.

They'll know we are on the same team.

Left to their own devices, the kids will be the first to tell you: Yeah, I totally forgot about that assignment. I didn't really try my best. I just didn't feel like finishing the reading. Whoops -- sorry, Ms. B! They'll cringe at you with raised eyebrows and endearing self-awareness. They'll laugh uproariously when you pull a pretend trophy from your desk and give it a quick shine as soon as they catch themselves in the act of whining.

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7 Reasons You Might Not Want to Teach Anymore (2)

They know. Deep down, despite that wafting air of entitlement, they know exactly what's going on. They are smarter than that, and they are capable of more failures -- and consequently, more successes -- than the world is allowing them to experience.

7. There is no reliable way to assess who is ACTUALLY good at this.

If you're a teacher worth your salt, this might be the most troubling of the bunch.

In order for people to really know how well you're doing your job, they have to watch you do it. But when there is only one administrator for every thirty-plus teachers, adequate observation time is often a physical impossibility. Even if an administrator's ONLY JOB was to sit in classroom after classroom, there would still be too few hours in the day, so lawmakers and district higher-ups are scrambling to figure out a way to fill in the blanks.

A popular bright idea is to examine students' test scores. In theory, this should work -- but in practice, you've got to be kidding. Students are not products tumbling off a cookie-cutter assembly line. They are human beings, and there are thirty-five of them per class period, and they are influenced by FAR more than yesterday's vocabulary lesson. You are not in charge of how well they slept, or the breakup that happened last week, or if their family has enough money for breakfast -- but all of those things affect test scores. So do IEPs, 504 plans, and whether or not you are teaching an AP or Honors class filled with students who might perform well with or without your help.

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As more and more districts begin to adopt this nonsensical practice, who will teach the kids who are struggling? Which educators will potentially sacrifice their own careers to guide the students who work hard for a D+? Some of the very best teachers do that now, with only intrinsic motivation working to retain them.

Another method is to place the burden of proof upon the teacher. Instead of spending your prep hour -- or your Sunday night -- creating a brilliant lesson plan or grading the ten dozen essays you just collected, you must spend that time figuring out how to meet arbitrary goals and initiatives that will become irrelevant and obsolete by the following school year. After that, you must utilize class time implementing said goals and initiatives, and then you must spend more prep time and Sunday nights writing reports to prove how well you implemented them. That, combined with your students' test scores, shall determine whether or not you are an effective educator.

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Can I please just talk about Of Mice and Men instead? Can we spend that time learning why some words on a page just made us cry a little bit? That's the important stuff. That's what matters. Those are the things that teach us who we are.

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Here are the other things that matter: Helping a group of students work through a disagreement civilly. Keeping everyone calm when someone vomits on the floor. Watching the shyest student in your class, the one who never ever spoke back in September, volunteer to read a part in The Crucible -- and he's hilarious, and he does it with an accent, and he makes two new friends because he finally let himself be vulnerable.

Your job is so much more than test scores, meaningless goals, and cyclical initiatives. It is tying shoelaces and distributing Band-Aids. It is listening to a parent cry about her crumbling marriage. It is showing teenagers how to debate thoughtfully, how to think critically, how to disagree respectfully. It is hearing from students ten years after graduation, because they just thought you should know it was your Spanish class that made them want to study abroad, your passion for science that led to a major in biochemistry, your quiet encouragement during their dark days that convinced them to keep coming to school in the first place.

Where does that fall on the "highly effective" checklist? How can you document that kind of delayed impact? It certainly can't be measured by A's and E's, or even by weekly walk-throughs. It's no wonder you're getting frustrated.

It's no wonder you don't want to do this anymore.

But if these are the reasons you might leave, here is the reason you might stay: the kids, man. The kids. After a year without them, you might miss their unbridled school spirit during Homecoming Week, their contagious sense of humor, the way they draw pictures for you and wave joyous hellos in the hallways. You might miss their ability to make you forget about the rough start to your morning, or the looks of awe on their captivated faces when they finally learn something that matters.

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If it weren't for them, instead of Googling "I don't want to teach anymore," you might already be gone.

A version of this post first appeared on Michifornia Girl.

7 Reasons You Might Not Want to Teach Anymore (2024)

FAQs

Why do people not want to teach? ›

Lack of Respect

Teaching can sometimes feel like a thankless job, especially when dealing with difficult students or family members. In addition to dealing with difficult students or family members, some teachers also feel micromanaged by administrators.

How do you know when it's time to stop teaching? ›

Teaching leaves you more exhausted than it leaves you energized/excited. It is normal to have a rough day at work, especially as a teacher. But if you find yourself exhausted 179 out of 180 days that you are in the classroom, consider it a flashing neon sign that it's time for you to make a change.

What are the disadvantages of being a teacher? ›

6 cons of being a teacher
  • Breaks without pay. Although some districts may follow a year-round schedule, most districts use a schedule that provides students and teachers with summers off for breaks. ...
  • Budgetary challenges. ...
  • Professional development days. ...
  • Varied learning styles. ...
  • Workload. ...
  • Student performance evaluation.
14 Apr 2022

Why do people quit teaching? ›

The tension and responsibility that educators like Gillum faced during the pandemic — combined with long-standing issues plaguing the profession, plus the coarsening of debates about classroom control, teacher pay and respect — have caused many to make the tough choice to leave the classroom.

What do you do if you don't want to be a teacher anymore? ›

I Don't Want to Be a Teacher Anymore (13 Options)
  1. Private Tutor. Private tutors help kids who are struggling with their schoolwork. ...
  2. Curriculum Developer. ...
  3. Position in an Educational Company. ...
  4. Life Coach. ...
  5. Corporate Training. ...
  6. Sales of Educational Products. ...
  7. Education Director. ...
  8. Educational Program Development.
8 Mar 2021

What else can I do instead of teaching? ›

Alternative careers for teachers
  • Private Tutoring. ...
  • Corporate Learning and Development. ...
  • Student Learning Support. ...
  • Education Liaison Positions. ...
  • Human Resources. ...
  • Museum role. ...
  • Publishing. ...
  • Youth worker.
14 Dec 2018

What do teachers do after they quit? ›

Leadership roles in community service are often a good fit for people who've left the teaching profession. Many youth organizations and retirement communities have positions for people skilled at planning, coordinating, and leading fun recreational or educational activities.

Are people happier after leaving teaching? ›

There are several examples of posts I shared from people who left teaching and described feeling a lot happier, less stressed and healthier. They also reported having more time for their own families.

What are the positives and negatives of teaching? ›

The Pros and Cons of Teaching
Pros of TeachingCons of Teaching
Summer vacations and holidaysSalary
Connecting with other teachers and staffLack of support from administration
Always learning and continuing to growContinuous professional development requirements
1 more row
12 Jun 2022

What problems teachers face in schools? ›

10 Challenges Of Teaching & How To Overcome Them
  • Understanding the different learning challenges amongst students. ...
  • Student family problems & bullying. ...
  • Lack of funding. ...
  • Lack of effective communication. ...
  • Being encouraging and motivating under challenging times. ...
  • Disciplining students. ...
  • Endless paperwork & extended working hours.

What are the advantages and disadvantages of teacher? ›

Carefully consider the pros and cons of the profession, so if you do sign-up you will be well-prepared for what lies ahead.
  • Changing Lives and Caring Too Much. ...
  • Degree of Autonomy. ...
  • Variety and Adherence to Schedules. ...
  • Short Days and Time Off. ...
  • Teaching as a Second Career.

What percent of teachers quit? ›

Nearly 50 percent of new teachers leave the profession within their first five years.

What does teacher burnout feel like? ›

A loss of interest, feelings of hopelessness, anxiety, irritability, and other symptoms of ill mental health may also be present (Capone, Joshanloo, & Park, 2019; Madigan & Kim, 2021). When teachers are experiencing burnout, they may feel like they are in survival mode each day or react with a short temper.

How many teachers quit 5 years? ›

44% of teachers quit in the first five years.

And they don't just quit their current positions - they often leave teaching altogether. This is a much higher rate than most other occupations in the U.S., including those known for high burnout rates, such as police officers.

What jobs can you do after teaching? ›

19 jobs after teaching in the classroom
  • Youth worker.
  • Education coordinator.
  • School counsellor.
  • Education recruitment consultant.
  • Education consultant.
  • Education welfare officer.
  • Campus recruiter.
  • Archivist.
30 Nov 2021

What can teachers do if they don't want to teach anymore? ›

There are plenty of roles in the education field that can benefit from the skills of an experienced teacher.
  • Test Developer. ...
  • Educational Product and Supply Professional. ...
  • Instructional Technology Specialist. ...
  • Education Nonprofit Employee. ...
  • Online Teacher. ...
  • Educational Consultant. ...
  • Microschool/Pandemic Pod Teacher.

Why teaching is a stressful job? ›

Sometimes we don't even get time to take loo breaks. Admission and assessment times are extremely tortuous for us. There are events to prepare for, targets to meet, we all do work beyond our office hours. Life isn't so easy as it seems.” To add to it all, there is a lot of stress.

How do I move away from teaching? ›

Ten Great Alternative Careers for Teachers Who Want to Get Out of Teaching
  1. Jobs in Education: Student Learning Support.
  2. Become a Private Tutor.
  3. Life after Teaching: Publishing.
  4. Jobs in Education Liaison.
  5. Corporate Learning & Development Jobs after Teaching.
  6. Working in Human Resources Management.
28 May 2018

Are teachers leaving the profession? ›

The National Center for Education Statistics says 44% of public schools will report teaching vacancies at the start of this year and more than half of those were from resignations with 1000s of teaching vacancies across the country, the nation appears to be reckoning with an exodus of educators.

What is the highest paid type of teacher? ›

Professor

When you are looking for the best-paid teaching jobs for your area of interest or specialized skill, then you may consider working as a professor in a college or university. A college professor prepares course material, teaches students in a classroom environment, and grades student work.

What happens if I quit teaching mid year? ›

If you have signed a contract to teach for a designated academic year, leaving mid-year could be considered a breach of contract, and technically, legal action could be taken. Your teaching license may be revoked or suspended.

How do you let go as a teacher? ›

In order to let go, you must practice surrender and the art of imperfection. Try to let go of your preconceived notions of the perfect lesson plan, the perfect classroom and the perfect teacher. Surrender to the day and tell yourself the rest can wait until tomorrow. And ASK FOR HELP.

Why do primary teachers quit? ›

In a survey of 1,788 teachers, a fifth (22%) said they would leave within two years. Teachers said their heavy workload was a significant factor in their decision to leave. More than half of respondents (52%) said the workload was “unmanageable” or “unmanageable most of the time”, up from 35% in 2021.

How many newly qualified teachers quit? ›

Among newly qualified teachers, the number who left within one year rose from 11.7 per cent in 2020, to 12.5 per cent last year. Again, this is still below the pre-pandemic levels (it was 14.6 per cent in 2019).

How many teachers left teaching this year? ›

Some 300,000 public-school teachers and other staff left the field between February 2020 and May 2022, a nearly 3% drop in that workforce, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.

Why is school teaching not very popular? ›

Why is school teaching not very popular?(i) The students are very challenging. (ii) The parents are demanding. (iii) It requires an idealism which is difficult to cultivate.

Is it okay to hate teaching? ›

Life is too short to stay in a career that you don't feel is the right fit. If teaching isn't what you thought it would be or you simply need a change, it's okay to move on. It's okay to validate those feelings instead of feeling wrong for them.

Are fewer people becoming teachers? ›

Between 2008 and 2019, the number of students completing traditional teacher education programs in the U.S. dropped by more than a third, according to a 2022 report by the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.

How do you teach a student that doesn't want to learn? ›

Teaching Students Who Don't Want to Be There
  1. Make it relevant. ...
  2. Give them choices. ...
  3. Solicit feedback along the way. ...
  4. Don't embarrass them. ...
  5. Polish your presentation. ...
  6. Only answer questions when you immediately know the answer.
20 Aug 2014

What is the hardest part of teaching? ›

10 Challenges Of Teaching & How To Overcome Them
  1. Understanding the different learning challenges amongst students. ...
  2. Student family problems & bullying. ...
  3. Lack of funding. ...
  4. Lack of effective communication. ...
  5. Being encouraging and motivating under challenging times. ...
  6. Disciplining students. ...
  7. Endless paperwork & extended working hours.

Why teaching is the hardest job? ›

It requires a lot of dedication

Compared to other professions that also require training and education, the stress that teachers go through each day can be significantly greater. Sometimes, they even have to spend their own money on school supplies. They don't really go on vacation during summers.

How stressful is teaching? ›

While teaching has always been stressful, it's been exacerbated by challenges many educators experienced due to Covid-19. A whopping 60% of teachers expressed they were stressed out. Many educators are considering leaving for the first time ever or have already left the profession altogether due to stress.

What else can I do with a teaching degree? ›

However, youth work is one of the many other jobs for teachers who feel they still want to be in a mentoring role within their community.
...
Roles in community youth work
  • developing clubs and workshops.
  • school and police liaison.
  • running community fundraisers.
  • informal counelling.
  • coordinating education programs events.
14 Jan 2021

Can I quit teaching? ›

Like any other job, there could be a variety reasons for quitting teaching at any point during the year. No matter the reason, leaving your current position and breaking your contract is a decision you don't want to make on a whim.

Why are their less teachers? ›

Shortages have been driven by a shrinking teacher education pipeline, high rates of turnover, and increased demand as districts replaced positions cut during the Great Recession and expanded staffing using federal COVID-19 relief funding to address increased vacancies and to support learning needs.

What does teacher burnout feel like? ›

A loss of interest, feelings of hopelessness, anxiety, irritability, and other symptoms of ill mental health may also be present (Capone, Joshanloo, & Park, 2019; Madigan & Kim, 2021). When teachers are experiencing burnout, they may feel like they are in survival mode each day or react with a short temper.

How many teachers are leaving the profession? ›

Overall, more than 44 percent of new teachers leave the profession within five years.

What state has the highest teacher shortage? ›

The 11 states in Group 1 have the clearest vacancies. Florida leads the nation with nearly 4,000 unfilled teaching positions for the 2021–22 school year, followed by Illinois with 1,703 and Arizona with 1,699.

What is your best asset as a teacher? ›

Communication skills are on the top of the list of what makes a good teacher. Effective communication is a critical asset to acquire in both professional and in intimate environments. It is the root of successful and memorable relationships.

What is good qualities of teacher? ›

Some qualities of a good teacher include skills in communication, listening, collaboration, adaptability, empathy and patience. Other characteristics of effective teaching include an engaging classroom presence, value in real-world learning, exchange of best practices and a lifelong love of learning.

How do you handle a slow learner? ›

Teaching strategies to help slow learners.

Providing students with a quiet place to work to reduce distractions. Give genuine praise frequently by emphasising their strengths and giving positive feedbacks. Developing short lessons by limiting the working time to several short work periods rather than one long one.

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