LINK TO PART 2 - Elementary Teacher to Product Designer (All about my new career / How I made the transition) : ruclips.net/video/ID8sd1rwv54/видео.htmlsi=f8uR6fp5eMSF5Z3x
I just want everyone to take a good look at the comments here... these comments are EXACTLY why we are quitting teaching. That lack of empathy and horrid disrespect is exactly how all of your kids act.
As a father of the 6 year old daughter in a charter school kindergarten, I am also appalled by some of the suggestions in this comments section. We actually live in a predominantly Latino neighborhood, so I do think most of the kids do have some concept of respect.
I am a first year teacher and I am trying to get out. I’ve been interviewing and have been exploring different career options. I don’t understand how anyone can be in this career for multiple years, especially with how messed up the public education system is now. Absolutely no accountability for students and everything is somehow the teachers fault.
It's always always been the teacher's fault. I started teaching in 1979, retired in 2011. I tried to get out, took two breaks and tried other lines of work. Both times I went back to the classroom. At times it was sheer he _ _.
When most Americans think of public schools, they think of the nationally popular radio show “Our Miss Brooks”. How well does that show compare to conditions in the schools today?
I have been teaching for 16 years and living from pay check to pay check, and You can feel how hard it is. The work never ends. I think you made a good decision. Wish you all the best.
You’re on point with everything!!! No breaks, during my lunch I’m making copies, calling parents, teacher meetings. Students need accommodations that are not getting the services they need. Exhausted!!! Emotionally draining, cried my first days of kindergarten, then did it again 2 years later, cried the second week.
@@knrdvmmlbkkn kindergarten it’s the first time going to school for some students, some students might need evaluations, for example be autistic, adhd, self contained behavior. Some Parents are not aware of their children needed a special service because they’ve never been in a school environment or interacting with other children
@@5mireya5"kindergarten it’s the (...) with other children That's not what I asked about. And my question was rhetorical. Services don't need any accomodations. I wanted to point out your ridiculous phrasing. "it’s the first time " - no; "is the first time". "Some Parents" - no; "Some parents". "children needed" - no; "children needing".
I'm a teacher from Spain, I've taught for 7 years now( In Spain). Last school year I went to the US to teach as a part of a teacher exchange program. That year got me question my whole career too. Never happened to me before
I resonated with this video so much. I am currently a 2nd grade teacher and am struggling with burnout and overall anxiety from the work load. I actually just put in my two weeks. I realize I need to put my mental health first. Thanks for sharing❤️
After being sick, sending a doctor’s notes, and literally forgetting to finish writing and submitting my lesson plans for the two weeks, my principal comes up to me to submit a 40 page lesson plan immediately by noon and if I don’t I am fired. Thank God he didn’t check on me. I don’t have an assistant. I’m the only one working in the classroom. That’s fine. I wrote the 40 page lesson plan, submitted it last night and wrote my resignation letter and submitting it at the end of the day. I’m sick. My life is sick. Enough is enough.
I'm in year 15 (and with one foot out the door). What I don't understand is how parents can't handle their 1-2 kids, but get frustrated that we can't handle 150 (high school, up to 33 kids at a time) kids!!
Literally supposed to graduate next year but decided to switch majors this semester. I’ve always wanted to be a teacher since middle school, but working as a substitute and hearing my mentor teachers honest insights literally made me question everything about this choice. I had to talk to my advisor, who happened to be a former teacher and she talked me out of it. Just like you, she only lasted three years as well. Working as a sub literally was an eye opener because college don’t tell you about the shit you have deal with in the real world. Literally how are teachers expected to teach and manage a classroom, while tracking students progress especially those with IEPs. Hell in ome schools especially title one, you get 23-25 or more students in a class and 5-7 of them could have IEP and you’re legally required to update all this documents. Then comes the lesson planning which nowadays it’s hard to teach outside of the box because our system is designed to focus on test preps. It makes it so much harder for the kids to learn and pay attention if the teacher is also bored by all these standards that our system have created. Then parents are entitled and disrespectful to teachers. Like how are these parents raising their children amd also tolerating bad behaviors. I once subbed with a 3rd grade class w And couple kids would literally mumble words and cuss me out at their desk as if I couldn’t hear them. But as teacher it’s like you’re not allowed to react. I have so much respect for teachers and they deserve so much better from the government, administrators, parents, and kids. Only important American where teachers are stepped on all over like a door mat, because in the Philippines, teachers are as much of an authority figures as police officers when students address teachers, they have stand up from their seats.
* I was working to get my AA in special education and transferring to a University, but I really can’t take it. My anxiety is so bad and I’m so depressed these days. But I really wanted to work with kids but I can’t do it anymore
I was very unhappy during student teaching also. Now, 11 years later, I'm considering leaving the profession. I only lasted this long, because I taught part time for 10 years.
I just finished my student teaching and graduated with my master's and credentials. I knew coming into this career that the system was broken. I knew what problems and issues I would face in this field. However, once I got to dip my feet into the water. The reality hits you differently. I’m still going for it, no matter what. One thing I learned is that there are going to be dark times when you will have to rely on yourself and maybe your kiddos 😮
Reasons for leaving: horrible principal, horrible admin, racism, anti military, told I had to pay for everything I needed, which of course was EVERYTHING, being locked out of main offices because principal brought grandchildren to work (that’s where copy machine and supplies were), no support, constant criticism, no lunch break, misbehaving kids forced on me during my planning period, no time to even pee. Final straw: being downgraded on my observations because I didn’t have enough room. Seriously. Most horrible job on the planet.
If America's government run schools are in fact this bad then it's time to try privatization. Treat public education as they do in Asia, like a business; not as they do in the US, as just another government racket. Under a privatized system, good teachers would make more money and get bonuses, while the rest would be shown the door. America would finally get the better teachers and smarter students it so desperately needs. I'm betting that won't happen since teachers unions are the most powerful and most feared public sector unions the world has ever known. Besides, any politician with two brain cells to rub together knows that their political futures rest entirely upon doing whatever the teachers unions tell them to do. So it's damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead until the money runs out. And then they'll just print more. The federal government is now taxing people who've yet to be born, as Americans just aren't having kids at the same rate as they once did. This is why our government will allow immigration, both legal and illegal, to continue.
Apparently third year itch is a real thing in teaching. This is my 2nd year teaching and I'm most definitely not working as hard as I did last year. I'm not staying behind. I'm not going above and beyond or volunteering for extra things. I only do things unless I'm told or the deadline is near. I don't have school email on my phone and never reply unless it's specifically directed at me with my name on the email. I've not be printing anything this year, it's all on Google classroom to save printing everything and it also saves precious planning time. I phone for help if behaviour gets out of hand. I do spreadsheets within my own time and don't rush things. I feel so much more relaxed. I leave about 20 minutes after students leave and only do a little bit of work at home (e.g. open all tabs and powerpoints on my computer for next day or a little bit of marking). I don't care what anyone else says, but if teacher wellbeing and mental health in isn't prioritised, the teaching quality will be poor. Seriously. Students push the boundaries to see how much they can get away with and how little work they can do. As staff, try the same. Stop going OTT and working so hard and see what happens. Because the way education is going, just being in the building with lessons prepared is enough. This doesn't mean you don't care about your students. It means you care about your health and your wellbeing that is vital for teaching good lessons, and this will rub off on your students education and wellbeing. There is nothing wrong with this! Good luck and I'm sure you have made a good decision.
I'm close to retirement but would not have stuck it out if I was 20 years younger. Lack of support for students with diverse needs is the biggest challenge in my experience. It's not that we don't care. We do!! It's just not a hill we are willing to die (literally) on.
100%!!! A lot of my former coworkers (included my admin) said the same thing. That they were happy I was exploring while I was young and I was always welcome to come back if needed but they’d probably be retired by then. 😅
I'm a school social worker. I have much empathy for teachers, especially the amount of work that's expected of them paired with any degree of behavior issues. I seriously think teachers should get a decent stipend for decorations every year, and any classroom where behavior needs to be documented for possible SPED intervention should have an aide, para or BCBA come in and document that one or two students. Documentation is a pain in the ass and oddly enough those that advocate for such extreme documentation aren't the ones doing the documentation.
I just quit my teaching job, in California, after 22 years. Everything you said in this video is true. The profession needs a major overhaul. Due to its dysfunctional nature you will be emotionally drained and your attitude will become extremely negative about the job. You will feel like your dreams of teaching (and making a difference) are being crushed! And, yes, the workload is tremendous and the pay is crap. Kudos! Your heart was in the right place...💙
Smart to get out at the three year mark. Teaching never gets any better. I made it 24 years and retired. Admin beats loving teachers to death and they enjoy doing it!
I think it’s pretty crazy that you turn 18 and you’re expected to choose a major. You’re 18. You don’t even know who you really are. I blame the high school counselors for aggressively pushing college right after hs instead of taking an active year off where you work/travel and figure it out.
Or better yet, high schools should offer more vocational courses that are geared toward high schoolers figuring out where they want to go in life rather than requiring the typical, boring English, Math, Social Studies, etc
Yep. College isn't for everyone. Trade schools set people up for good jobs. Military is also an option and you start getting hands on training after 10 weeks of basic training (boot camp) "Everyone needs to go to college" is a babyboomer meme. I know guys that work for Raytheon fixing air defense systems making $100K that never went to college, let alone too the SAT or ACT
School counselor do a piss poor job of utilizing interest inventories and test scores to facilitate students planning for higher education and vocation. Just a simple Myers-Brigs and an ASVAB would save graduating students tens of thousands of dollars on useless college degrees.
Thank you for making this video. There is so much I want to say. I quit teaching a few months ago, mid-year because it was destroying my soul and I was no longer taking care of myself. Just...thank you for this video. Thank you. Truly.
I’m glad this video helped you to feel heard & understood. I am even more glad you got out of a situation that was causing you emotional distress! I felt the exact same way, and I hope you find happiness in whatever you decide to do next! The sky is the limit now!
Started subbing back in March to test the waters and I see what you mean!! Besides the disrespectful students, teachers are so unsupported and overworked it’s ridiculous. When I go in to sub, it’s the teachers with full classes and no time to themselves, not the admin, that offer me support and advice.
Thank you so much for sharing. I am a 27 year veteran teacher and feel stuck. I have made the decision to transition from the teaching profession for my own mental and physical health. Some of us stay way too long reminiscing of the good times. I’m so glad that you got out when you did.
Thank you! I definitely heard from my more experienced coworkers that it used to be completely different (see also: better) than it is today. Which is unfortunate!
This is my 15th school year. My first 7 or so were great years- then I started getting classes from hell with seriously disturbed students (some of which are currently in prison for serious crimes). It broke my teaching soul. I started seeing all of these issues a few years before the pandemic so as much as people like to blame Covid, that just isn't true. Apathy, overbearing parents, and unrealistic district expectations are pushing many of us away and out. I feel sad because I dedicated my life to this profession, and don't want to leave, but this has become unsustainable.
How do You think the future is? Teacher shortage? Problems getting new? Here in scandinavia There is also issues but pay is getting better. . Kids with problems here too. One kod did bite my brother. My sister in law was so tired that she cried .
I feel the same. I love my kids and admin was supportive but the amount of money I had to spend to fund my classroom all while being paid so little plus working 60 hour weeks. It's just not worth it. If they pay teachers more I would go back but until then I found a job that pays way more for doing less work.
Praying this happens for you! 🙌🏼 you could perhaps consider teaching some type of virtual school to give you that work from home flexibility while still staying in the field! Just one option of many!
It is too much. I worked 81 hours a week in 3rd grade. It's a testing year for students and I was also grade chair. I needed work-life-balance and don't get me started about student behavior....
Hope you are still doing well - IT is an amazing world - there is sooooo much under the hood that you can get into (and if you have the drive, desire, and aptitude it can be extremely rewarding - my passion was databases and back-end servers (including middle tier servers) - even the buzzword "Cloud" is still just a different front-end to the "real" back-end). Word of warning though, IT can consume you if you let it (and, if you move into management, be sure you understand what that means in the long run - some love it, some hate it).
My wife is an awesome 2nd grade teacher, she loves her job. BUT, student behavior is out of control. And there are no consequences and little support from Admin. I’m not sure how much longer she can continue. Teacher morale at her school is in the toilet.
Thank you for sharing your story. I’ve been trying to leave teaching since my 2nd year and now I’m on my 6th. I’m terrified of making another terrible decision. I moved into high school, which is so much better than elementary (I can use the bathroom!!) but I still need to get out. The problem is when? The past two weeks I’ve been running on less than 4 hours of sleep due to this job. It’s so hard to start something new. I know I’ll get out, though!
Having the courage to try something new is more than half the battle! 🤍 one thing that really helped me was speaking to colleagues and reminding myself that if something went awry I could always go back! But now I don’t foresee that ever happening.
Thanks. I just cried alone in my class after my Grade 2s. They don't stop talking, no matter what I do. I'm a specialist music teacher in a Private school. I cried while brushing my teeth this morning, and my mom noticed and had to console me. 3 months in, and .... I'm not sure this role is for me anymore. I'm going to start sending resumes tonight. Thanks for sharing your light, and "there is always something to be thankful for" is really helpful for me at this moment.
I’ve definitely been there and am so sorry you’re going through a tough time in the classroom 😔 sending you all the good vibes for success in sending out your resume!
There is an epidemic of kids who don't know how to shut up. It's gotten worse. Years ago, they did away with having desks in rows, wanting kids to be seated in groups for cooperative learning. For the most part, it turned into each group being like a coffee klatch, with kids not knowing when to talk and when not to talk. It is exasperating!!! And as usual, I ask, "What is the training at home, such that kids cannot stop talking when it's necessary to hear instruction and directions?"
Middle school teacher here ... I went back to teaching last year after a really long hiatus of being a SAHM. Teaching is a whole different world since I left. Covid really changed things dramatically. However, it's also just dealing with constant BS either from admin, co-workers that are hard to work with, difficult parents, students with significant educational needs or emotional problems, not to mention the insane workload. Let's not forget the ridiculous meetings that are pointless, or the lack of planning periods. I will give another year a shot, but honestly I'm not sure I can stick it out beyond that. I'm looking for a new job in a new school, so I guess I'll see how it goes.
Yes! I never really got to experience teaching “pre-COVID” (other than internships) but I heard from many of my more experienced co-workers that things shifted drastically for the worse. 😞
@@AndreaMichelleYT just started teaching after a military career. Middle school students don't understand they need to do homework and lack any work ethic. They got accustomed to school being "sitting at home and playing on phone while on Zoom" and figure if they drag their feet it will eventually go back to that. It will take 4-5 years for the new cohort of students to come about that will be back to somewhat normal. However current batch of students are ruined and need tons of repair
Hi Andrea. Just came across your video and I am currently in the same boat. I’ve been teaching for five years and am currently on sick leave for burnout and anxiety. I find it encouraging to see that there are other teachers out there who left the profession and are doing well. Thank you ❤
I know that feeling of burnout and anxiety all too well :/ I hope you are able to heal and find something else you can look forward to! I don’t regret my decision for a second- it was what I needed! There are just so many options out there! Sending you all the best wishes! 🥰
1, Efficiency: Lack of EFFICIENCY is a major problem. Give teachers time to improve the actual learning opportunities. Allow teachers time to tweak learning opportunities to make them better, time to find/make entirely better learning opportunities, to present learning opportunities that fit the teaching style of the teacher and learning style of the students, etc. Do not waste time with lesson plan submissions, too many grades in the gradebook, giving teachers too many preps, giving teachers too many students, giving teachers too many forms, etc. Give the teachers their time/freedom to grow and get better on their own. That is very important if not the most important! 2, Passing along students: Many are PASSING ALONG STUDENTS if you will and not standing their ground with grades. Because of this and for the most part, students know they are likely going to pass, so they hardly try in class, which leads to bad conduct. An extreme amount of students are lacking in key measures of college and career readiness, but yet, they are still walking across that stage their senior year. 3, Egos: A variety of people voice major concerns (bullying, violence, safety, bad choices, toxicity, etc.) to others, but others have unnecessary EGOS directed to those people, which leads to a large amount of major concerns being ignored and what not.
Teaching WAS DEFINITELY my calling. And yet, still, I got burnt out. -In the very real sense of the term. I tried to hang in there for the kids; but then, when they weren’t doing well academically, I had to admit that “it was time”; and that I really had no other choice. And had to resign (due to health issues and all things related to burn out) during my fourth year of teaching. What costs are needed (/do you recommend) to have a successful career oi web design?
@@lwontherez7927 if you have the opportunity/time/ means to do a bootcamp that is probably very helpful for learning the fundamentals and building up portfolio projects. I didn’t go that route but I found doing online courses about UI/UX and Figma (design software) were helpful in building me up enough to feel comfortable in job interviews
I 100% relate, my health has improved significantly since leaving. At one point I had 13 ocular migraines in a month and now I can’t remember the last time I had one!
Great info....all student teachers should have to watch your video...I've been at it for 28 yrs. I wish I could have seen this video when I first started.
I wish I’d have had a deeper understanding of what the profession was really like before I was in my final year of college! Thanks for watching my video! 😊
When I was growing up,m (2000 - 2012) none of my teachers seemed as stressed as my colleagues and I seem now. They certainly weren’t leaving left and right.
Totally- many of my own elementary teachers have been in the profession for around 30 years and they’ve said that it’s never been as bad as it has the past 5-ish years.
Great video! As a former teacher myself, I can totally relate to these mistakes. It's so important for educators transitioning into new careers to be aware of these pitfalls. Thanks for sharing!
Just happen to come across your video and I am glad I did. In fall of 2019 I graduated for elementary Ed. However I have yet to start in the career field. I was even an EA just to make sure I wanted to be in the schools. I love it, but I don’t think I can mentally handle the stress. Or even physically because I have a lot of medical issues. Although, I am sort of struggling to find another profession. I am hopeful I can find something, because I am unsure teaching is for me. It is definitely a lot! I admire teachers, but it is so tough. And I had no idea how hard this job is. I admire your story tho. You stuck through a lot of major changes! Thank you for your real story.
What the hell are these comments asking if she has only fans. Leave her alone and only comment if you are showing support. I completely understand how you feel and I wish you the best. I’ve seen teachers get into recruiting and onboarding after they leave teaching. Easy field to switch over into!
I quit two years ago after teaching for 15. I now have a podcast where I interview current and former teachers and get their perspective on burnout and what is fueling it. Let me know if you're interested in doing an interview!
I quit being a sub. I know why teaching is so hard - teachers are given too much workload, not paid enough, and the creme de la creme of it all is the kids are all a bunch of entitled bratty shitheads because the parents let them do whatever. Sure the kids are fine one on one, but as a group it’s a nightmare. I genuinely think I have PTSD.
Thank you for being so candid on this. You worked hard and had a tough experience through Covid to add to everything else that comes with being a new teacher. I think Covid has taught a lot of us that time is short, we get one shot at life and we have to be happy and healthy. I am glad you feel better for choosing another career right now. One of the good things is that you have your qualifications and lots of experience, nobody can take that away. Maybe one day in the distant future you could tutor privately. There are always options, we have to be brave and stand up for ourselves and sometimes take a whole new direction. X
Thank you! That really means a lot! 🥲 it was a decision I pondered for months and months and I am glad I finally got the courage to do it! It was so hard to leave but staying and sacrificing my mental health would have been even harder. Thanks again for your support! 🤍
I’m so tired of this. A student threw up all over her desk and the floor yesterday. I told administration and they just told me to push her desk to the back. We had to stay in the room the rest of the day. The vomit was still there when I got in today and it smelled sooooo bad. Luckily I finally convinced them to get the janitor in….. ugh I hate it here
Oh no! That sounds unsanitary for all the students and you… I’m so sorry you had to work in those conditions! Hope your student is feeling better and no one else caught the bug!
I was not officially a teacher, but I worked in special education when I was in college and I learned quickly that teaching was not for me. I became an accountant just because I love the quiet lol. The thumbnail of this video hit me in the gut. You seem like a genuinely kind soul who went into the teaching profession to make a difference. I’m sorry you didn’t stay long in teaching, but I sincerely wish you well.
Working in SPED is truly for those who have a calling, I think. I could not have done it! I’m glad you landed in something that brings you more peace (hopefully). Although my fiancé is an accountant and although quiet, I know it has its own, entirely different share of stress! Thank you for your kindness. I definitely had a tough realization (and a lot of tears) when I realized I had made myself miserable. But I’m happy at least for the three years I was there I was able to give it my all and make a difference for those 65-ish students. 😊
@@AndreaMichelleYT Yes, I worked with wonderful kids but the parents were awful. I was also not willing to be hit, scratched, and kicked for $15 an hour. Being an accountant is certainly stressful, but I am left to my own devices and I don’t even need to see my clients in person. I have massive respect for teachers and I hope they keep leaving in droves so that reformation does happen. Things need to change.
That would be so helpful! I thought about that, if every teacher had an assistant to do all the administrative work (grading, making copies, sending out communication to parents, planning field trips, managing absences and make up work) it would be sooo different
the problem is that public schools are tax funded and from all the other things that are tax funded (cough cough the police cough) education is the least of priorities for states so they would never fund the education work sector to add assistants and looking at how well funded the police are and how well paid and the benefits officers have, it makes one wonder why teachers and schools can't have the same benefits
After 40+ years of teaching, I’m becoming increasingly convinced college is a huge waste of time and money for most people. Go only if you have a specific goal that requires it, and work at least a quarter time while doing so. Do not take out humongous loans you’ll regret.
What does that have to with anything she said? She went to school for teaching and got a teaching job, and then due to class behavior and excessive paperwork, plus the lack of support from admin, she quit.
Teaching is definitely an under appreciated/paid field for sure, I have a few teacher friends in similar positions and from what I've heard from them, the challenges are pretty consistent to what you mentioned in this video. Glad you found something that gives you a little more flexibility and less chaos though! 🙌
Let your teacher friends know I am thinking of them! It’s really rough out there, especially the past few years. 🥲 Sad that it seems like the choices are to sacrifice your sanity, your quality of teaching (and just leaving work undone to get back an ounce of free time), or just leaving the profession. I don’t blame anyone for wanting to leave, I’m so much happier! It’s just sad the kids are ultimately the ones who will suffer. 😕
Great video, I have been teaching for over 20 years and year it hasn’t been easy so I feel your pain, how old are you? and congratulations on finding something that you enjoy.
@@AndreaMichelleYT wow, that is young, you still have your whole life ahead of you to explore different avenues, do whatever makes you happy, don’t bring your self into the ground when it comes to doing a job that you hate.
I retired last year after 21 years of teaching. My life is blissful right now without undisciplined students, entitled parents, and fake “I understand what you’re going through” administrators.
Good for you. I went into teaching and taught abroad and in the States and I went back to my former non teaching job this year and I'm so much happier. I had a baby during teaching and it was stressful. I wfh now too and get to see my child and it's lovely.
I’m so glad you get to spend more time with your child now and are happier! My stress levels are so much lower now and I’m looking forward to knowing I’ll have more time and patience for my own children one day!
I'm so sorry you went through this, Andrea, it must be terrible to invest so much time and effort into what you think at the time is your passion, only for it to fall through. I can't imagine the stress you must have gone through, it really seems like teaching demands so much of you but barely gives anything in return, the whole school system is so screwed up. I hope your career as a UI and UX designer works out for you, honestly, you seem like you're so smart and talented and I think you would excel at whatever you choose to do. I've really been enjoying your channel so far, I appreciate you taking time from your busy schedule to make these videos.
Thank you for your kindness! I do miss my former students dearly, they were the best. I’m sad things didn’t go the way I’d hoped or planned but I’m thankful to be in the industry I am now! I feel like there’s lots of potential! I hope to make some new videos soon!
@@AndreaMichelleYT You're welcome, at least you're a lot happier now, and less stressed, I hope everything goes well for you. Nice! Glad to hear it, I'll be looking forward to them, I've been checking out some of your older ones, too.
I enjoyed hearing your story, I am in a similar boat and plan to leave teaching this year (my 2nd year). I have always been interested in graphic design and art related things. Youve inspired me to look into ui/ux for my next career. I start UX design labs next month. Thank you!
What can we do? That’s what I want to scream out in the world. We all don’t believe each-other, we’re all so divided now. It’s almost like it’s on purpose . We’re all in this together.
I think the future of teaching might be teacher teams in one class. Although there is pride and a feeling of success to have your very own classroom, I think things have changed today and a team of 3-4 people maximum could teach a class and they could all communicate when one is going to be out sick or take turns working from home to grade ect. A team could help with the overwhelming amount of duties for one person. (Emails, adapting for iep’s, lesson planning, classroom mgmt ect.)
I think I would have stayed in teaching (for longer than I did, at least) if I could have had the ability to co-teach! 🤍 Being in a classroom with only children and being the sole adult responsible for all of it is very isolating and draining! I think a co-teacher would have completely transformed my experience!
Thank you. In many countries teachers do get paid for the summer. In the US, I have never in 34 years as a teacher had an hour of paid vacation as a teacher. Is there any other profession that does not give you an hour of paid vacation? Most get at least 10 days of paid vacation a year. In Europe, you get a month of paid vacation. How taxing is it? One interpreter/aide said, her husband used to complain about how easy it was and why did she need to come back and lie down immediately? She replied, remember your daughter's birthday party. It was two hours. You remember how tired you were after that? I'm there for 7, five days a week. She said he never again, made another negative comment about how taxing it is and why she needed to lie down for a while.
@@grahambell8760 wow! When I was a teacher I had 10 PTO days per school year. To your other point, exhaustion at the end of every day is the best way to describe it.
I can’t imagine the cell phones! I taught kindergarten so didn’t have to deal with that but I’m sure that’s just yet another difficult thing to manage day in and day out
Great video. I am a fifth year middle school teacher. I too quit after my third year (for reasons similar to yours), did substituting for a year and returned to the classroom. Nevertheless, I will probably only teach one more year before finding a job with more work/life balance. Still, I will always be honored to have been an educator.
A word of encouragement..... I taught iniversoty, then two years pf Grade 4. Loved the kids but they are exhausting. Parents were good. Admin.... Not so great. Studied comp programming, ended up administering co phone system. Then back to adult day high school.... The best of all! They wete migrants/refugees, and wanted t Learn English. their attendance was checked by social support system. We had fun. Few young ppl nowadays will have only one career for life. I tell them thatm im 80.
I’m currently in the healthcare field and I want to switch careers. I’m happy that you were able to find something that you really enjoy now and gives you some work/life balance. Could you maybe do a day in the life for the current position you’re in?
Healthcare is a death sentence. You can definitely make big bucks, but it will come at a cost; long hours, disgruntled nasty co-workers, and administrative control that wants you to do the job of 3 people.
I want to thank you so much for sharing your story! Also want to apologize on behalf of others' rude comments -- people are weird. Anyhow, I was also unsure about my career path so ended up double majoring in communications and elementary education. I ended up becoming a teacher and share so many similarities with the working conditions you shared. My last year teaching, I was literally starting to feel like I was in an abusive relationship with teaching. I made it five years, just long enough to qualify for student loan forgiveness and get the pension. I had a lot of guilt/shame surrounding leaving but the working conditions are just ridiculous. I'm now a therapist and it is a welcome change.
Thank you for your kindness! I was not expecting this video to reach this wide of an audience. Double-majoring is a wise decision, probably one I should have considered. I totally agree that it can get to a point where it feels like an abusive relationship and I did a lot of internal bargaining on whether or not I should stay or go. I’m in the same boat as you- so much better off now in my new career field! I’m glad you found something that makes you happy! Thanks for watching! 😊
I’ve met people who have said they can’t imagine themselves doing anything else but teaching which is fine and I’m happy for them! But I agree- so many people resign to the fact that they will be overwhelmed and underpaid in their jobs, and it’s so sad!! It doesn’t have to be that way!
She should not have to do all the paperwork and communication for new students .It is the job of administration to communicate with parents about all policies, so teachers have time to do teaching
Agreed. Unfortunately every teacher I know has had to take on all of that. I will say, I worked at large schools with around 1,000 students or more so that probably makes a difference.
I was in the classroom for 8 years and I had to make some big changes this year. I am now private tutoring and I've been thinking about training to be a UX/UI designer. I love teaching, but I'm starting to hate being in education.
I completely get it! I loved the actual teaching part of my day as well! Sadly there were so many other things to do/worry about! I love UI & UX and highly recommend it thus far! 😊
Everything you’ve said I relate to 100000%. I quit last week. I tried to make it to December, but there was no way. Only made it 2.3 years, but I’m so relieved to be done. There are so many more sustainable careers. Thank you for sharing!!!
I'm working Going to College This year My Major this year is workplace critical thinking I'm Excited Go Back to college when i was little i knew that i wanted to be a English Teacher and Help My students Be Better students should Always listen to teachers and parents should Always listen to students and learn from their mistakes and make the right decision and choices I'm Going to put Behavior Mangement in My Classroom
Trust me, seeing the parents more often doesn't make this situation any better. If they ever show up, they just come to fight with you, the teacher, about their kids' grades. If parents actually stepped up, did the parenting and enforced some consequences if their children act up, teachers wouldn't have to see them all year.
In my experience, a lot of older teachers I knew got into the profession when it is was a much different time (back when it was fun, they say) but sadly either feel stuck or like you said, are hanging in for retirement. Where younger teachers who have only been in a handful of years see it being unsustainable long term so they leave. 😔
That’s an interesting point! I think at the end of the day it would be almost impossible to replicate because as a student teacher you aren’t there the entire year, and the student’s parents also know you are not the actual teacher so the vibe is very different.
I taught for 32 years and loved it except I had differences with the principal towards the end, so I ended up retiring. Teaching is so much work and if you don’t have a true passion for teaching it’s best for one to do something else.
Are you also in an abusive relationship? Education treats teachers like a battered wife. This ‘true passion’ is bullshit. NO ONE should put up with being treated this way! You being dismissive & disrespectful is a huge part of the problem. The answer is no, she is choosing not to be treated like crap like you put up with for so long.
I’m not in an abusive relationship with my students. If I could have just closed my door and teach my kiddos it would have been great. I taught in Texas in an affluent district. I adored my kiddos. The principal is the reason I left.
@@annamariemiller3877 it’s never the kids - it’s the adults but your ‘you couldn’t cut it unless you’re passionate’ toxic garbage indicates that you were, in fact, in an abusive relationship with teaching. The holier than thou attitude is just disgusting.
I was not treated in an abusive matter until the year I retired. At this point I’ve been retired for about 11 years. At the end of the day no teaching job is perfect 100% of the time. I loved being with my students and the last year I taught the principal was just to hard to work with, so after 32 years I retired. You can say whatever you want Miss Mary Jane, but you don’t know me and weren’t teaching with me. You can think whatever you want. Best of luck to you.
I think the pains of being a teacher are found in many other industries where there is often a lack of time and resources to achieve what the company demands. That said, there are certainly jobs and careers that are better than others. Of course it depends on the individual as well. I also like creating, where in most of jobs that involved repair, there was a fair amount of creating, which was my favorite part even though fixing problems was also fun in that you had to put on your detective hat and examine the clues to figure out who cause the problem. I think if computers and the internet would have been around when I was trying to figure out my career I would have chosen that path. I have built computers, learned programming which includes web design, but it has mostly been at the hobby level and very little at my jobs.
I've been a parapro for a few years and loved it so much. I've been wanting to go to college to pursue a career in teaching but after seeing what all the teachers go through, I didnt think it would be worth it to pay for college just to go through all that crap when I already get payed pretty well just to be a parapro so i decided to stick to that. I'm lucky enough to be in a district that pays more than the average in my state.
It’s also hard as parents when it comes to special need child. I know that you had to document everything and we thank you for that. The doctors wants the school to deal with the situation and vice versa for the teachers. When my son went to preschool, I knew something was up. Teachers are afraid to diagnose and doctors were just giving us the runaround. Even though we keep going back to the doctors. He was not properly diagnose until he was in 5th grade. He went to kindergarten and by first grade we decided to homeschool him until 5th grade. Even though I homeschooled my child, he also had in person classes twice a week. I stayed with him in class for a couple of months, stayed in the lobby of the school so he can still see me and eventually I would leave him and do my errands.
It can definitely be challenging to advocate for the kids who really need support! I documented for an entire year, and finally got IEP meetings at the very end of the year. I imagine getting smaller class size/placements for the students who need it would take several more years. It’s a shame. 🙁
Behaviors can be difficult to navigate! Especially when there are students who cannot easily assimilate into the classroom norms because of special circumstances. They deserve better support! It’s so sad!
I was surprised Andrea stayed in it for the kids, I would have thought the kids were a major nuisance. Them kids are losing out . Miss Andrea I’m sure you were a great teacher, many great teachers will leave do to the low pay and lots of hours to put in. Not to mention the bad attitude of the parents and kids. And the administration, calling the office to pee.
I feel identified with you in the 100% things you said... I couldn't agree more! I've been a teacher for 5 years now, I'm 30 years old... The problem is that I don't have another job....
A great thing about teaching is you have the summertime as a built in “break” to explore other options or take certification classes! That’s what I did, at least!
Good luck to you, Andrea! I graduated from college with a degree in teaching, but I decided that I wanted to pursue a different career path after I had spent a year of being a substitute teacher. In your opinion, what is the factor which causes the most disruption in public schools? I believe that cell phones and/or social media have absolutely ruined the public school environment, and I am afraid that this problem will never be able to be corrected. What do you think? Have a good day!
@@danielvick3527 I had a different experience because I taught kindergarten so the students didn’t have phones yet (well, not that they brought to school anyway 🙃). I think my struggle with disruption was just that there were students who needed accommodations and weren’t getting them in a general ed setting so by trying to accommodate the things those few needed (IEP style accommodations like 1:1 assistance etc) that took time away from the other 20-ish students as a whole. I can’t imagine how difficult the distraction of cell phones are in upper grades!
Andrea, my boyfriend tells me that phones and tablets are just making life miserable for him and other teachers! I can't imagine why anyone would major in any field of education now!
apparently now parents are contacting professors even though legally the professors can't tell them anything about their kids. so bad behavior is definitely creeping into college as well
As someone quitting real estate this year after 7 years - a real estate major is NOT necessary. I swear some successful realtors are practically illiterate. They delegate everything.
I definitely need to! Now that I’ve been at my new job for almost six months I feel like I’m well equipped enough to speak on how it’s been for me! I will plan on making a video talking all about it soon! 💕
@@AndreaMichelleYT Thank you for answering me. I am looking forward to watch your next video. I am thinking to take some courses to learn about that profession.
I see so much content like this that discourages me. I know the education system is messed up but I'm seriously considering becoming a Spanish teacher. I don't want to regret it but I want to at least try and give it a shot.
I will say- although teaching wasn’t for me long term, I don’t necessarily regret the years I spent as a teacher. They taught me a LOT about a lot of things. Patience, time management, quick thinking, adaptability. So I’d look at it this way; if you truly want to go for it, maybe you’ll love it or maybe you’ll learn from it! Not to mention, being a former teacher made a huge difference in my interviews for my current job. People know if you can handle being a teacher you are likely a hard worker who does well at listening and collaborating with others. 😄
A lot depends on the district. Like 99% of the time the folks that quit come from a district with certain challenges. Watch the series Abott Elementary and it shows how mismanagement can make/break an entire school.
I taught preschool for 20 years and loved it, and won a community award. My husband was sick and told me if he died i would gave to go into the public school system to make more money. I was pared with a former administrator who came to watch me every month. She decided that I would be better In a higher grade than the first grade i was in. I was always placed in a higher grade when i got a job and never in the same grade every year. I worked very hard and had mouthy kids plus teachers who wanted my job and made my life miserable reporting me to the school rep all the time. My mother became ill and was in nursing care. I visited her after school every night. My life became a nightmare of testing and entering grades. I had a small 3 weeks substituting in 1st grade and loved it but never got a chance to teach that grade. 4th grade was doable but I was Swithed to 5th. That was the year i quit. I was exhausted from admin Unrealistic expectations. That year many teachers left at that building. Even those who taught in the district for nearly 30 years. I never had the experience of teaching the same grade more than 1 year. And i couldnt get the teacher manuals Until school started. Then came common core. Ridiculous. After the holidays i quit. No regrets.
I love being a teacher but yeah, it's not an easy career path. Worse so, teachers are not given the treatment they deserve. It's still the most taxing job I have ever done/still doing and love too.
Teaching is a job people must be passionate about to be able to stay/give what it takes to be successful! 🤍 I’m so glad your students have someone like you teaching them!
Your mental health and quality of life will be much better leaving teaching . There are may fulfilling carees outside teaching. I left teaching and found options for good and rewarding careers.
No doubt about that... Every teacher and principal I've run into by chance a year after they retired always looked 15 years younger(!) than I last saw them. No joke. The bags under the eyes, the weight gain, the bad skin... all gone.
I quit teaching 34 years ago. It was already unbearable even then, but since the bastard offspring of Dubya Bush’s dim mind, “no child left behind” was introduced, the public schools have been reduced to custodial daycare institutions where it is virtually impossible to segregate, much less get rid of, chronic disciplinary offenders because once they’ve been diagnosed with any sort of psychiatric disorder they become members of a privileged class of persons known as “special needs” who are on an “IEP” and who cannot be suspended more than nine days per year, or so I’ve been told. By way of contrast, back in the dim recesses of the early to mid twentieth century big city school districts in particular had institutions casually referred to as “bad boys’ schools” where the real dirt-bags where kept isolated lest they spoil every last school building with their obnoxious behavior. But apparently such measures are now considered reactionary and unenlightened. With this in mind it should come as no surprise that no one wants to teach school anymore.
What people fail to appreciate is that it is simply not possible to guarantee that everyone will succeed in school. Perhaps only the top third of the school population could be considered “college material”. The other kids need trades training not incomprehensible to persons with low IQs liberal arts.@@robertcuba5947
The part about the Sims connecting with your love for design resonated with me. I’m a burnt out teacher and I think I’d love to work with city planning due to playing Cities Skylines. lol.
Your experience resonated with me except I knew right as I graduated that I needed to go into something else. I was just disappointed and realized for the same time investment I should have been taking data analytics, business, real estate ect. An education degree does give you transferable skills but there is no substitute for the hard skills you need for a business or government management position. Education classes were awesome but a young 17/18/19 year old is not going to know how a job differs from the class IE planning for special Ed vs. not having the resources, funding, or team. Homeless or at risk kids also deserve way more assistance then they get. We did things like help kids wash their laundry, but it was hard to go home imagining that they were living in a camper or tent. Couldn’t shut my brain off either.
This video is exactly what I needed, I'm thinking about getting into the same thing! Thanks so much for your insight! Do you have any credible sources or places to help someone break into that field / industry?
That is why you always have to go for your passion. It doesnt matter how many oportunities about it there are of its a good idea from somebody elses eyes.. you will make it work because you love. When you setle for something else then what happens is that even if you can find plenty of jobs you will eventually quit and its not worth it
@@AndreaMichelleYT no no, I was saying we should all choose what we feel passionated about, because when you truly love a job it will go well for you. I was not saying you should find joy in teaching, I totally understand why you left. I was saying society encourages people to go for the more aparently save and secure options , when it should encourage us to go for our passions. I also think in America probably being a teacher is specially hard because of the harsh competitive culture there. If you had the discipline to study all this time, that means you can do so well in anyhing you truly like
LINK TO PART 2 - Elementary Teacher to Product Designer (All about my new career / How I made the transition) : ruclips.net/video/ID8sd1rwv54/видео.htmlsi=f8uR6fp5eMSF5Z3x
I just want everyone to take a good look at the comments here... these comments are EXACTLY why we are quitting teaching. That lack of empathy and horrid disrespect is exactly how all of your kids act.
As a father of the 6 year old daughter in a charter school kindergarten, I am also appalled by some of the suggestions in this comments section.
We actually live in a predominantly Latino neighborhood, so I do think most of the kids do have some concept of respect.
I’m cried a lot from the serious disrespect everyday
I am a first year teacher and I am trying to get out. I’ve been interviewing and have been exploring different career options. I don’t understand how anyone can be in this career for multiple years, especially with how messed up the public education system is now. Absolutely no accountability for students and everything is somehow the teachers fault.
I feel for you, the first year is the hardest! Wishing you luck in your job hunt!
It's always always been the teacher's fault. I started teaching in 1979, retired in 2011. I tried to get out, took two breaks and tried other lines of work. Both times I went back to the classroom. At times it was sheer he _ _.
It is sad that so many take an expencive education and then do not like the work. Does nobody know about all the struggles?
When most Americans think of public schools, they think of the nationally popular radio show “Our Miss Brooks”. How well does that show compare to conditions in the schools today?
I want out so badly. I’m a sub, and I can’t get a job outside of education.
I hate it.
I have been teaching for 16 years and living from pay check to pay check, and You can feel how hard it is. The work never ends. I think you made a good decision. Wish you all the best.
Thank you- it is so challenging! Teachers deserve far better pay!
Thank you for what you do. Teachers are the real heroes of America - treated like disposable bodies while raising our future.
I’m so glad you have found a career you enjoy. Life is to short to “stick it out.”
Thank you! I feel truly blessed. And I totally agree, no regrets from me on leaving!
You’re on point with everything!!!
No breaks, during my lunch I’m making copies, calling parents, teacher meetings. Students need accommodations that are not getting the services they need. Exhausted!!! Emotionally draining, cried my first days of kindergarten, then did it again 2 years later, cried the second week.
"Students need accommodations (...) services they need."
Which *services* could *accommodations* need?
@@knrdvmmlbkkn kindergarten it’s the first time going to school for some students, some students might need evaluations, for example be autistic, adhd, self contained behavior. Some Parents are not aware of their children needed a special service because they’ve never been in a school environment or interacting with other children
@@5mireya5"kindergarten it’s the (...) with other children
That's not what I asked about. And my question was rhetorical. Services don't need any accomodations. I wanted to point out your ridiculous phrasing.
"it’s the first time " - no; "is the first time".
"Some Parents" - no; "Some parents".
"children needed" - no; "children needing".
I'm a teacher from Spain, I've taught for 7 years now( In Spain). Last school year I went to the US to teach as a part of a teacher exchange program. That year got me question my whole career too. Never happened to me before
I’ve heard teaching abroad is SO different from the US! Mainly that abroad is much better, so sadly this doesn’t surprise me. 😞
I resonated with this video so much. I am currently a 2nd grade teacher and am struggling with burnout and overall anxiety from the work load. I actually just put in my two weeks. I realize I need to put my mental health first. Thanks for sharing❤️
I hope your mental health improves! Best of luck on your new journey! 😊
After being sick, sending a doctor’s notes, and literally forgetting to finish writing and submitting my lesson plans for the two weeks, my principal comes up to me to submit a 40 page lesson plan immediately by noon and if I don’t I am fired. Thank God he didn’t check on me. I don’t have an assistant. I’m the only one working in the classroom. That’s fine. I wrote the 40 page lesson plan, submitted it last night and wrote my resignation letter and submitting it at the end of the day. I’m sick. My life is sick. Enough is enough.
More than 20 years in and it NEVER gets easier. I'm still putting in late hours. The stress is horrible.
stress is even worse I think sometimes. 20 years and teaching in three different states.same problems different states
I'm in year 15 (and with one foot out the door). What I don't understand is how parents can't handle their 1-2 kids, but get frustrated that we can't handle 150 (high school, up to 33 kids at a time) kids!!
Amen!!!
Literally supposed to graduate next year but decided to switch majors this semester. I’ve always wanted to be a teacher since middle school, but working as a substitute and hearing my mentor teachers honest insights literally made me question everything about this choice. I had to talk to my advisor, who happened to be a former teacher and she talked me out of it. Just like you, she only lasted three years as well. Working as a sub literally was an eye opener because college don’t tell you about the shit you have deal with in the real world. Literally how are teachers expected to teach and manage a classroom, while tracking students progress especially those with IEPs. Hell in ome schools especially title one, you get 23-25 or more students in a class and 5-7 of them could have IEP and you’re legally required to update all this documents. Then comes the lesson planning which nowadays it’s hard to teach outside of the box because our system is designed to focus on test preps. It makes it so much harder for the kids to learn and pay attention if the teacher is also bored by all these standards that our system have created. Then parents are entitled and disrespectful to teachers. Like how are these parents raising their children amd also tolerating bad behaviors. I once subbed with a 3rd grade class w
And couple kids would literally mumble words and cuss me out at their desk as if I couldn’t hear them. But as teacher it’s like you’re not allowed to react. I have so much respect for teachers and they deserve so much better from the government, administrators, parents, and kids. Only important American where teachers are stepped on all over like a door mat, because in the Philippines, teachers are as much of an authority figures as police officers when students address teachers, they have stand up from their seats.
I was starting with associate and work as a IA and making the choice to switch to liberal arts. I’m so stress and I’m health is not great
* I was working to get my AA in special education and transferring to a University, but I really can’t take it. My anxiety is so bad and I’m so depressed these days. But I really wanted to work with kids but I can’t do it anymore
I am getting out of student teaching today. I’m so unhappy and don’t like where education is going.
I was very unhappy during student teaching also. Now, 11 years later, I'm considering leaving the profession. I only lasted this long, because I taught part time for 10 years.
I just finished my student teaching and graduated with my master's and credentials. I knew coming into this career that the system was broken. I knew what problems and issues I would face in this field. However, once I got to dip my feet into the water. The reality hits you differently.
I’m still going for it, no matter what. One thing I learned is that there are going to be dark times when you will have to rely on yourself and maybe your kiddos 😮
Being treated like a child ...wow girl thanks for saying that. You really nailed it...sad truth
I'm in my second year teaching.
I'm still struggling with not being able to "shut my brain off"
I feel like I'm always working
I was the exact same way ❤️🩹 I hope things improve for you soon!
@@AndreaMichelleYT thanks
Reasons for leaving: horrible principal, horrible admin, racism, anti military, told I had to pay for everything I needed, which of course was EVERYTHING, being locked out of main offices because principal brought grandchildren to work (that’s where copy machine and supplies were), no support, constant criticism, no lunch break, misbehaving kids forced on me during my planning period, no time to even pee. Final straw: being downgraded on my observations because I didn’t have enough room. Seriously. Most horrible job on the planet.
The state of education is pretty sad nowadays, I don’t fault anyone for seeking other options! I personally am much happier since leaving!
If America's government run schools are in fact this bad then it's time to try privatization. Treat public education as they do in Asia, like a business; not as they do in the US, as just another government racket. Under a privatized system, good teachers would make more money and get bonuses, while the rest would be shown the door. America would finally get the better teachers and smarter students it so desperately needs. I'm betting that won't happen since teachers unions are the most powerful and most feared public sector unions the world has ever known. Besides, any politician with two brain cells to rub together knows that their political futures rest entirely upon doing whatever the teachers unions tell them to do. So it's damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead until the money runs out. And then they'll just print more. The federal government is now taxing people who've yet to be born, as Americans just aren't having kids at the same rate as they once did. This is why our government will allow immigration, both legal and illegal, to continue.
Apparently third year itch is a real thing in teaching. This is my 2nd year teaching and I'm most definitely not working as hard as I did last year.
I'm not staying behind. I'm not going above and beyond or volunteering for extra things. I only do things unless I'm told or the deadline is near. I don't have school email on my phone and never reply unless it's specifically directed at me with my name on the email. I've not be printing anything this year, it's all on Google classroom to save printing everything and it also saves precious planning time. I phone for help if behaviour gets out of hand. I do spreadsheets within my own time and don't rush things. I feel so much more relaxed. I leave about 20 minutes after students leave and only do a little bit of work at home (e.g. open all tabs and powerpoints on my computer for next day or a little bit of marking).
I don't care what anyone else says, but if teacher wellbeing and mental health in isn't prioritised, the teaching quality will be poor. Seriously. Students push the boundaries to see how much they can get away with and how little work they can do.
As staff, try the same. Stop going OTT and working so hard and see what happens. Because the way education is going, just being in the building with lessons prepared is enough. This doesn't mean you don't care about your students. It means you care about your health and your wellbeing that is vital for teaching good lessons, and this will rub off on your students education and wellbeing. There is nothing wrong with this!
Good luck and I'm sure you have made a good decision.
Taking my work email notifications off of my phone was game changing! 🙌🏼
I'm close to retirement but would not have stuck it out if I was 20 years younger. Lack of support for students with diverse needs is the biggest challenge in my experience. It's not that we don't care. We do!! It's just not a hill we are willing to die (literally) on.
100%!!! A lot of my former coworkers (included my admin) said the same thing. That they were happy I was exploring while I was young and I was always welcome to come back if needed but they’d probably be retired by then. 😅
I can’t see the new generation of teachers lasting 30 years I just can’t. Those days are done!
I'm a school social worker. I have much empathy for teachers, especially the amount of work that's expected of them paired with any degree of behavior issues. I seriously think teachers should get a decent stipend for decorations every year, and any classroom where behavior needs to be documented for possible SPED intervention should have an aide, para or BCBA come in and document that one or two students. Documentation is a pain in the ass and oddly enough those that advocate for such extreme documentation aren't the ones doing the documentation.
It’s a very tough job that only teachers and their immediate family can see. I’m sure you feel so much healthier.
So much better! My ocular migraines, brain fog, and episodes of aphasia have entirely gone away. 😌
I just quit my teaching job, in California, after 22 years. Everything you said in this video is true. The profession needs a major overhaul. Due to its dysfunctional nature you will be emotionally drained and your attitude will become extremely negative about the job. You will feel like your dreams of teaching (and making a difference) are being crushed! And, yes, the workload is tremendous and the pay is crap. Kudos! Your heart was in the right place...💙
Thank you for your kindness. 😊 I don’t regret my decision for a second, and I hope you find your experience to be the same! Cheers!
Smart to get out at the three year mark. Teaching never gets any better. I made it 24 years and retired. Admin beats loving teachers to death and they enjoy doing it!
Yep- sadly three years was enough for me! Kudos for 24!! I’m so much happier/healthier now, hope you are as well!
I think it’s pretty crazy that you turn 18 and you’re expected to choose a major. You’re 18. You don’t even know who you really are. I blame the high school counselors for aggressively pushing college right after hs instead of taking an active year off where you work/travel and figure it out.
I definitely wish I’d have thought the decision of changing my major through a bit more!
Or better yet, high schools should offer more vocational courses that are geared toward high schoolers figuring out where they want to go in life rather than requiring the typical, boring English, Math, Social Studies, etc
@@mmdmmj1 agreed. Parents too busy to guide Thor kids and rely on schools
Yep. College isn't for everyone. Trade schools set people up for good jobs. Military is also an option and you start getting hands on training after 10 weeks of basic training (boot camp)
"Everyone needs to go to college" is a babyboomer meme. I know guys that work for Raytheon fixing air defense systems making $100K that never went to college, let alone too the SAT or ACT
School counselor do a piss poor job of utilizing interest inventories and test scores to facilitate students planning for higher education and vocation. Just a simple Myers-Brigs and an ASVAB would save graduating students tens of thousands of dollars on useless college degrees.
Thank you for making this video. There is so much I want to say. I quit teaching a few months ago, mid-year because it was destroying my soul and I was no longer taking care of myself. Just...thank you for this video. Thank you. Truly.
I’m glad this video helped you to feel heard & understood. I am even more glad you got out of a situation that was causing you emotional distress! I felt the exact same way, and I hope you find happiness in whatever you decide to do next! The sky is the limit now!
Started subbing back in March to test the waters and I see what you mean!! Besides the disrespectful students, teachers are so unsupported and overworked it’s ridiculous. When I go in to sub, it’s the teachers with full classes and no time to themselves, not the admin, that offer me support and advice.
Thank you so much for sharing. I am a 27 year veteran teacher and feel stuck. I have made the decision to transition from the teaching profession for my own mental and physical health. Some of us stay way too long reminiscing of the good times. I’m so glad that you got out when you did.
Thank you! I definitely heard from my more experienced coworkers that it used to be completely different (see also: better) than it is today. Which is unfortunate!
This is my 15th school year. My first 7 or so were great years- then I started getting classes from hell with seriously disturbed students (some of which are currently in prison for serious crimes). It broke my teaching soul. I started seeing all of these issues a few years before the pandemic so as much as people like to blame Covid, that just isn't true. Apathy, overbearing parents, and unrealistic district expectations are pushing many of us away and out. I feel sad because I dedicated my life to this profession, and don't want to leave, but this has become unsustainable.
How do You think the future is? Teacher shortage? Problems getting new?
Here in scandinavia There is also issues but pay is getting better. . Kids with problems here too. One kod did bite my brother. My sister in law was so tired that she cried .
I feel the same. I love my kids and admin was supportive but the amount of money I had to spend to fund my classroom all while being paid so little plus working 60 hour weeks. It's just not worth it. If they pay teachers more I would go back but until then I found a job that pays way more for doing less work.
Lord Jesus I pray I get blessed with an at home job so I can be a mom and wife 😭
I’m on year 3 of teaching and it’s too much.
Praying this happens for you! 🙌🏼 you could perhaps consider teaching some type of virtual school to give you that work from home flexibility while still staying in the field! Just one option of many!
It is too much. I worked 81 hours a week in 3rd grade. It's a testing year for students and I was also grade chair. I needed work-life-balance and don't get me started about student behavior....
Hope you are still doing well - IT is an amazing world - there is sooooo much under the hood that you can get into (and if you have the drive, desire, and aptitude it can be extremely rewarding - my passion was databases and back-end servers (including middle tier servers) - even the buzzword "Cloud" is still just a different front-end to the "real" back-end). Word of warning though, IT can consume you if you let it (and, if you move into management, be sure you understand what that means in the long run - some love it, some hate it).
My wife is an awesome 2nd grade teacher, she loves her job. BUT, student behavior is out of control. And there are no consequences and little support from Admin. I’m not sure how much longer she can continue. Teacher morale at her school is in the toilet.
I’m glad she loves her job. I understand the lack of student consequences completely. I hope things improve for her. 😔
Thank you for sharing your story. I’ve been trying to leave teaching since my 2nd year and now I’m on my 6th. I’m terrified of making another terrible decision. I moved into high school, which is so much better than elementary (I can use the bathroom!!) but I still need to get out. The problem is when? The past two weeks I’ve been running on less than 4 hours of sleep due to this job. It’s so hard to start something new. I know I’ll get out, though!
Having the courage to try something new is more than half the battle! 🤍 one thing that really helped me was speaking to colleagues and reminding myself that if something went awry I could always go back! But now I don’t foresee that ever happening.
Thanks. I just cried alone in my class after my Grade 2s. They don't stop talking, no matter what I do. I'm a specialist music teacher in a Private school. I cried while brushing my teeth this morning, and my mom noticed and had to console me. 3 months in, and .... I'm not sure this role is for me anymore. I'm going to start sending resumes tonight. Thanks for sharing your light, and "there is always something to be thankful for" is really helpful for me at this moment.
I’ve definitely been there and am so sorry you’re going through a tough time in the classroom 😔 sending you all the good vibes for success in sending out your resume!
There is an epidemic of kids who don't know how to shut up. It's gotten worse. Years ago, they did away with having desks in rows, wanting kids to be seated in groups for cooperative learning. For the most part, it turned into each group being like a coffee klatch, with kids not knowing when to talk and when not to talk. It is exasperating!!! And as usual, I ask, "What is the training at home, such that kids cannot stop talking when it's necessary to hear instruction and directions?"
Middle school teacher here ... I went back to teaching last year after a really long hiatus of being a SAHM. Teaching is a whole different world since I left. Covid really changed things dramatically. However, it's also just dealing with constant BS either from admin, co-workers that are hard to work with, difficult parents, students with significant educational needs or emotional problems, not to mention the insane workload. Let's not forget the ridiculous meetings that are pointless, or the lack of planning periods. I will give another year a shot, but honestly I'm not sure I can stick it out beyond that. I'm looking for a new job in a new school, so I guess I'll see how it goes.
Yes! I never really got to experience teaching “pre-COVID” (other than internships) but I heard from many of my more experienced co-workers that things shifted drastically for the worse. 😞
@@AndreaMichelleYT just started teaching after a military career. Middle school students don't understand they need to do homework and lack any work ethic.
They got accustomed to school being "sitting at home and playing on phone while on Zoom" and figure if they drag their feet it will eventually go back to that.
It will take 4-5 years for the new cohort of students to come about that will be back to somewhat normal. However current batch of students are ruined and need tons of repair
I've decided to give teaching another try except this time through an agency. I'm going in with the attitude that I have needs and not wants.
Hi Andrea. Just came across your video and I am currently in the same boat. I’ve been teaching for five years and am currently on sick leave for burnout and anxiety. I find it encouraging to see that there are other teachers out there who left the profession and are doing well. Thank you ❤
I know that feeling of burnout and anxiety all too well :/ I hope you are able to heal and find something else you can look forward to! I don’t regret my decision for a second- it was what I needed! There are just so many options out there! Sending you all the best wishes! 🥰
1, Efficiency: Lack of EFFICIENCY is a major problem. Give teachers time to improve the actual learning opportunities. Allow teachers time to tweak learning opportunities to make them better, time to find/make entirely better learning opportunities, to present learning opportunities that fit the teaching style of the teacher and learning style of the students, etc. Do not waste time with lesson plan submissions, too many grades in the gradebook, giving teachers too many preps, giving teachers too many students, giving teachers too many forms, etc. Give the teachers their time/freedom to grow and get better on their own. That is very important if not the most important!
2, Passing along students: Many are PASSING ALONG STUDENTS if you will and not standing their ground with grades. Because of this and for the most part, students know they are likely going to pass, so they hardly try in class, which leads to bad conduct. An extreme amount of students are lacking in key measures of college and career readiness, but yet, they are still walking across that stage their senior year.
3, Egos: A variety of people voice major concerns (bullying, violence, safety, bad choices, toxicity, etc.) to others, but others have unnecessary EGOS directed to those people, which leads to a large amount of major concerns being ignored and what not.
Teaching WAS DEFINITELY my calling. And yet, still, I got burnt out. -In the very real sense of the term. I tried to hang in there for the kids; but then, when they weren’t doing well academically, I had to admit that “it was time”; and that I really had no other choice. And had to resign (due to health issues and all things related to burn out) during my fourth year of teaching.
What costs are needed (/do you recommend) to have a successful career oi web design?
@@lwontherez7927 if you have the opportunity/time/ means to do a bootcamp that is probably very helpful for learning the fundamentals and building up portfolio projects. I didn’t go that route but I found doing online courses about UI/UX and Figma (design software) were helpful in building me up enough to feel comfortable in job interviews
I respect your decision completely. I was in a similar boat. Teaching took a toll on my health.
Society will no longer allow teaching......it is sad
I 100% relate, my health has improved significantly since leaving. At one point I had 13 ocular migraines in a month and now I can’t remember the last time I had one!
Great info....all student teachers should have to watch your video...I've been at it for 28 yrs. I wish I could have seen this video when I first started.
I wish I’d have had a deeper understanding of what the profession was really like before I was in my final year of college! Thanks for watching my video! 😊
When I was growing up,m (2000 - 2012) none of my teachers seemed as stressed as my colleagues and I seem now. They certainly weren’t leaving left and right.
Totally- many of my own elementary teachers have been in the profession for around 30 years and they’ve said that it’s never been as bad as it has the past 5-ish years.
Great video! As a former teacher myself, I can totally relate to these mistakes. It's so important for educators transitioning into new careers to be aware of these pitfalls. Thanks for sharing!
I’m on that’s same boat. I’ve been teaching for 5 years. I’m about ready to leave the profession.
Just happen to come across your video and I am glad I did. In fall of 2019 I graduated for elementary Ed. However I have yet to start in the career field. I was even an EA just to make sure I wanted to be in the schools. I love it, but I don’t think I can mentally handle the stress. Or even physically because I have a lot of medical issues. Although, I am sort of struggling to find another profession. I am hopeful I can find something, because I am unsure teaching is for me. It is definitely a lot! I admire teachers, but it is so tough. And I had no idea how hard this job is. I admire your story tho. You stuck through a lot of major changes! Thank you for your real story.
Thank you for watching! It was an extremely turbulent 3 years for me. I learned a lot and grew a lot from the experience for sure!
What the hell are these comments asking if she has only fans. Leave her alone and only comment if you are showing support.
I completely understand how you feel and I wish you the best. I’ve seen teachers get into recruiting and onboarding after they leave teaching. Easy field to switch over into!
because she's a 7/10 and she needs someone strong and fierce like u to save her from the internet
She's crazy hot tho 😂😂
@@eyeThink11 so that means she should have an onlyfans? tf is wrong with you?
I was asking for a friend. 😅
This video made me realize as a kid I should have told a classmate to stop bothering the teacher. The kid was a real jerk.
Hahaha epiphanies!
I quit two years ago after teaching for 15. I now have a podcast where I interview current and former teachers and get their perspective on burnout and what is fueling it. Let me know if you're interested in doing an interview!
I quit being a sub. I know why teaching is so hard - teachers are given too much workload, not paid enough, and the creme de la creme of it all is the kids are all a bunch of entitled bratty shitheads because the parents let them do whatever. Sure the kids are fine one on one, but as a group it’s a nightmare. I genuinely think I have PTSD.
I’m interested! Second year Special Education teacher.
Thank you for being so candid on this. You worked hard and had a tough experience through Covid to add to everything else that comes with being a new teacher.
I think Covid has taught a lot of us that time is short, we get one shot at life and we have to be happy and healthy. I am glad you feel better for choosing another career right now.
One of the good things is that you have your qualifications and lots of experience, nobody can take that away.
Maybe one day in the distant future you could tutor privately. There are always options, we have to be brave and stand up for ourselves and sometimes take a whole new direction. X
Thank you! That really means a lot! 🥲 it was a decision I pondered for months and months and I am glad I finally got the courage to do it! It was so hard to leave but staying and sacrificing my mental health would have been even harder. Thanks again for your support! 🤍
I’m so tired of this. A student threw up all over her desk and the floor yesterday. I told administration and they just told me to push her desk to the back. We had to stay in the room the rest of the day. The vomit was still there when I got in today and it smelled sooooo bad. Luckily I finally convinced them to get the janitor in….. ugh I hate it here
Oh no! That sounds unsanitary for all the students and you… I’m so sorry you had to work in those conditions! Hope your student is feeling better and no one else caught the bug!
@@MeowCatTrio I ended up quitting. I realized it wasn’t worth it
I was not officially a teacher, but I worked in special education when I was in college and I learned quickly that teaching was not for me. I became an accountant just because I love the quiet lol.
The thumbnail of this video hit me in the gut. You seem like a genuinely kind soul who went into the teaching profession to make a difference. I’m sorry you didn’t stay long in teaching, but I sincerely wish you well.
Working in SPED is truly for those who have a calling, I think. I could not have done it! I’m glad you landed in something that brings you more peace (hopefully). Although my fiancé is an accountant and although quiet, I know it has its own, entirely different share of stress!
Thank you for your kindness. I definitely had a tough realization (and a lot of tears) when I realized I had made myself miserable. But I’m happy at least for the three years I was there I was able to give it my all and make a difference for those 65-ish students. 😊
@@AndreaMichelleYT
Yes, I worked with wonderful kids but the parents were awful. I was also not willing to be hit, scratched, and kicked for $15 an hour. Being an accountant is certainly stressful, but I am left to my own devices and I don’t even need to see my clients in person.
I have massive respect for teachers and I hope they keep leaving in droves so that reformation does happen. Things need to change.
They need to have a separate secretary for teachers to help with decorating and contacting parents and the other minor stuff
I definitely agree with you on your comment
That would be so helpful! I thought about that, if every teacher had an assistant to do all the administrative work (grading, making copies, sending out communication to parents, planning field trips, managing absences and make up work) it would be sooo different
the problem is that public schools are tax funded and from all the other things that are tax funded (cough cough the police cough) education is the least of priorities for states so they would never fund the education work sector to add assistants and looking at how well funded the police are and how well paid and the benefits officers have, it makes one wonder why teachers and schools can't have the same benefits
After 40+ years of teaching, I’m becoming increasingly convinced college is a huge waste of time and money for most people. Go only if you have a specific goal that requires it, and work at least a quarter time while doing so. Do not take out humongous loans you’ll regret.
What does that have to with anything she said? She went to school for teaching and got a teaching job, and then due to class behavior and excessive paperwork, plus the lack of support from admin, she quit.
Teaching is definitely an under appreciated/paid field for sure, I have a few teacher friends in similar positions and from what I've heard from them, the challenges are pretty consistent to what you mentioned in this video. Glad you found something that gives you a little more flexibility and less chaos though! 🙌
Let your teacher friends know I am thinking of them! It’s really rough out there, especially the past few years. 🥲 Sad that it seems like the choices are to sacrifice your sanity, your quality of teaching (and just leaving work undone to get back an ounce of free time), or just leaving the profession. I don’t blame anyone for wanting to leave, I’m so much happier! It’s just sad the kids are ultimately the ones who will suffer. 😕
Great video, I have been teaching for over 20 years and year it hasn’t been easy so I feel your pain, how old are you? and congratulations on finding something that you enjoy.
I’m 25! I started teaching right after I graduated college and turned 22.
@@AndreaMichelleYT wow, that is young, you still have your whole life ahead of you to explore different avenues, do whatever makes you happy, don’t bring your self into the ground when it comes to doing a job that you hate.
I retired last year after 21 years of teaching. My life is blissful right now without undisciplined students, entitled parents, and fake “I understand what you’re going through” administrators.
Happy retirement! I hope you are soaking up all the peace and quiet these days. 😂😄
Good for you. I went into teaching and taught abroad and in the States and I went back to my former non teaching job this year and I'm so much happier. I had a baby during teaching and it was stressful. I wfh now too and get to see my child and it's lovely.
I’m so glad you get to spend more time with your child now and are happier! My stress levels are so much lower now and I’m looking forward to knowing I’ll have more time and patience for my own children one day!
I'm so sorry you went through this, Andrea, it must be terrible to invest so much time and effort into what you think at the time is your passion, only for it to fall through. I can't imagine the stress you must have gone through, it really seems like teaching demands so much of you but barely gives anything in return, the whole school system is so screwed up. I hope your career as a UI and UX designer works out for you, honestly, you seem like you're so smart and talented and I think you would excel at whatever you choose to do. I've really been enjoying your channel so far, I appreciate you taking time from your busy schedule to make these videos.
Thank you for your kindness! I do miss my former students dearly, they were the best. I’m sad things didn’t go the way I’d hoped or planned but I’m thankful to be in the industry I am now! I feel like there’s lots of potential! I hope to make some new videos soon!
@@AndreaMichelleYT You're welcome, at least you're a lot happier now, and less stressed, I hope everything goes well for you. Nice! Glad to hear it, I'll be looking forward to them, I've been checking out some of your older ones, too.
Thank You for accommodating the kids that needed it! Good Luck in your new journey
Thank you. 🤍 I cherish the memories with the 70-ish students I did get to teach over my 3 years!
I enjoyed hearing your story, I am in a similar boat and plan to leave teaching this year (my 2nd year). I have always been interested in graphic design and art related things. Youve inspired me to look into ui/ux for my next career. I start UX design labs next month. Thank you!
That’s great! I am loving being in UI/UX/product design now! I hope you have a similarly positive experience! 😊
American society has devolved to a point where teaching school is no longer possible.
What can we do? That’s what I want to scream out in the world.
We all don’t believe each-other, we’re all so divided now. It’s almost like it’s on purpose .
We’re all in this together.
I think the future of teaching might be teacher teams in one class. Although there is pride and a feeling of success to have your very own classroom, I think things have changed today and a team of 3-4 people maximum could teach a class and they could all communicate when one is going to be out sick or take turns working from home to grade ect. A team could help with the overwhelming amount of duties for one person. (Emails, adapting for iep’s, lesson planning, classroom mgmt ect.)
I think I would have stayed in teaching (for longer than I did, at least) if I could have had the ability to co-teach! 🤍 Being in a classroom with only children and being the sole adult responsible for all of it is very isolating and draining! I think a co-teacher would have completely transformed my experience!
Thank you. In many countries teachers do get paid for the summer. In the US, I have never in 34 years as a teacher had an hour of paid vacation as a teacher. Is there any other profession that does not give you an hour of paid vacation? Most get at least 10 days of paid vacation a year. In Europe, you get a month of paid vacation.
How taxing is it? One interpreter/aide said, her husband used to complain about how easy it was and why did she need to come back and lie down immediately? She replied, remember your daughter's birthday party. It was two hours. You remember how tired you were after that? I'm there for 7, five days a week. She said he never again, made another negative comment about how taxing it is and why she needed to lie down for a while.
@@grahambell8760 wow! When I was a teacher I had 10 PTO days per school year. To your other point, exhaustion at the end of every day is the best way to describe it.
Congratulations on your new journey!!! Can you make a video with advice on transitioning to tech? ❤
Sure! I’d be happy to do that!
"Learn to code" is a real thing. Awesome.
I admire those who can do it well!!!
@@AndreaMichelleYT No, I was talking about YOU!.
I left teaching and became a software engineer, have never looked back. The job market is a lot worse now than it was a few years back though.
Watching the whole entire video now. Thank you so much for sharing your story and experience here.
Thanks for watching! :)
@@AndreaMichelleYT no problem 😌
I quit teaching last month as well.. . I just could NOT get my juniors to pay attention! The phone's, the disrespect etc.
I can’t imagine the cell phones! I taught kindergarten so didn’t have to deal with that but I’m sure that’s just yet another difficult thing to manage day in and day out
Same happened to me. I just quit🥹
Great video. I am a fifth year middle school teacher. I too quit after my third year (for reasons similar to yours), did substituting for a year and returned to the classroom. Nevertheless, I will probably only teach one more year before finding a job with more work/life balance. Still, I will always be honored to have been an educator.
I completely understand! Work/life balance is so important! 💕 wishing you all the best in wherever your career takes you!
A word of encouragement..... I taught iniversoty, then two years pf Grade 4. Loved the kids but they are exhausting. Parents were good. Admin.... Not so great. Studied comp programming, ended up administering co
phone system. Then back to adult day high school.... The best of all! They wete migrants/refugees, and wanted t
Learn English. their attendance was checked by social support system. We had fun.
Few young ppl nowadays will have only one career for life. I tell them thatm im 80.
I’m currently in the healthcare field and I want to switch careers. I’m happy that you were able to find something that you really enjoy now and gives you some work/life balance. Could you maybe do a day in the life for the current position you’re in?
Hi! I filmed a video about my current job and will post it soon! Just need to edit it! :)
Healthcare is a death sentence. You can definitely make big bucks, but it will come at a cost; long hours, disgruntled nasty co-workers, and administrative control that wants you to do the job of 3 people.
I want to thank you so much for sharing your story! Also want to apologize on behalf of others' rude comments -- people are weird. Anyhow, I was also unsure about my career path so ended up double majoring in communications and elementary education. I ended up becoming a teacher and share so many similarities with the working conditions you shared. My last year teaching, I was literally starting to feel like I was in an abusive relationship with teaching. I made it five years, just long enough to qualify for student loan forgiveness and get the pension. I had a lot of guilt/shame surrounding leaving but the working conditions are just ridiculous. I'm now a therapist and it is a welcome change.
Thank you for your kindness! I was not expecting this video to reach this wide of an audience. Double-majoring is a wise decision, probably one I should have considered. I totally agree that it can get to a point where it feels like an abusive relationship and I did a lot of internal bargaining on whether or not I should stay or go. I’m in the same boat as you- so much better off now in my new career field! I’m glad you found something that makes you happy! Thanks for watching! 😊
Love this story.
This thing of "It's my calling"... like some mysterious force that says, "You are meant to teach." To me it's nonsense.
and it plays a role into educators allowing themselves to get abused financially and even physically.
I’ve met people who have said they can’t imagine themselves doing anything else but teaching which is fine and I’m happy for them! But I agree- so many people resign to the fact that they will be overwhelmed and underpaid in their jobs, and it’s so sad!! It doesn’t have to be that way!
She should not have to do all the paperwork and communication for new students .It is the job of administration to communicate with parents about all policies, so teachers have time to do teaching
Agreed. Unfortunately every teacher I know has had to take on all of that. I will say, I worked at large schools with around 1,000 students or more so that probably makes a difference.
They just keep giving teachers more and more.
I was in the classroom for 8 years and I had to make some big changes this year. I am now private tutoring and I've been thinking about training to be a UX/UI designer. I love teaching, but I'm starting to hate being in education.
I completely get it! I loved the actual teaching part of my day as well! Sadly there were so many other things to do/worry about! I love UI & UX and highly recommend it thus far! 😊
Everything you’ve said I relate to 100000%. I quit last week. I tried to make it to December, but there was no way. Only made it 2.3 years, but I’m so relieved to be done. There are so many more sustainable careers. Thank you for sharing!!!
Glad you enjoyed the video! And best of luck on your new journey! 😊
I'm working Going to College This year My Major this year is workplace critical thinking I'm Excited Go Back to college when i was little i knew that i wanted to be a English Teacher and Help My students Be Better students should Always listen to teachers and parents should Always listen to students and learn from their mistakes and make the right decision and choices I'm Going to put Behavior Mangement in My Classroom
‘Teachers see the children more than they see their parents on a given weekday.’
And we wonder what the problem is?
Trust me, seeing the parents more often doesn't make this situation any better. If they ever show up, they just come to fight with you, the teacher, about their kids' grades. If parents actually stepped up, did the parenting and enforced some consequences if their children act up, teachers wouldn't have to see them all year.
I see so many vids of teachers who quit, and most are very young. I assume that older teachers hang in for retirement.
In my experience, a lot of older teachers I knew got into the profession when it is was a much different time (back when it was fun, they say) but sadly either feel stuck or like you said, are hanging in for retirement. Where younger teachers who have only been in a handful of years see it being unsustainable long term so they leave. 😔
I quit too. I could definitely relate to your story
Even as a full-time student teacher, you don't get the whole picture of what the job involves. I kind of wonder if they do that on purpose...
That’s an interesting point! I think at the end of the day it would be almost impossible to replicate because as a student teacher you aren’t there the entire year, and the student’s parents also know you are not the actual teacher so the vibe is very different.
Good job being an advocate for yourself, very proud of you
I taught for 32 years and loved it except I had differences with the principal towards the end, so I ended up retiring. Teaching is so much work and if you don’t have a true passion for teaching it’s best for one to do something else.
Are you also in an abusive relationship? Education treats teachers like a battered wife. This ‘true passion’ is bullshit. NO ONE should put up with being treated this way! You being dismissive & disrespectful is a huge part of the problem. The answer is no, she is choosing not to be treated like crap like you put up with for so long.
I’m not in an abusive relationship with my students. If I could have just closed my door and teach my kiddos it would have been great. I taught in Texas in an affluent district. I adored my kiddos. The principal is the reason I left.
@@annamariemiller3877 it’s never the kids - it’s the adults but your ‘you couldn’t cut it unless you’re passionate’ toxic garbage indicates that you were, in fact, in an abusive relationship with teaching. The holier than thou attitude is just disgusting.
I was not treated in an abusive matter until the year I retired. At this point I’ve been retired for about 11 years. At the end of the day no teaching job is perfect 100% of the time. I loved being with my students and the last year I taught the principal was just to hard to work with, so after 32 years I retired. You can say whatever you want Miss Mary Jane, but you don’t know me and weren’t teaching with me. You can think whatever you want. Best of luck to you.
@@annamariemiller3877 twatwaffle
I think the pains of being a teacher are found in many other industries where there is often a lack of time and resources to achieve what the company demands. That said, there are certainly jobs and careers that are better than others. Of course it depends on the individual as well. I also like creating, where in most of jobs that involved repair, there was a fair amount of creating, which was my favorite part even though fixing problems was also fun in that you had to put on your detective hat and examine the clues to figure out who cause the problem. I think if computers and the internet would have been around when I was trying to figure out my career I would have chosen that path. I have built computers, learned programming which includes web design, but it has mostly been at the hobby level and very little at my jobs.
I've been a parapro for a few years and loved it so much. I've been wanting to go to college to pursue a career in teaching but after seeing what all the teachers go through, I didnt think it would be worth it to pay for college just to go through all that crap when I already get payed pretty well just to be a parapro so i decided to stick to that. I'm lucky enough to be in a district that pays more than the average in my state.
It’s also hard as parents when it comes to special need child. I know that you had to document everything and we thank you for that. The doctors wants the school to deal with the situation and vice versa for the teachers. When my son went to preschool, I knew something was up. Teachers are afraid to diagnose and doctors were just giving us the runaround. Even though we keep going back to the doctors. He was not properly diagnose until he was in 5th grade. He went to kindergarten and by first grade we decided to homeschool him until 5th grade. Even though I homeschooled my child, he also had in person classes twice a week. I stayed with him in class for a couple of months, stayed in the lobby of the school so he can still see me and eventually I would leave him and do my errands.
It can definitely be challenging to advocate for the kids who really need support! I documented for an entire year, and finally got IEP meetings at the very end of the year. I imagine getting smaller class size/placements for the students who need it would take several more years. It’s a shame. 🙁
Teaching is tough when you have bad unruly kids
Behaviors can be difficult to navigate! Especially when there are students who cannot easily assimilate into the classroom norms because of special circumstances. They deserve better support! It’s so sad!
I was surprised Andrea stayed in it for the kids, I would have thought the kids were a major nuisance. Them kids are losing out . Miss Andrea I’m sure you were a great teacher, many great teachers will leave do to the low pay and lots of hours to put in. Not to mention the bad attitude of the parents and kids. And the administration, calling the office to pee.
@@dannyball2503 thank you! I remember my former students fondly!
I feel identified with you in the 100% things you said... I couldn't agree more! I've been a teacher for 5 years now, I'm 30 years old... The problem is that I don't have another job....
A great thing about teaching is you have the summertime as a built in “break” to explore other options or take certification classes! That’s what I did, at least!
Good luck to you, Andrea! I graduated from college with a degree in teaching, but I decided that I wanted to pursue a different career path after I had spent a year of being a substitute teacher. In your opinion, what is the factor which causes the most disruption in public schools? I believe that cell phones and/or social media have absolutely ruined the public school environment, and I am afraid that this problem will never be able to be corrected. What do you think? Have a good day!
@@danielvick3527 I had a different experience because I taught kindergarten so the students didn’t have phones yet (well, not that they brought to school anyway 🙃). I think my struggle with disruption was just that there were students who needed accommodations and weren’t getting them in a general ed setting so by trying to accommodate the things those few needed (IEP style accommodations like 1:1 assistance etc) that took time away from the other 20-ish students as a whole. I can’t imagine how difficult the distraction of cell phones are in upper grades!
Andrea, my boyfriend tells me that phones and tablets are just making life miserable for him and other teachers! I can't imagine why anyone would major in any field of education now!
If you want to teach, do it at the university level. Better pay, more autonomy and you don't have to deal with parents.
Interesting idea!
Half of all university instructors are part time adjuncts with no benefits.
not better pay, and still more pressure
apparently now parents are contacting professors even though legally the professors can't tell them anything about their kids. so bad behavior is definitely creeping into college as well
As someone quitting real estate this year after 7 years - a real estate major is NOT necessary. I swear some successful realtors are practically illiterate. They delegate everything.
Thanks for sharing. How does one get started in it?
Could you make a video about your new career ? I am very interested to know more about it.
I definitely need to! Now that I’ve been at my new job for almost six months I feel like I’m well equipped enough to speak on how it’s been for me! I will plan on making a video talking all about it soon! 💕
@@AndreaMichelleYT Thank you for answering me. I am looking forward to watch your next video. I am thinking to take some courses to learn about that profession.
What’s the job?
@@user-fy3nf3lg2j UX Designer!
I see so much content like this that discourages me. I know the education system is messed up but I'm seriously considering becoming a Spanish teacher. I don't want to regret it but I want to at least try and give it a shot.
I will say- although teaching wasn’t for me long term, I don’t necessarily regret the years I spent as a teacher. They taught me a LOT about a lot of things. Patience, time management, quick thinking, adaptability. So I’d look at it this way; if you truly want to go for it, maybe you’ll love it or maybe you’ll learn from it!
Not to mention, being a former teacher made a huge difference in my interviews for my current job. People know if you can handle being a teacher you are likely a hard worker who does well at listening and collaborating with others. 😄
A lot depends on the district. Like 99% of the time the folks that quit come from a district with certain challenges. Watch the series Abott Elementary and it shows how mismanagement can make/break an entire school.
I taught preschool for 20 years and loved it, and won a community award. My husband was sick and told me if he died i would gave to go into the public school system to make more money. I was pared with a former administrator who came to watch me every month.
She decided that I would be better
In a higher grade than the first grade i was in. I was always placed in a higher grade when i got a job and never in the same grade every year. I worked very hard and had mouthy kids plus teachers who wanted my job and made my life miserable reporting me to the school rep all the time. My mother became ill and was in nursing care.
I visited her after school every night. My life became a nightmare of testing and entering grades. I had a small 3 weeks substituting in 1st grade and loved it but never got a chance to teach that grade.
4th grade was doable but I was
Swithed to 5th. That was the year i quit. I was exhausted from admin
Unrealistic expectations. That year many teachers left at that building.
Even those who taught in the district for nearly 30 years. I never had the experience of teaching the same grade more than 1 year. And i couldnt get the teacher manuals
Until school started. Then came common core. Ridiculous. After the holidays i quit. No regrets.
You couldn’t pay me enough to put up with other people’s kids.
I love being a teacher but yeah, it's not an easy career path.
Worse so, teachers are not given the treatment they deserve.
It's still the most taxing job I have ever done/still doing and love too.
Teaching is a job people must be passionate about to be able to stay/give what it takes to be successful! 🤍 I’m so glad your students have someone like you teaching them!
Your mental health and quality of life will be much better leaving teaching . There are may fulfilling carees outside teaching. I left teaching and found options for good and rewarding careers.
I absolutely LOVE my career now! I go to work happy almost every day. 😊
No doubt about that... Every teacher and principal I've run into by chance a year after they retired always looked 15 years younger(!) than I last saw them. No joke. The bags under the eyes, the weight gain, the bad skin... all gone.
I quit teaching 34 years ago. It was already unbearable even then, but since the bastard offspring of Dubya Bush’s dim mind, “no child left behind” was introduced, the public schools have been reduced to custodial daycare institutions where it is virtually impossible to segregate, much less get rid of, chronic disciplinary offenders because once they’ve been diagnosed with any sort of psychiatric disorder they become members of a privileged class of persons known as “special needs” who are on an “IEP” and who cannot be suspended more than nine days per year, or so I’ve been told. By way of contrast, back in the dim recesses of the early to mid twentieth century big city school districts in particular had institutions casually referred to as “bad boys’ schools” where the real dirt-bags where kept isolated lest they spoil every last school building with their obnoxious behavior. But apparently such measures are now considered reactionary and unenlightened. With this in mind it should come as no surprise that no one wants to teach school anymore.
Very accurate post
What people fail to appreciate is that it is simply not possible to guarantee that everyone will succeed in school. Perhaps only the top third of the school population could be considered “college material”. The other kids need trades training not incomprehensible to persons with low IQs liberal arts.@@robertcuba5947
The part about the Sims connecting with your love for design resonated with me. I’m a burnt out teacher and I think I’d love to work with city planning due to playing Cities Skylines. lol.
The Sims is really out here setting up our new life paths! 😂
Your experience resonated with me except I knew right as I graduated that I needed to go into something else. I was just disappointed and realized for the same time investment I should have been taking data analytics, business, real estate ect. An education degree does give you transferable skills but there is no substitute for the hard skills you need for a business or government management position. Education classes were awesome but a young 17/18/19 year old is not going to know how a job differs from the class IE planning for special Ed vs. not having the resources, funding, or team. Homeless or at risk kids also deserve way more assistance then they get. We did things like help kids wash their laundry, but it was hard to go home imagining that they were living in a camper or tent. Couldn’t shut my brain off either.
This video is exactly what I needed, I'm thinking about getting into the same thing! Thanks so much for your insight! Do you have any credible sources or places to help someone break into that field / industry?
That is why you always have to go for your passion. It doesnt matter how many oportunities about it there are of its a good idea from somebody elses eyes.. you will make it work because you love.
When you setle for something else then what happens is that even if you can find plenty of jobs you will eventually quit and its not worth it
I miss the students but not the job! I’m so happy for anyone who can find joy in the profession though!
@@AndreaMichelleYT no no, I was saying we should all choose what we feel passionated about, because when you truly love a job it will go well for you.
I was not saying you should find joy in teaching, I totally understand why you left.
I was saying society encourages people to go for the more aparently save and secure options , when it should encourage us to go for our passions.
I also think in America probably being a teacher is specially hard because of the harsh competitive culture there.
If you had the discipline to study all this time, that means you can do so well in anyhing you truly like
"this class is a family" to quitting is so real 😆😆
Guilty as charged 😂