Saturday, July 27, 2024

Opinion: COVID-19 devastated teacher morale — and it hasn’t recovered


By Lesley Lavery and Steve Friess

Kansas faces the worst teacher shortfall in its history. The 4,000 teaching vacancies Florida faces as the new school year approaches “is more than the population of teachers in 19 of Florida’s smallest counties combined,” the state’s teachers union says. In Vermont, there are days when whole grades of students are sent home because there’s no teacher or sub available.

The teaching profession faces a morale — and staffing — crisis. A National Education Association survey of members found that, as of late 2022, a staggering 55% of educators were thinking of calling it quits.








This is a legacy of COVID-19. Teachers were already unhappy before the pandemic, but the public’s reaction to the education their kids got during that crisis continues to haunt the profession. A Brown University study found teachers’ job satisfaction in 2022 hovered near its lowest level since the 1970s.

As a researcher focused on education policy, along with my colleague Sara Dahill-Brown, we spent the pandemic researching how teachers felt as events unfolded. Between 2020 and 2022, we conducted 164 interviews with a total of 53 leaders of teachers unions and associations from 45 school districts in 14 states. They represented urban, suburban and rural districts and an array of partisan leanings.

The results, published in our new study in Teaching and Teacher Education, show how damaging the pandemic was for K-12 teachers. Thousands subsequently left the profession.

COVID-19 response erodes teachers’ sense of safety

Many teachers were already worried about security because of school shootings. With COVID-19, those fears were compounded by the public’s demand for a fast return to in-person class before public health officials deemed it safe and before money flowed to put best practices in place.

In the summer of 2020, most teacher leaders told us they were “terrified” and “scared to death” because there was “no established criteria or expectations. … It was just jump into the deep and do your best.”

Vaccines and other scientific developments eased that particular anxiety, but as recently as April 2023, nearly 4 in 10 teachers told researchers they were considering looking for another job because they didn’t feel safe at work.

An intense and unrelenting workload

Throughout the 2020-21 school year, parents balanced jobs with children sitting — or running and yelling — alongside them for “Zoom school.” Teachers found themselves with two jobs, thanks to hybrid models in which they taught in person for some students and via videoconference for others.

According to one respondent, they were “expected to teach students in person, but also deliver a meaningful education experience to those same students when they were at home.” Another shared that “teachers were working many, many, many more hours than they had ever put into a face-to-face environment,” clocking “12 to 16 hours a day and weekends” and providing feedback “until 10 o’clock at night.”

The result was exhaustion that one leader described as “June-tired in October.” And that was merely an unusual bump in their already intense workloads; teachers in nonpandemic times typically work 53 hours per week on average. That’s seven more hours than the average working adult.

Lackluster leadership and changing expectations

The pandemic also exacerbated festering dissatisfaction with school and district leadership. Teachers felt misled, ill-informed and unconsidered. They were rarely asked for input and forced to make radical changes to education, respondents told us.

Teachers wanted “consistency,” “straight answers” and to stop “switching on a dime,” they told us. Plans changed so frequently that one said “an email written on Monday” was “stale by Wednesday.” Another said administrators would say “the right things in public” to signal “compassion and care for teachers. But the actions are different. And it’s really taking a toll on teachers.”








One union leader told us: “You see parents’ comments on social media, there are a lot more of ‘You just need to shut up and get back to the classroom. You’re lazy. You’re not doing your job.’”

Another echoed this: “Historically educators have been an under-respected profession. But it’s much, much worse now. It’s not just that they’re disrespected, they’re villainized.”

Jobs and budget cuts raise new fears


The majority (68%) of study respondents were concerned from early in the pandemic about budgets or job security. Forty percent feared enrollment losses related to COVID-19 would make those worries worse. And many worried that “schools don’t have the budget to do all of the safety procedures that science tells us is necessary.”

All of this persisted even as Congress, in April 2020, set aside more than US$13 billion for K-12 emergency relief. By the end of 2020, then-President Donald Trump pledged $50 billion more to help schools reopen.

These funds did hold off catastrophic cuts, but researchers and policymakers both warned of a fiscal cliff facing districts if they didn’t prepare for the point at which that spigot would run dry. And, indeed, examples now abound of just that reality, as seen by mass job cuts in St. Paul, Minnesota, Houston and Ann Arbor, Michigan, among others.

With the worst of the pandemic behind us, resources are being reduced despite ongoing needs. This recipe — burned-out teachers quitting and some who chose to stay being fired — has the entire profession reeling.

Avenues for boosting morale


There are several ways to boost morale, but most require more investment, not less.








Teachers say they need better pay — to the tune of a minimum starting salary of $60,000 a year — along with stability in health and retirement benefits. The National Education Association says the average starting salary now is $44,530. The NEA is also advocating for better conditions for the paraprofessionals who assist them in the classrooms. And teachers want more say in what they teach.

Short of these changes, we don’t see school systems being able to stop the exodus of educators from the profession — and they will continue to lose their best and brightest as a result.

Lesley Lavery is a professor of political science at Macalester College, and Steve Friess is an independent writer and editor at University of Michigan.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mothers for liberty and magat infiltraters pushed for seats on school boards causing teachers not being able to teach. Their right-wing agenda is more about burning books than learning from books. The white nationalist magats in this country are pushing us back 50 years or more to Jim Crow and the fight for civil rights. Education is following suit as well. The country is dumbing down under magat leadership.

Anonymous said...

8:22PM - Blaming the Republicans and Name Calling them for everything is another Democratic Radical Leftist Common Trait. Democrats seem to always Blame Republicans, but they never seem to try and Find Solutions and Fixes for the Problems - Just Blame someone else and it continues their Cause -

What is the main cause of the teacher shortage?

What Caused the Teacher Shortage? Low wages, high workloads, and challenging working conditions are some of the reasons the education sector faces a teacher shortage.

What we need to do is Support Higher Wages for Teachers and Less for Administrators.

Incentivize Teachers - For going above and beyond - - Of course they are held in place by Teacher's Unions Sucking the Blood life out of them, with Dues and allowing Teachers who are doing a Bad Job to stay in their Jobs. If the Average Employee did a Bad Job - they would be Terminated - Not Teachers - Once they receive Tenure - you cannot Remove the Bad Ones. Teacher Unions Support the Democrats - Wonder Why???

We need to Create an Attitude of Hiring the Best Teachers - Incentives, Bonuses, Student Debt Forgiveness Programs for Teachers - Not for Individuals that do not want to Pay their Debts - (Thanks to the Democrats)...

Parents are sending Children to School for the Teachers to Babysit, Not to Educate. They are having to Handle Children with all types of Physical, Mental, and Behavioral Problems - that the Parents are not Dealing with - Just Forcing Schools to Deal with them.

The U.S. Supreme Court held in Plyler v. Doe (1982) that public school districts must enroll minors, regardless of their immigration status. Teachers are Forced to deal with Illegal Aliens - who cannot Speak or Understand English. Sometimes Doubling the Number of Students in a Classroom - and Not Adding Additional Teachers to Cover the Workload of handling all of their Students.

So 8:22PM - What is Your Ideas - Do you every Offer Any Ideas, Solutions, Anything - Just Blame the Republicans - - Your Same-Old, Same-Old - is keeping our Country, our Students behind the World in Education - Focus on the Issues, Find Solutions - - Our Education System is Broke - Unions have Stifled America - - They are thing of the Past - -

The National Education Association (NEA) is the Largest Union in America, Established in 1857 - It is Passed its Prime and Controls and Influences the Way we Educate and Teach Students in America - It is a Hinderance to Creating the Best Education for Students - - It is a Democratic Juggernaut and Supporter - -













Anonymous said...

I dare to say, the children are better off without these scared(woke) teachers. Teachers are to be strong, compassionate, caring and patient. A big thank you to all the teachers I’ve had that fit my description,
30 years out of school I still remember the life lessons they taught us.

Anonymous said...

To 815 and 915, face the facts, the far right attempt to take over schools and their social agenda has caused massive hardship on districts. Consider: being a teacher and having to decide what's best for kids but are forced to place the 10 commandments in a room with kids not Christian, and, fearing for your job, and b.s. crazy parents, you offend your students. Consider: having to practice hiding from a gun yielding intruder and then having to comfort your students because their fear/anxiety prohibits learning. Consider: being a teacher and told you will have a gun in your classroom all because the far right covets guns more than their own kids.
Consider: having to teach "alternative facts" so that true historical events are again, whitewashed so as not to demoralize the white far right population. 815 and 915, we should all hope you see the truth with your exquisite intellectual abilities and stop burning books. Not all right-wingers are as brilliant like yourselves.

Anonymous said...

I would gladly go back 50 years, before the Department of Education was created. The US was 3rd in the world in education. Who could have guessed that rainbow flags, tampon dispensers in boys bathrooms and gay porn in the school libraries wouldn't result in better education?
Schools used to teach citizenship, now they revere activism and victimhood. Garbage in, garbage out.

Anonymous said...

Gonna scare people with facts 🤣 be careful one of these party’s doesn’t like facts,

Anonymous said...

537 and 707 really should return to the 70's, back when women and people of color had little to no chance of advancment in a world of white male dominance. Missouri ranks 32nd because it's your right-wing magat leadership making all the calls to make pubic education an indoctrination into magat white nationalist beliefs. Blame dems all you want but truth is, the state makes it's own decisions regarding education and Missouri is another example of more failures of the magat party. I don't think either one of you have spent any recent time in a school because it's quite obvious that your wordview is saturated in right wing conspiracy theories. It would be to your great benefit to take a break from the faux propaganda channel and hear some truth.