Educ. 609 What to Do When You Leave Teaching

Picture_3A million is often used as a metaphor for some large, unattainable, unimaginable number. My students often say things like, “That essay will take me a million years to do?” So, for students, a million is a large number. Me, I cannot conceptualize what a million looks like, let alone 1.5 million. But 1.5 million of the 3 millions teachers in American leave the profession every 5 years, mostly to go on to professions that have better pay or more pleasant working conditions. In Washington state, rather than 1/2 leaving the profession every 5 years, it is slightly less, at 1/5. However, that is still not a number about which to be proud.

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Washington state has about 58,000 teachers and will lose 1/5 of that in 5 years (11,600 teachers). So our state has a better retention average than that of the nation, but I still find this number unsettling.

Education is a great profession. It reaches and teaches the youth of tomorrow. It is a profession of giving and being there for others. And that may just be the problem. Education may demand more from its teachers than its teachers are getting out of it. I do not have any numbers to back this next statement up; it is a hypothesis based on the teachers I know who have left the profession. It is my hunch that the altruistic warm fuzzies that have kept teachers going for so many years are no longer powerful enough to keep high-quality teachers in the profession. Ten of my closest colleagues left the profession for more flexible jobs with higher pay so that they could enjoy life. These were great teachers. Teachers with whom I would have serious educational discussions; teachers that did make a difference. Check out TREND #3 from an NEA news release.

The situation is that teachers are leaving the profession. The problem is that this ultimately effects the consistency of our quality education and impacts students. The solution is to have a system where teachers want to stay.

I know from my experience as a house painter that keeping an employee was always preferable to having to hire a new one. The amount of time it takes to get the new guy up to speed costs the company and crew and ultimately the home owner. My boss was fantastic at making his employees feel respected and he made sure the working situation was always favorable. It took some time and effort on my boss’s part. However, it was not as much effort as it would be to fill a vacant spot. He also believed in keeping people in his company so that a relationship could develop. He had a simple motto: keep the employees happy and they will be loyal to the company. Win-win.

How can we, as a state, apply this simple motto to retain high-quality teachers?

Of course, I have a few ideas to throw out there. Teachers, you can help keep high-quality teachers in your school. Try some of these out this September. You can introduce yourself to the new teachers. Having someone in the building will go a long way for the new teachers. Check in with the new teachers and offer yourself up for anything that they need. Sometimes they just need to bounce an idea off of you or had a rough day and need some perspective or simply need to know how to make the copy machine do double-sided. In between the check ins, send the new teachers an email to keep the conversations constant. Get the new teachers to go to the lunch room to be with the other teachers in the school. It is too easy as the new guy to hide in a room that has a door that closes. I did it. However, sitting with the teachers in the school and hanging out will help to create that sense of team that will retain your high-quality teachers. I do these things, and a few more, because I want my school to be top notch. It does take time on my part, but the benefit of being in a school that runs well and the students are learning outweighs the time.

Other people in the school setting can make the difference as well. The secretary at my current school is such a powerful presence every morning when I walk in. Her smile and honest care of what is going on in my life helps me to get in the role for the day, leaving behind anything that would take away from my job. She is this and more to new teachers. I have watched her work her craft: friend, counselor, advisor…. Principals can think about pairing up teachers so that partnerships are made. Ask teachers what they need and find resources to meet their needs. Help teachers find goals and the ways to achieve those goals.

Most districts have professional opportunities for teachers as well, new and seasoned that will help retain teachers. My current district offers a welcoming retreat to new teachers to build communities (which I have noticed works as those new teachers stay in contact with each other for years). This district also offers a similar version for the veteran teacher.

I do not have all of the answers but I have been thinking about this lately since we are getting close to the start of school and wanted to post it for discussion.

This is not an isolated situation. People in education (and policy makers) are aware and want to get the solutions out there. Check out the 5 broad themes that more than 1,700 National Board Certified Teachers from North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Washington came up with as recommendations for retaining teachers. These recommendations are directed at retaining teachers at high-needs schools. However, these recommendations, like good teaching, will work anywhere.

Washington’s summit in October 2006 was co-hosted by CSTP, WEA and OSPI. Read Washington’s summit report.

Across the five states the NBCTs laid out a comprehensive list of 142 specific policy recommendations that, if implemented, they believe would significantly alleviate the nation’s problems in staffing high-needs schools. The report organizes them into the following five major recommendations:
1. Transform the teaching and learning conditions in high-needs schools.
2. Prepare and support teachers for the specific challenges posed by working in high-needs schools.
3. Recruit and develop administrators who can draw on the expertise of specially prepared teacher leaders.
4. Create a menu of recruitment incentives, but focus on growing teacher expertise within high-needs schools.
5. Build awareness among policy makers, practitioners, and members of the public about the importance of National Board Certification for high-needs schools.

NBCTs believe that the bulk of incentives should focus on growing accomplished teachers from within high-needs schools. Salary incentives alone will not be enough to encourage accomplished teachers to move to or remain in dysfunctional schools. (Jeanne Harmon)

19 thoughts on “Educ. 609 What to Do When You Leave Teaching

  1. Travis

    @ Bob Heiny. The idea you present is one for which many people yearn. Whenever I talk in a new school, I sought out teachers who shared similar teaching styles and philosophies and we became “teamers”. Even if we were separated by different grade levels or subject areas, we aligned our efforts. This gave us the satisfaction that we needed and had the result of impacting students because they received an education that was planned by many teachers, supported by many teachers, and had the occasion to get at least two teachers throughout the day who shared a similar teaching style (the benefit there is the student could just learn, not worry about how the class works).
    But then again, I am a positive person and I love figuring out how to do something in the best way. For me it is an intellectual/action challenge to make the most of whatever I have available. I believe that education will be that one thing that allows any student to make it in this country as an adult. I would like those students to have the best teachers, in this “best” country. I would like for the teachers who I know are great and make an impact on students to continue teaching with me because that makes my team stronger.

  2. Bob Heiny

    Thanks, Travis. I have another option that you have likely considered also and some teachers have followed to their and their students satisfaction: Start a school or another learning venue (including online) with others that feature environments, instruction, and learning that these people deem appropriate. Resources exist to support such ventures. Respectfully, it seems to me that part of conditions remaining teachers handle result from their inadequate responses to this competition, not lack of resources, policies, administrative support, etc. As in a NASCAR race, moment to moment bumping in some public schools by and among teachers is and probably always has been required. Sad and unfair, yes, but part of a multilayered sorting system that exists anyway. As teachers, we’re paid to overcome those judgments.

  3. Travis

    @Bob Heiny, I completely agree with your comment. In fact, I love it. We are thinking alike. If a person would like to change jobs, that is great. There are so many options out there and it keeps it “fresh”.
    In my post, I have a subtle difference that, if it was not clear before, I shall point it out now. My concern is in teachers who (1) are new to the profession and/or (2) are good teachers who want to teach, but the environment is such that it is not worth continuing. This is my concern. As I mentioned in my post, I have had colleagues who are great teachers, newly hired from Montana, fresh out of school, and they left to go do other things. Like your comments states, that is great and people should be able to go on and try new things. I agree. However, if the reason for moving on is because the teacher is unable to teach or the teacher is in a hostel work environment, then that is sad. That tells me that the teacher would stay if he/she could, but he/she cannot. That is sad.
    Perhaps it all boils down to these two questions. One, the idea that you added to the conversation, is a person leaving the profession to go on to other pursuits a bad thing? Two, my core thought, are the conditions such in the field of education that good teachers are leaving when they would like to continue to teach?
    And, there is the thought that maybe this is just not a problem. It is quite possible that the situation of teachers leaving the profession when they would rather teach, is not a negative. Equally possible is the fact that maybe it is a negative, but not a big enough situation to be bothered.
    I believe there is a comment (Jeanne), below, that adds the thought that maybe there is not a “big” turn over.
    Thanks for keeping the ideas going.

  4. Bob Heiny

    I respect your background, Travis. Your students have an advantage over other students. Still, I wonder why wouldn’t painters, carpenters, pastors, physicians, nurses, pilots, auto technicians, and other job holders leave their positions? It seems like a reasonable act in a voluntary sorting process available in a churning labor market. In today’s U.S employment atmosphere, people with initiative (no disrespect to anyone intended) have more options to contribute to society and to acquire assets along the way than to stick with one position for a working lifetime. Why shouldn’t a teacher exercise that option?

  5. Travis

    @Linda. I sympathize with you. That can be so frustrating. You are ready to go, ready to reach kids and teach the beauty of science. But how can you do that when you are missing many of those crucial items. Now, sure, you could do some science things that you came up with yourself, but knowing how systems work, you would probably just get in trouble for not teaching the curriculum that the district adopted (but for some reason you do not have or cannot hand out).
    I spent the first 4 months of the school year teaching a HS physics class with only 15 texts which had to stay in the classroom. I did not have only 15 students.
    Hope things go better in the weeks to come. They usually do. I went to your blog. I like the in-the-trenches-feel you have.
    Enjoy.

  6. Linda F

    Boy, this hits home. I’m a science teacher, and feel the pressure to do more teaching, while, at the same time, being stuck in more meetings. The meeting thing is really getting on my nerves – so many of these meetings could be eliminated by emailing.
    In the classroom, I currently (in a classroom that is new to me) have:
    no teacher resources
    no lab equipment
    no materials
    no time to prepare
    and
    I just today (3 days after school started) got access to a copy code – which means I couldn’t make copies of syllabi, forms, or anything
    Did I mention that they also don’t want us to hand out student books for the first 2 weeks?
    I feel like Congressman Zell Miller, who listed the ways anti-war Democrats cut the military budget, and said: What to they want us to fight with? Spitballs?

  7. Trusted.MD Network

    Brain-Based Carnival of Education, 186th Edition

    Welcome to the 186th edition of the Carnival of Education, the weekly virtual gathering of dozens of bloggers to discuss all things education.
    Q: Why do you say this edition is “brain-based”?
    A: Because the QA frame we are using is inspired by how Ch

  8. Karen

    Love it ! Your cartoons add so much to the “letter”. For me, it was people treating one as people. A big culprit was the time limitations–were do you fit in more time than the 20-minutes at lunch (by the time you get there, and need to leave). I am strongly for smaller classes, longer periods (thus less time lost in passing, role taking , etc. etc.), a possible 3 semester system, a day for planning (weekends were almost totally sucked up with class planning), later start times for middle school, and especially high school. Mrs. Wittwer, Teacher and Educator

  9. Travis

    TL, your comments are solid. I would have to agree (or hope that it is true) that many leaving are those who are not cut out for teaching. And there is not a way to clinically decide who left who was good and who left who was bad. However, when a number of close teachers (that I deem great) leave the profession, it brings it home. It hurts. It is sad.
    Any solutions? Any way to weed and feed?

  10. TL

    I, like all of you think more should be done to keep “high quality” teachers in the classroom. However, in my own (limited) experience I wouldn’t consider most of the teachers leaving “high quality”.
    Example 1 – “Oh your pissed and quitting because your kids didn’t want to do another worksheet while you planned football practice?”
    Example 2 – “Your upset and just quit because you have to teach ALL your students not just the A+ kids?”
    I believe that “high quality” teachers work smarter not harder, are innovative, understand the demands and the limitations of the profession and view teaching as a calling not a pay check.

  11. Tom White

    Nice post, Travis; and very timely. It makes me wonder about something that might be unique to our profession: We seem to be the only one in which first-year professionals have the same workload with the same expectations as seasoned veterans. Take my school, for example. We just hired a new teacher yesterday to do a 2/3 split class beginning next week. During her first year, she’ll have to juggle two separate curriculums at the same time. I can’t imagine that a first-year attorney would be assigned to a death-penalty all by themselves, or that a first-year doctor would be performing open-heart surgery all alone. I think we should take a long look at the culture we’ve developed within our system and how that affects those entering the profession.

  12. Travis

    I sent the comment, then made a cup of tea and thought….”Is there a problem in our state with teachers leaving the profession for reasons related to being unsatisfied with the profession?” Maybe there is not such a problem and the ten colleagues that I have had (great teachers by the way) who left is an isolated case in my little world.
    (1) is there an increase in teachers leaving the profession due to dissatisfaction?
    (2) is there a negative effect to this?
    (3) should we as a state care?
    (4) should we do something about it?

  13. Travis

    What Jeanne states is true. For example, a teacher who still teaches but leaves Washington to go to Oregon is counted as no longer in the Washington system. And Washington has a lower loss of teachers than many other states.
    However, what the larger issue is, is the idea that teachers are leaving the profession. Leaving for other jobs that have a higher satisfaction for the employee. And many of these teachers are great teachers. Teachers who we want in out system.
    Let’s pretend that the loss of teachers was 1 teacher from each school in our state a year. Such a small number. Is it a big deal? In this pretend scenario I would still hope that people would strive to keep teachers teaching.

  14. Jeanne Harmon

    Just another word about the Washington retention statistics Travis cited. Of the 20% who depart Washington’s school system, approximately half of those are retiring. Those who have become principals or central office personnel are NOT counted as “leavers” so departing the classroom for administration is not a factor in these data. We don’t know what happens to the rest….. just that they have disappeared from the personnel reports submitted by Washington school districts. Some may be on leave, some have moved to other states, some have taken a different kind of job. If you’re interested in retention, CSTP did school-by-school analysis in 20 districts:
    http://cstp-wa.org/Navigational/Commissionedresearch/Research_reports/Research_reports.htm

  15. Travis

    Kelly, I have not read Horace’s Compromise, but I can only imagine. I have just added it to my queue of books from the library.
    [Kelly said] Working sixty hours a week only to feel you hardly did the job justice is not conducive to retaining quality teachers, and I certainly know of teachers who have left the profession “to have a life.”
    This is strong. True. After working more than the scheduled work week, then to not feel like anything was completed, leaves the worker feeling empty. This emptiness is not healthy for working environments and will usually result in a worker finding a place where they can have a “start” and “stop”, a sense of satisfaction. I love teaching. However, when I painted houses, at the end of the day, we were done and if the job carried on, there was an end when we celebrated the finish.
    I do not know if teachers even need to “have a life” but to have something that makes them feel more than just a person who spins their wheels for hours every week, would be nice.

  16. Kelly

    Your post brings up numerous thoughts on working conditions, but one stands out to me as it grows increasingly precious at the end of August: Time. It was Ted Sizer in Horace’s Compromise who pointed out the “chasm” between the time truly needed to do secondary teaching well and what we can manage: “only five minutes per week of attention to the written work of a student and an average of ten minutes of planning for each fifty-odd-minute class – the task is already crushing, in reality pushing a sixty-hour work week.” Working sixty hours a week only to feel you hardly did the job justice is not conducive to retaining quality teachers, and I certainly know of teachers who have left the profession “to have a life.” I wonder how lowering the workload (lowering class size, increasing planning time) might contribute to teacher retention and quality of instruction.

  17. Ben

    This one is right on. I did not see eye-to-eye on your principal post, but I see this in my school. What can we do? What happened to people treating people like people so that people can be people?

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