Teacher Shortage: What is Happening to Education Right Now?

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  • čas přidán 22. 10. 2022
  • Today's episode is a discussion about what in the literal f**k is happening in classrooms these days and what is driving teachers away more than ever before.
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Komentáře • 477

  • @FailedFuturist3626
    @FailedFuturist3626 Před rokem +423

    Teaching HS and MS and I put 80% of the student issues at the feet of parents. Far too many want to be friends than be a parent. Basic human things (listening, being respectful, and understanding consequences) are taught at home.

    • @pcnative8225
      @pcnative8225 Před rokem +12

      I taught early childhood and elementary and if we don't teach mastery of the basics how are the ms and hs teachers going to have success??? That is my frustration

    • @tamerapratt1383
      @tamerapratt1383 Před rokem +11

      You can be your child's friend while still parenting them... just need balance

    • @melrod4877
      @melrod4877 Před rokem

      Parents just want to stick their kids on electronics so they don't have to deal with them.

    • @prissylovejoy702
      @prissylovejoy702 Před rokem +2

      All of its interconnected and so crazy messed up now.

  • @jonigarciajg
    @jonigarciajg Před rokem +159

    I think it's crazy that we expect classrooms to have only 1 adult in the room.

    • @azchanna
      @azchanna Před rokem +26

      Agreed each classroom should have 1 teacher and an assistant teacher or paraprofessional

    • @penelopepurple5169
      @penelopepurple5169 Před rokem +3

      I agree 💯

    • @sharpaycutie2
      @sharpaycutie2 Před rokem +12

      If it’s 20 and less it’s not an issue but classes be packed 😢

    • @sarahelizabeth8908
      @sarahelizabeth8908 Před rokem +4

      As a former teacher, I absolutely agree.

    • @sarahelizabeth8908
      @sarahelizabeth8908 Před rokem +7

      For pre k (4-5 yo) legally I could have 15 kids by myself. Some of which were autistic and had no one else to help (I had 3 children on the spectrum at one point with a full class). I loved those kids to death, but I had NO help whatsoever.

  • @anniewallace3601
    @anniewallace3601 Před rokem +372

    I'm one of them who left 3 years ago and sadly will never go back. I loved the work but the disrespecting, low pay, and the burn out caused by guilt trip was not worth it. Teachers need more support, higher pay matching the degree obtained and respect for all the work they do. I shouldn't have to get a second job to pay the bills if I'm teaching full time with a bachelor degree. It's wrong.

    • @RY-os9vw
      @RY-os9vw Před rokem +16

      @Annie, I completely understand. Most teachers (including myself) struggle/have struggled with walking away for health/financial reasons yet are passionate about teaching. Take care of yourself ❤.

    • @kayladelvalley5236
      @kayladelvalley5236 Před rokem +5

      Can I ask what you moved on to? I’m ready for a change in career but honestly don’t know what else I can do with a bachelors in early childhood…😅

    • @anniewallace3601
      @anniewallace3601 Před rokem +6

      @@kayladelvalley5236 well I had a baby at the time and the daycare he was at kept giving him milk causing him to have a anaphylaxis attack so I've been a stay at home mom since I left.

    • @anniewallace3601
      @anniewallace3601 Před rokem +8

      @@kayladelvalley5236 you can get any job with children or human related. You could do a human resource assistant job if you need a break from people, school career counselor at a university level and the other job I looked at was working in a assistant living as a activity director. Even though you have a early childhood degree they won't care if you show them the human development classes taken. You have the planning skills and old people can be so fun!

    • @Ry1e3
      @Ry1e3 Před rokem +3

      @@kayladelvalley5236 I know of multiple people who made the shift from teaching to tech sales. There are a lot of transferable skills - empathetic listening, people skills, problem solving, explaining, writing, etc.
      I’d say look into a reputable sales boot camp / training program. (plenty of free ones, i’d never pay for one!)

  • @teaganhope7523
    @teaganhope7523 Před rokem +115

    When you said “the parents don’t know how to be with their kids that long” that really hit. That’s the problem with our society. These problems are starting at home with the family unit being broken up. The lack of peoples dedication to their children and their role as parents is showing so clearly.

    • @michellekaiser5907
      @michellekaiser5907 Před rokem +3

      Eh. The family being "a unit" isn't as important as having each parent being involved. Divorced, never married, none of it matters like involvement...

    • @Starburst514
      @Starburst514 Před rokem +16

      @@michellekaiser5907 that's still a unit. "Unit" as in seperated parts all working together, so a divorced couple doing thier best to raise their child and coparent is a "unit", a single parent and a grandparent caring for a child is a "unit", a single parent on thier own with thier children is a "unit" a single parent and a teacher can even be a unit when they communicate to figure out a solution concerning the parents kid. The home environment itself is a unit whoever the kid goes home to whether it's a foster parent or whatever

    • @kimberlyhicks3644
      @kimberlyhicks3644 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I am a former teacher and I WILL homeschool my future grandchildren from daycare through 12th grade. Moreover, I advocate this with all children. The public school system is broken. It has become a disgusting clown show 🤡. HOMESCHOOL NOW!!!

    • @stephanienewton6618
      @stephanienewton6618 Před 6 měsíci

      @@kimberlyhicks3644agree! I pulled my oldest out in 7th grade (right after I quit the classroom myself). He is now 19 and a successful entrepreneur and that wouldn’t have happened in the system. He and his GF have already told me they want me to help homeschool their kids one day. My youngest is in private high school and doing ok but even that’s not ideal. I agree with homeschool now (and by the way I did it as a single mom working from home).

  • @someonenotsomeone8450
    @someonenotsomeone8450 Před rokem +196

    I'm currently a senior in HS, and the way covid impacted kids is SO crazy. The sophomores this year have absolutely zero comprehension of their actions or the consequences of those actions. We recently had an assembly and the principal had to stop everything and tell everyone to pay attention and be respectful FOUR TIMES IN LESS THAN AN HOUR. This has never happend at all in my time at HS, much less four times. I cannot begin to imagine what teachers are going through during this time. It would be so degrading to go to work and face these children who haven't learned how to person properly, then to be discredited and devalued at every opportunity by the community and the greater system as a whole. School and teaching is such a necessity; the behavior of these children is indicative of that, and to act as though teachers are worthless in the very same breath-
    Y'all deserve the world, I'm so sorry it's gotten to this point.

    • @kaitlynjoshua9193
      @kaitlynjoshua9193 Před rokem +13

      This is happening at my school too and I’m also a senior. It’s truly scary to see and I can only imagine how the teachers are dealing with the blatant disrespect.

    • @ladycaticorn2950
      @ladycaticorn2950 Před rokem +13

      I've heard stories from elementary teachers of kids forgetting cursive or how to write their names, how to use scissors, and basically acting developmentally delayed. It sounds like COVID and lockdown did a number on this generation of students. It's scary--both for the kids and for the teachers who will have to deal with these delays.

    • @pistoffpussycat5778
      @pistoffpussycat5778 Před rokem +14

      Teacher here. We talk about it every day. We try to think of the few nice kids, but it's getting harder every day. Admin doesn't support us. We are hanging on by a fingernail. Teacher absenteeism is way up. It's hard to get substitute teachers in too

    • @deathlight4210
      @deathlight4210 Před rokem +5

      Eh. My school didn’t really change 🤷‍♀️
      They’re as wild as they were before covid
      The only change I can see is that we have less focus on stuff so we do everything the day before

    • @lisamr40
      @lisamr40 Před rokem +6

      I have 2 kids in high school. One in 11th grade and the other is a senior. They both go to separate schools. They are saying the same exact things about Last year's 9th graders, they were bad, but this year's 9th graders are ten times worse.

  • @kristen438
    @kristen438 Před rokem +102

    I am 23, recently graduated and not even halfway through my first year of teaching. I am done. I'm going back to school for a bit longer to hopefully become a school psychologist instead. As a teacher I have felt nothing but disrespect from the kids, admin, and zero support as a new teacher. I already feel burnt out and unmotivated. It's sad, and if the government doesn't wake up soon education is seriously doomed.....

    • @brightknight1965
      @brightknight1965 Před rokem +11

      My friend that is a school psychologist just left too. It’s tough all around unfortunately

    • @bellaboo8557
      @bellaboo8557 Před rokem +15

      I’m 25-I tried teaching three time in three different districts. I taught special Ed behavior for 6th-8th grade, then special Ed elementary, and then 7th grade English.. I sincerely could not last one full school year-the system is broken and u have not failed, just remember tht!

    • @adamlambboy8332
      @adamlambboy8332 Před rokem +17

      I’m not a trained teacher but I taught in a center for a period and all I can say is it was awful. None of the kids listened, they were disrespectful, and I had no backup when it came to discipline. I was told I was too “tough” on kids because I told them “no” and wasn’t allowed to do time outs.
      How do you expect kids to learn what’s right and wrong when they never face consequences?
      It was a thankless job and I quit. I didn’t even get my paychecks on time and made 12 dollars an hour to watch 20 kids by myself. I was supposed to have another teacher help but she wouldn’t change diapers and was always out of the room. Never again.

    • @michellekaiser5907
      @michellekaiser5907 Před rokem +7

      After teaching, I was a paralegal and now I'm in business administration.

    • @ariyahramos6244
      @ariyahramos6244 Před rokem +3

      I am feeling the same 1st year

  • @jonicain2779
    @jonicain2779 Před rokem +100

    I've been teaching for 23 years now. I've seen better days and I've had the chance to enjoy teaching, but it saddens me for those who are new to the profession. I hate to be pessimistic, but things aren't going to get better and more and more teachers are going to walk away. Educators are expected to take on responsibilities that we were never meant to have. Meanwhile, there's no real expectations or accountability for students and their parents. It's insane to expect school systems to make up for what's lacking at home. The pandemic isn't the real culprit. It merely revealed and magnified what we were already experiencing.

    • @jyt74
      @jyt74 Před rokem +10

      Thank you for stating the pandemic is not to blame. Fellow teacher here. Covid precautions weren't even instituted consistently enough to be effective for public health, let alone powerful enough to bottom-out academic or behavioral skills. Covid showed clearly that parents consider us babysitter slaves rather than educators. It showed that parents don't mind easy tokens of "gratitude" or showy displays that make them look good, but when told we expect pay and trust and respect for a valuable skill set, we are the enemy.

    • @stbrobbins
      @stbrobbins Před 6 měsíci

      PBIS is going to be the nail in the coffin for our society and culture.

    • @growtocycle6992
      @growtocycle6992 Před 3 měsíci

      It's the "restorative justice"approach, I think... Maybe.
      I used to like it, but no consequences lead to.... 💥

  • @lcdrturner9554
    @lcdrturner9554 Před rokem +48

    The fix is two words: "Tough Love" It has to come from parents, it has to come from teachers, it has to be supported by administration, and it has to be accepted by the community.

  • @Calcifurr
    @Calcifurr Před rokem +9

    I just started teaching this past month and I absolutely hate it.
    I prep so much to meet the standards, I spend a lot of my money on the kids because I’m expected to “make learning fun.” I am disrespected every single day. I feel bitter and exhausted. I can’t.
    I want to quit everyday. I’ve developed stomach ulcers from the sheer amount of stress as well. I love a lot of my kids, but a lot of them are absolutely disrespectful and plain out rude.
    I grew up poor with trauma too, but that is NO excuse. I was NEVER disrespectful to a person who was trying to help me.

    • @user-uh9gg5dc5k
      @user-uh9gg5dc5k Před 4 měsíci

      I totally understand. I hate teaching too. It is so stressful to constantly be disrespected .

  • @AdamLongandTall
    @AdamLongandTall Před rokem +138

    I’m a para educator and it’s crazy for us too. So many people are constantly being moved around and it’s exhausting. We are over a month into the year and I’ve been assigned to 5 different kids. It feels unstable and it’s because as much as teachers are being unsupported, support staff like paras and teaching assistants are also being disregarded and not paid enough. I definitely agree that COVID has a huge impact on everyone’s development.

    • @LisaMarie-ht9zs
      @LisaMarie-ht9zs Před rokem +7

      Bless paras!!!! I teach ESE PreK & I wouldn’t survive without my 2 paras! With 18 babies, 3 of us is not enough but I’m so thankful for them!

    • @szigtema
      @szigtema Před rokem +1

      100% true.

  • @robsgirl7778
    @robsgirl7778 Před rokem +45

    When children aren't taught respect and personal responsibility at home it will carry over to school as well. Also parents need to show respect for their children's teachers in front of then. Like do not bad mouth teachers when your kids can hear, you are literally teaching your child to disrespect the authority figures in their lives.

  • @fatinabangura4735
    @fatinabangura4735 Před rokem +82

    I can relate. The kids will talk while I’m teaching, run around the classroom, be extremely loud and even use profanity and storm out of the room without permission. I lost my voice over four times yelling at them to stop. And the majority of them are below grade level. It’s a mess.

    • @missright9159
      @missright9159 Před rokem +13

      This is me. All day. You'll probably find my classroom in some tiktoks from DURING class. Not to mention the stress of what if admin walks in on me before I "figure this out" or delude myself that I will figure it out.
      I figured it's because I am a first year, and I'm sure that's part of it, but it's not like I'm up there giving this behavior the green light and telling kids to go ahead. I don't care how much I'm supposed to "put my foot down". I feel weak, I feel tired. Also to add that I feel guilty having, feeling like I'm not helping kids that are 3 grade levels behind, but I'm sure admin, parents will be annoyed if I stopped teaching, and bothered them constantly in order to be as assertive as I need to be in order to get these kids to just stop, let alone be compliant to what I want from them.
      Sorry. Rant over. I feel you.

    • @fatinabangura4735
      @fatinabangura4735 Před rokem +7

      @@missright9159 what grade do you teach? I teach 5th grade and they are a handful with the hormones and everything. I am a first year myself and at first I was too nice on them but I learned that it could hurt me in the long run so I had to get firmer and issue consequences if they broke the rules. They say I am mean now but that tells me that I am doing my job. Don’t be afraid to be firm on them, some of them do need it. Especially being in a Title 1 school.

    • @missright9159
      @missright9159 Před rokem +6

      Hey, @@fatinabangura4735. 8th math at a Title 1 school. The sad thing is, I know that very fact having worked with children for a while, but the issue is I don't feel like I have the time and space to dole out these consequences. There is so much other bs to consider and do, partly because we're Title 1, and we're "initiat-ized" to death to no helpful results.
      When I worked with younger kids, it was easier to withhold things from them if they didn't do the bare minimum. But with these kids, it's just "tattling" on them to parents and admin, and hoping they respect you enough to come to lunch detention because I can't physically force them or we'll write a referral...that they don't care about. It feels very hopeless but you still are right all the same. I just need to find that consequence they actually care about 🥴

    • @fatinabangura4735
      @fatinabangura4735 Před rokem +2

      @@missright9159 I feel you. Title 1 is tough. Kids coming in with all types of behavioral problems. And these kids’ learning is like two or more grade levels below. Have you offered them a lunch bunch? I know that middle schoolers love to eat lunch with the teacher and talk to them on a personal level. You can try that and see the difference.

    • @pistoffpussycat5778
      @pistoffpussycat5778 Před rokem +2

      ​@@missright9159 It's not you. 20 year teacher here and going through the same thing

  • @kathleenreardon8943
    @kathleenreardon8943 Před rokem +20

    I just walked out of what I thought would be a dream job. Half day teaching that started at noon. It was a middle school and I had 7th and 8th graders. They went the first 2 months with out a regular teacher. When I came in none of them could hear me. They were slamming desks and chairs and books. One student screamed in my ear so loud it really hurt my ears. We had a fire alarm after school I was trying to hear what the office was saying over the loud speaker. One student screamed so loud over and over I could not hear what the office was saying. Then they all rushed me and left the room. Within 3 days the principal was telling me how sensitive these kids were and I was reprimanded 3 times. The students were running to her and actually lying about me. I tried to teach for a month. I was never trained in the grading system or the referral system or the electronics system. I got piecemeal information, from a couple of teachers, but I was never able to post grades. I have 27 years of teaching experience, most of it in middle school and I have never been treated so badly by admins or students and the parents who also believed everything these students said.. I had been retired and I came out of retirement for this job. I am so sorry I did. These students are totally enabled. I need a job, but I think I'll look into a different profession. I'm surprised their are any teachers left. This school never had enough subs. This district and especially this school deserve a teaching shortage.
    I was so beat up by these students I cried all the way home. Bottom line, I'm not going get sick or die for these kids. I am not.

  • @dpcatlady176
    @dpcatlady176 Před rokem +46

    I retired last Dec with 25 years in teaching. I'm a highly qualified Science teacher and I'd never go back into the classroom again. I now have an Office Manager job for a small company. Love it so much more. The huge amount of time teaching takes away from a teacher's personal life is CRAZY! The paperwork is outlandish.

    • @ztellers27
      @ztellers27 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Amen to that and I'm not doing it anymore.

  • @solala6325
    @solala6325 Před rokem +71

    It’s so different now. As a daycare teacher, it starts early. I have had parents argue other teachers up and down about behaviors. Some just shrugs their shoulders, or ignore you all together. Half of the time it’s because they themselves lack empathy for teachers. It’s like “you sign up for this deal with it”

    • @victoriabeckfinat225
      @victoriabeckfinat225 Před rokem +15

      Oh, definitely. For tons of parents, lack of home training in their children has become a point of pride.

    • @lyssadussman5102
      @lyssadussman5102 Před rokem +8

      Same. When kids bite or pull hair and the parents are notified, they want to know what you or the other kid did wrong instead of teaching their children how to behave in society.

    • @michellekaiser5907
      @michellekaiser5907 Před rokem +5

      I feel like child minders should be able to "fire" the bad kids. Scare those parents that they'll need to find another location.

    • @sarahelizabeth8908
      @sarahelizabeth8908 Před rokem +2

      @@lyssadussman5102 YES ! It is infuriating . I got dhs called on me a few times because of ONE YEAR OLDS biting each other 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄 the main reason I quit 😭

  • @lunkee6972
    @lunkee6972 Před rokem +16

    This is my first year teaching. It will also be my last. I don’t care about most of my students anymore. Yelling across the room, walking around, calling me names, talking non stop- and admin doesn’t put any pressure on parents. I can’t do this.

  • @KathrynOliver_1321
    @KathrynOliver_1321 Před rokem +94

    Parents and admins, I hope you’re watching this. Open your ears and listen to what teachers are saying. Things need to get better.

    • @melrod4877
      @melrod4877 Před rokem +3

      I homeschool but still am watching. Just an ocean of information I didn't know.

    • @jasonmcgarry4383
      @jasonmcgarry4383 Před rokem +6

      They listen, but do not act on your behalf.

  • @marysharvey
    @marysharvey Před rokem +9

    You are validated by this family. When our daughter has to spend over 1,000 a year on supplies, and can only right off $250.00 on her taxes, there is a problem. Grabbing people off the street is a slap in the face to the teachers that have gone to school, and worked hard to get their degrees.

    • @ztellers27
      @ztellers27 Před 7 měsíci

      Don't waste your money anymore.

  • @darlalemmo8840
    @darlalemmo8840 Před rokem +46

    First let me say that I am not a teacher. But I wanted you all to know that I have cried over the things you are all going through. I'm so sorry that parents allow their children to walk all over teachers today. I'm very grateful for everything you do. I work with the public and I see how parents let their children do anything they want. I hear how kids treat adults. It's horrible. Thank you for talking about this because I had no idea how hard teacher's have it. Bless you all.

  • @mr.manning4119
    @mr.manning4119 Před rokem +12

    I'm a teacher in Orlando and full time single father of 5 kids, and I come home so overwhelmed that helping them with homework is beyond my capacity.

  • @a.harrington1634
    @a.harrington1634 Před rokem +73

    A huge issue I have seen in teaching high school is that a lot of our students had to parent themselves for 2 years. Now they are in a school setting being expected to listen to adults, and they don't understand that temporarily caring for themselves did not make them "grown". Many get very angry at ANY expectation or attempt to curb inappropriate behaviour because they were used to being alone and doing whatever they wished. It's really hobbled their ability to consider others' perspectives.

    • @Tecknowledgy
      @Tecknowledgy Před rokem +3

      All of this.

    • @the.sapling
      @the.sapling Před rokem

      you can’t rly blame them… they’ve been expected to care for themselves as you said. especially since their in high school they’re already going through so much.

  • @oreobaby2010
    @oreobaby2010 Před rokem +25

    I just got put in charge of the toddler room at my school (1 1/2 -2 years old) and I have a student that has had no interactions with anyone but their parents for the past 2 years. I now having to teach them how to walk, communicate and to be comfortable with other people and that just one child in my class. It's a lot to deal with.

  • @robsgirl7778
    @robsgirl7778 Před rokem +26

    I understand having core curriculum but teachers need to have the authority to teach that curriculum in the way they think will best serve their students. When administrators and school boards sti k their nose into the classroom they limit the creativity and adaptability of the teachers

  • @LostInMystery89
    @LostInMystery89 Před rokem +20

    I was an assistant teacher in a Pre-K classroom for two years and I was a lead teacher in Pre-K for five months, both times in a daycare center. I couldn't even finish out the school year in regards to the latter; I had NO support when it came to behaviors, so I struggled when it came to making curriculum because I was thinking that there was no point if they didn't listen to me and, therefore, didn't learn. The director and the owners only cared about appearances and only acknowledged the people who were in their inner circle (most of whom just were NOT qualified to be in the position they were in), and I just did not feel valued. The last straw was when a kid who destroyed my classroom because I told her she couldn't gargle her water was given a sticker sheet just so that she could get out of the director's office so that she (the director) could go back to her zoom class. I broke down right in the hallway. That took place on a Friday. By Monday, the resignation letter was on her desk. That happened over a year ago and I'm still traumatized from what happened. I never want to go back to a classroom ever again.

    • @sydneyjrivera
      @sydneyjrivera Před rokem +3

      Solidarity, I was pregnant my last year of teaching December 2019 a student struggling with behavior attempted to gouge me with scissors. Finished the year and still am home with my kid. I try my best to shower him with knowledge & teach him moral values. As that student was never taught… I pray for the girl still.

    • @tanyatimms2951
      @tanyatimms2951 Před rokem +2

      God Bless You. You did the right thing

  • @DianaandherGuitar
    @DianaandherGuitar Před rokem +11

    I graduated HS in 2010 and immediately enrolled in college for music education. I dropped out after none of my older friends could get jobs. I felt bad about that decision for a while, but the past couple years have absolutely validated my decision. Being a teacher now seems like a special kind of hell

  • @zohaibsaleem7648
    @zohaibsaleem7648 Před 11 měsíci +3

    It has become very difficult now for Early Career Teachers, many leave because the stress is too much with management expecting that you should be a PERFECT teacher as soon as you complete your training.

  • @Tecknowledgy
    @Tecknowledgy Před rokem +27

    My seniors have senioritis already. Quarter 1 ends next week. I’m tired every day. I’m tired of parents not caring, kids not caring, the disrespect. It is way too much to deal with.

    • @ztellers27
      @ztellers27 Před 7 měsíci

      Take your paycheck and screw them.

  • @bethmoore7722
    @bethmoore7722 Před rokem +38

    Teaching is as much emotional labor, as it is intellectual labor. Emotional labor sets the stage for all that comes after it. You’ve had to learn how someone else feels, how they think, how the world looks to them. You have to do this for how many kids at once?
    I live in Texas, and I don’t know how teachers here can do their jobs. What’s being required of them is cruel and immoral, and the book-banning is based on religious extremism and bigotry.
    The parents demanding these things forget that the rest of us exist. The district where my kids were educated is in a very high income area, and parents often treat teachers like lowly employees. It’s also a very conservative area, and I’d hate to teach here, or anywhere in Texas.

    • @michellekaiser5907
      @michellekaiser5907 Před rokem +3

      I don't think I could raise a dog in Texas. We lived there for years and the hard boxes they wanted to fit us all into was too much! For reference, I have a great job and I married an MD/PhD. Texas is too intense to live happily!

  • @lizchagolla7536
    @lizchagolla7536 Před rokem +48

    We as parents have to trust our teachers. ❤️

  • @JujuB1551
    @JujuB1551 Před rokem +7

    I’m not a teacher and have no experience with the educational system outside of being a student. But I’ve worked in a restaurant that’s right next to a K-8th grade school so we get a fair amount of families with their kids (mostly middle school aged). About 80% of the kids who come in have very few tables manners and will get up and run around the restaurant screaming and jumping all over our couches. The parents won’t do anything about it and are sometimes worse than the kids. We’ve gotten to the point where we literally have to have them (the parents) sign a contract stating that they will sit down at one table and not roam around the restaurant. I have the utmost respect to the teachers that deal with this on a daily basis. I want to quit after dealing with it for 4 hours once or twice a week.

  • @kathleenreardon8943
    @kathleenreardon8943 Před rokem +8

    I no longer felt like a teacher. All I did was try and manage outrageous behavior. And I couldn't do it.

  • @vampdollbites9355
    @vampdollbites9355 Před rokem +12

    So I used to do telephone surveys. The main reason I would hear that people vote against levies for schools other than not wanting tax increases is that the money seems to them to be going to sports facilities and gyms and new schools instead of making any effort at all to repair the existing structures and put the focus on those renovations on education rather than sports.

  • @justlooking1299
    @justlooking1299 Před rokem +29

    This is my first year and I'm having the same issue with the constant talking. Like and with Covid I feel like the biggest issue is that they have been able to get away with the bare minimum results of work. I feel like we've allowed them to fall behind on a lot of things and we're playing catch up

  • @TheM163
    @TheM163 Před rokem +40

    This was a more serious episode however I do feel better knowing that me and the teachers at my school are not the only ones going through this hell.

  • @1984kame
    @1984kame Před rokem +56

    I was watching the episode and a thought struck me that I had not thought of before so I had to pause the episode to type it before I forgot it. I worked in an elementary school for 12 years and 4 months ago just went to working at a local daycare. It has been ROUGH to say the least since covid happened. The kids are out of control and hard to keep engaged and focused and I see a lot of people saying they are unsure of where it is coming from. I was one of those people but now I think a lot of this stems from over stress in the home. Lets be honest we are all financially struggling and everything is so expensive you can't work hard enough or long enough to get the amount of money needed to create a carefree and happy environment at home all the time. Kids pick up on that stress and that weight and a lot of kids take that heaviness on their own shoulders even if they don't realize it. Maybe the real issue is the stress and exhaustion and uncertainty and price gouging that has been going on at home is causing a society of burnt out people who just can't take it anymore and our kids are exhibiting the behaviors we adults can't.

    • @jewelmartinez1438
      @jewelmartinez1438 Před rokem +4

      This comment should have more upvotes. It’s true.

    • @PlayerTenji95
      @PlayerTenji95 Před rokem +4

      Oh wow, this makes so much sense! 😟🫢😲

    • @the.sapling
      @the.sapling Před rokem +2

      yep, the issue is always capitalism. (serious)

    • @pistoffpussycat5778
      @pistoffpussycat5778 Před rokem +1

      ​@@the.sapling That's dumb. The very reason you were able to afford the device you typed your comment on IS capitalism

    • @the.sapling
      @the.sapling Před rokem

      @@pistoffpussycat5778 your point is 🤨

  • @RY-os9vw
    @RY-os9vw Před rokem +18

    “So much of ourselves is why we teach.” So very true. A good teacher is a teacher who is teaching effectively while they are letting their personality shine. I agree that allowing teachers to be their authentic selves help them to learn how to get along with different people while they’re learning so when they enter the workplace, they have had practice interacting with different personalities.

  • @juliegrossman-13
    @juliegrossman-13 Před rokem +16

    Times have definitely changed since I was in school. I remember when I was a freshman in HS and my social studies teacher had a permission form for our parents to sign for those of us to be able to watch Hotel Rwanda since we were learning about the country at the time and everyone was there to watch the movie that day so it's sad to see that families don't want certain topics to be talked or shown about

  • @slk1451
    @slk1451 Před rokem +7

    I was a ag teacher for 3 years in OK. I was so burned out and was consuming a bottle of wine a night just to numb my back and feet so I could sleep. AG teachers are on 12 month contracts and we work most weekends and holidays because of our outrageous duty demands. I was also in charge of the local 4H kids which was a $500 stipend in my salary. I left in 2017 before shit really hit the fan. I farm/ranch full time now and I’m much happier. Lol somehow farming is less stressful than teaching!

  • @casualviewer_
    @casualviewer_ Před rokem +5

    I was XC captain recently for my senior year of college. By far, the freshman grade was the worst that we have ever seen. Even my coach said it. We determined that it was because they were in lockdown from ages 16 to 18, a peak developmental time for a teenager. None of these students were mature, all of them caused issues with each other and could not handle interpersonal relationships. It was like they were 14-15, not 18. Over half of them ended up dropping out of college. It's sad that COVID has affected kids like this.

  • @ericahearst5470
    @ericahearst5470 Před rokem +36

    I'm a sub and I feel like a lot of the same things apply. I'm also credentiald and have my Master's degree. I'm apprehensive to get a full time teaching job because I don't want to be stuck! As a sub, I can take a day off if I need to. I dunno... but teaching and even subbing is SO MUCH MORE than just teaching stuff kids. You are a psychiatrist, a doctor, a babysitter, an entertainer etc. It's rough! Even as a sub you are all these things!

    • @tr_4600
      @tr_4600 Před rokem +8

      Same only i have been a substitute for years and have decided not to become a teacher based on all I have seen.

    • @Ms.AnatomyGeek
      @Ms.AnatomyGeek Před 4 měsíci

      I’m becoming a sub soon, thinking of actually teaching. I have my MS, teach in community college , and maybe just being a sub is the best deal. No responsibility.

  • @sarahgrindstaff6727
    @sarahgrindstaff6727 Před rokem +11

    I teach 1st grade at a charter school in Las Vegas, NV. This is 100000000% accurate! They won’t be quiet, no respect, no manners. It’s crazy

    • @animecookies8784
      @animecookies8784 Před rokem +1

      Girl charter schools are horrible to begin with. I also teach in Vegas but luckily I love my school and my grade level team

    • @azchanna
      @azchanna Před rokem

      @@animecookies8784 depends on the charter school , if it’s in a good neighborhood affluent or middle class to high socioeconomic it tends to be better or fair

  • @stephaniequintana3072
    @stephaniequintana3072 Před rokem +22

    I honestly am not entirely sure its just cause of coivd this is happening (obviously thats also a major factor) I honestly think its partly just the way people are being brought up.
    The reason I say this is I’m a full grown adult, (34) and went to school in the 90’s never in my life would I have even THOUGHT to talk back to a teacher.
    I’m now going threw career change and working on a Bachelors degree, one class is a design type class and entails a bi weekly critique from an INDUSTRY SPECIALIST who makes time to teach the course to a) share knowledge b) recruit students to her firm on graduation.
    THE AMOUNT OF TALKING BACK AND DISRESPECT FROM MY FELLOW CLASSMATES IS PHYSICALLY PAINFUL.
    The second hand embarrassment and cringe is awful, this is a required course and we all knew what was required of this course and people speak over and borderline fight this women on her valid and accurate critiques WHILE GIVING SAID CRITIQUE !! Even after the critique they refuse to take ownership of their mistakes and continue to whine and blame the teacher for them not understanding the assignment… usually while shes giving another critique… which is how she teaches us … 😅
    These aren’t children, these are 19-21 Junior/ senior level colleges students, and this disrespect is disgusting and Im not even the teach I’m a fellow student.

    • @shannonb4011
      @shannonb4011 Před rokem +1

      I'm turning 27 in a few week sand am back in college for a bachelors in nursing. Our lectures are 3 hours long and our professors will often give us a bit of a break in the middle. The amount of people who pack up and leave class at that time astonishes me! For the later half of class we only have about half the students. I'm so embarrassed for them, it's so disrespectful and I wish they just wouldn't come to class at all in the first place.

    • @billTO
      @billTO Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@shannonb4011duodenum? I've never heard of it.
      Oh, that was after the break.

  • @mykhiddos2
    @mykhiddos2 Před rokem +47

    I like to find out the teachers favorite candy and (school appropriate) drink and will randomly send it to school with my kids to give their teachers. They need shown appreciation

    • @MommyBee1589
      @MommyBee1589 Před rokem +3

      THANK U!!!!

    • @kyleefurniss9096
      @kyleefurniss9096 Před rokem +4

      When my students hand me a monster my day gets 10x better, bless you

    • @sarahelizabeth8908
      @sarahelizabeth8908 Před rokem +3

      Keep doing this. As a former teacher, this can save someone from a mental breakdown to know there are still some parents who actually care.

  • @purpleflamingos8756
    @purpleflamingos8756 Před rokem +5

    Lauren, the class you are talking about with the crazy chatty kids, that's literally my classmates right now. Its so sad watching my teachers yelling at everyone every single day. The even more terrible thing, is that nothing changes no matter what my teachers tell them. My classmates don't even care when prizes are up if the class is good. This is so bad.

  • @susanwegele2882
    @susanwegele2882 Před rokem +6

    I'm a parent and I see that teachers are under such pressure to make everyone feel good that I can't get a real answer or help for what to do at home with my misbehaving child.

    • @bellecruz5190
      @bellecruz5190 Před rokem +3

      I'm sorry you are going through this. You're one of the rare parents who are actually concerned and want to help at home. Ask the teacher to give you examples of the misbehavior, and work on those skills at home. For example, if the child is getting in trouble for hitting, then at home you tell your child that feeling angry is ok, and then give them ideas of how to appropriately act on that anger: saying you're angry with words, breathing, taking a break, fidgets, etc. You can do this for every behavior.

  • @PamelaH_HappyVibes
    @PamelaH_HappyVibes Před rokem +17

    What a great episode! I love the way these discussions help all of us understand what teachers are going through.

  • @ZIPPYMYCAT
    @ZIPPYMYCAT Před rokem +4

    I'm a 9th grade student I just started high school and 2 weeks into school police and an ambulance came to my school, a kid had been taken by the ambulance because he overdosed in the bathroom, for 2 weeks we had police infront of the bathroom door checking bags to make sure there wasn't any drugs in their bag

  • @lydia1634
    @lydia1634 Před rokem +13

    Per the Columbus City School strike, what's most infuriating about the building situation is that it isn't every building. Some of the schools in the district are in more affluent neighborhoods and those schools are really nice. So it's a neighborhood by neighborhood issue even more than a district wide issue. There's an internal school district lottery system because some of the schools are much, much better than others.

    • @BlackAnarchist1992
      @BlackAnarchist1992 Před rokem +1

      This is a blatant class issue that is caused by our society itself

    • @lydia1634
      @lydia1634 Před rokem +1

      Ohio's method of school funding has been deemed unconstitutional more than once but nothing has changed. 🤷

    • @BlackAnarchist1992
      @BlackAnarchist1992 Před rokem +1

      @@lydia1634 Okay so then you keep fighting like hell until it changes cause just going by what you said it is unconstitutional and it has been made clear multiple times so clearly you all are in the right.

    • @lydia1634
      @lydia1634 Před rokem +1

      I'm a district parent, not a teacher. The strike lasted only one school day before the district gave in to all their demands (in writing that all buildings be air conditioned before the next contract is signed; art, music, PE teachers, and nurses for every building; and all class size caps dropped by five). It was very funny to watch the 180 the board made.

    • @lydia1634
      @lydia1634 Před rokem +1

      @@BlackAnarchist1992 The strike happened in the middle of August, during the first week of school.

  • @martynkal.1248
    @martynkal.1248 Před rokem +5

    Looking forward to watching this -- thank you for choosing to speak on important/difficult topics!

  • @MrsWill-wd3mb
    @MrsWill-wd3mb Před rokem +9

    I went back to full-time teaching this year after being in a variety of roles for 5 years. I was *only* interested in coming back in a school that would give me the support I would need to go back. Luckily I found it. I switched to self contained ESE ASD (my first yr in all 3 veins). It's super hard but I love it. 🥰

  • @fremontpathfinder8463
    @fremontpathfinder8463 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I left a job in my district for another job that was out of the classroom after 18 years in the classroom. I never thought I would do that. I still work with kids but it is one on one and I no longer take home 12 extra hours of work a week. If this job had not materialized I would have retired early, moved out of state and done online teaching. These issues predated the pandemic. i was faced with a class of students where a significant minority were malicious and untrustworthy and it just floored me. Previously I taught in an urban area and had minimal classroom issues. I realized I could not put up with the admin gaslighting and blaming teachers for poor students behavior. There are so many people with teaching credentials out there and it is shocking to me that instead of trying to lure these people back, they are hiring people with minimal skills. And yes, I really hate the way teachers bag on other teachers. It is such a hard job. Give each other respect and love.

  • @tr_4600
    @tr_4600 Před rokem +3

    Lack of support, lack of consequences, and lack of accountability placed on students are the major reason why I have been a sub for years and decided not to teach. Teachers deal with so much. As a parent and trained educator I am so grateful for what they do and wish they had more support.

  • @nicoleolson1347
    @nicoleolson1347 Před rokem +19

    I homeschool because I am able and it fits my kids. However I always vote for levy’s, I always go to school board meetings and advocate for the teachers.

  • @angelalunsford2005
    @angelalunsford2005 Před rokem +6

    I'm feeling the same. I've tried everything I can for each of my six classes of 36, but there are those who still want to talk while I'm trying to teach. (It's been worse since Hurricane Ian.) I've reached out for help with basic appropriate behavior with parents and admin, but I feel like I'm getting nothing. It's taking a toll on my mental health, and now my physical health. I love what I teach, but there needs to be a break somewhere. Or, I'm going to have to find another place.

  • @cliv9591
    @cliv9591 Před rokem +6

    I am so happy that this isn't just me! This is my first year of teaching in Scotland and have primary 4 (aged 7-8). They were in their first year of school when covid hit so they really struggle because they don't have skills in the classroom. Not specifically academic skills but life skills. It's so difficult during transitions with talking.

  • @Mandassina
    @Mandassina Před rokem +5

    I taught high school Spanish in the Southeastern US for nine years. This was prior to the Common Core initiative, and Spanish was an elective, so I could pretty much do what I wanted as long as it wasn't too outrageous, and I could name the specific vocabulary or grammar the kids were learning. For example, Simon Says taught body parts, Mother May I taught familiar and polite commands and different ways to ask permission. We had fun. With my upper levels, I always did a unit on Don Quijote using a graphic novel (ok, it was really a comic book - only about 40 pages) that presented some of the key scenes and played relevant songs from Man of La Mancha.
    Because this was the Bible Belt, I always made a point of explicitly informing my administrator of the themes and issues the unit addressed: self-esteem, dysfunctional families and absentee parents, mental health, mental illness, dementia, elder abuse, religious persecution, prostitution, r@pe and consent - particularly in the context of someone who is known to be 'easy' (I'd tell my students, 'Just because they gave it away once does not give you permission to take it the next time'), religious piety and hypocrisy vs actually being a good person (more controversial than you might think in the Bible Belt), nobility of birth vs nobility of character ('nobility' is not so much an issue now, but the idea that well-born people can be horrible and low-born people can be noble is still very relevant), looking past a person's station in life to see who they really are (Don Quijote fell in love with a prostitute), the importance of getting out into the world and having real experiences as opposed to living through books (and nowadays, I would include the internet and social media), and the importance of following one's dreams even when the rest of the world tells you you're crazy (Another big issue when parents just wanted their kids to be able to get a job after school because 80% of my students lived below the federal poverty level and qualified for free or reduced lunches, but pride kept their parents from filling out the paper work. There were days when some of my kids didn't eat lunch and I kept snacks in my desk drawer to feed them). There were probably other things I've forgotten, too.
    I'd cover myself by sending this information to my principal and assistant principal in an email and giving them a copy of the entire unit including every handout, the song lyrics, and a copy of the book for their review a week or two in advance. I always got amazing support and the response to my email usually said something along the lines of, "They see worse on television and sooner or later most of them will encounter most of these things in real life. Go for it."
    Then, in 2001, we got hit with George W. Bush's No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). I honestly never considered that it would change the landscape for me because my class was an elective. I sent the email and dropped a copy of the unit in my principal's mailbox as usual. This time, the reply to my email was, "I have some notes and observations. What day this week can we meet over lunch?" (His suggesting a lunch meeting was by no means out of line. My planning and lunch ran together, so I had a two-hour block of time in the middle of the day. It was lovely, and most days I would join the principal and a few other colleagues for lunch anyway, so this time, we would just be talking about my unit instead of other stuff.)
    I picked a day and went into that meeting loaded for bear. I had a three-point argument defending my choice to address every one of those controversial themes. Don Quijote is arguably the greatest work of Spanish-language literature. For many people, it is the only work of Spanish literature they know, even if they've never read it. The fact that this was the first time he had 'notes and observations' told me it was the first time he'd actually bothered to read the full unit. This was my hill to die on. I was going to teach the unit my way, or find another school that would let me, in which case he would have to find another Spanish teacher.
    I should have trusted my principal. He didn't want to edit out or dumb down a single element in that unit. Rather, he had seen the potential for this unit to meet some of the NCLB requirements and with his 'notes and observations' had turned it into an interdisciplinary unit for me. He wanted the music teacher to come in to talk about how different instruments and rhythms create different emotions (there's a song in Man of La Mancha that is very sweet and soothing in one scene, and with a different musical arrangement and singing style it is the backdrop for a r@pe). He suggested having the school resource officer talk about how the police deal with consent issues. He wanted the school nurse, the guidance counselor and the health occupations teacher to lead a discussion on self-esteem, mental health, mental illness, dementia, and elder abuse. He offered to contact a social worker address issues of dysfunctional families and absentee parents. He wanted me to bring in one of our social studies teachers to talk about the Spanish Inquisition and the concept of 'the nobility.'
    Several of those people had lunch during that same time period, and we got them on board that week. I think my principal actually covered one of their classes himself to they could come into my classroom for their part of the discussion. It was an amazing 2-1/2 weeks. The kids loved it, I loved it, the other teachers and guests enjoyed the change of pace, we got to have deep discussions about big issues, and every single thing we did met state standards and/or fulfilled requirements of the NCLB Act. It's been over 20 years, and it's still one of my best memories from my years as a teacher.
    And as far as I know, I never, ever had a parent complain about that unit in all the years I taught it.
    I guess my point is this: Teachers know how to handle delicate topics. We know what's appropriate and what isn't. We have access to people and resources that parents often don't. With a supportive administration, we have the ability to provide your children with a safe space to talk about big, scary things that many of them will encounter in the wide, wide world. By all means, get involved in your child's education, but trust us, don't stifle us. We want to work with you for your child's benefit, and we have the resources, the capacity, and the desire to do so much good, if you'll let us.
    If there are problems in your school system, find the source of the trouble and remove it, don't impose blanket restrictions or excessive demands on all of your teachers. If you make it impossible for them to do their jobs the right way, they will leave. Remember, that unit was my hill to die on. I honestly believed it was too important to not do it and that if I wasn't allowed to teach it, then my principal might as well pull anyone in off the street to do the rest of my job.
    As an aside, I didn't leave teaching because of anything happening in education. I left because my mother fell ill. I realized she wouldn't be around forever and I wanted to spend some time with her, so I moved back home to help take care of her. When I was ready to return to full-time work a few years later, there were a number of reasons why returning to teaching didn't seem like a good plan, so now I'm in my 50s, I have some awesome memories, and I'm content with a J.O.B. that pays the bills.
    Bless you all, and thanks for your hard work and the love you show those children every day.

  • @DorothyOzmaLover
    @DorothyOzmaLover Před rokem +1

    No denying I'm thrilled yall are out here conveying what many teachers feel which being a secondary music/history/Eng teacher at an adult school, I'm so grateful for. Your points and concerns are so important to discuss and share since even teaching adult students, I see those issues at that level too and then on top of that, instructors are still taken advantage of w/ little pay and barely any resources or they don't work properly. Bless yall!

  • @joythompson9530
    @joythompson9530 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this video!
    At the end of the video I love when it was mentioned that these kids Need to see Teachers with Different personalities really hit home for me. In a safe, nurturing environment you will feel comfortable as a Teacher with being your true, authentic self! I am more introverted, quiet and shy in some realms and I feel like many teachers at my school look at me like I don't have a voice, I need to be babied, and not worthy to be a Teacher with a backbone.
    I'm planning my exit strategy. It's not worth the stress/anxiety.

  • @rebeccaernette1749
    @rebeccaernette1749 Před rokem +7

    I am a senior in high school, I know how much is expected of you all, and you guys are heroes and I think the only thing I've ever enjoyed in school is the teachers. I remember some of my teachers were a part of the military because they would get paid more. I really wish I could do so much more for you guys, you deserve the world. Especially the elementary school teachers. You guys are incredible and I will always vote for school grants because I go to a small school in Pennsylvania. We have had to get rid of the library cause of budget cuts, and I've watched my school deteriorate over my four high school years. I love learning about the teachers perspective, because you guys are astonishing. I hope you guys have a great school week and God bless

    • @fabiolabolivar9850
      @fabiolabolivar9850 Před rokem +4

      --- I wish i had more students like you 🥺. I teach HS. Students have no idea how much work goes into being a good teacher. Keep being the appreciative and kind person that you are 🙂 This world needs more kids like you.

    • @rebeccaernette1749
      @rebeccaernette1749 Před rokem +2

      @@fabiolabolivar9850 aww thank you so much 🥰

    • @Groovylu3
      @Groovylu3 Před 11 měsíci

      You put tears in my eyes. Thank you for your words. 🥹

  • @Snail320
    @Snail320 Před rokem +1

    It took me 3 months to teach my first graders common manners (no hitting, no interrupting, no back talking, listen to lessons, they NEVER want to stop talking). Simple things like taking care of a box of supplies, picking paper up off the floor. Basic socialization skills completely lacking in the majority of kids. The gap between high socioeconomic and lower socioeconomic kids is HUGE, worse than its ever been. The admin. blames the teachers for gaps in learning and low scores, never mentioning it at all.
    It's 24/7 drill, drill, drill to bring up the test scores. Our afternoon recess was canceled. 12:15 - 2:45 with no break and the kids are 6. Shameful.

  • @lisamr40
    @lisamr40 Před rokem +3

    As a parent to 3 kids during COVId I can't imagine being a teacher. You have to be a special person with a giant heart. I couldn't figure out the entire online schooling, it was horrible. Honestly, if it wasn't for my kids' teachers, my kids would have failed. Because I could not teach in that manner. Thank you to all teachers out there!!! I wish you would get treated so much better because you guys teach our kids, the same kids that will be doctors, judges, etc. One day. Tfs

  • @eddieredmann3
    @eddieredmann3 Před 9 měsíci

    When I went to the school Greg teaches at right now, they used to call in my grandfather every other week to fix something that broke in the AC system. My sister (who goes there now) also told us how they couldn't use the classrooms on one half of the building because the AC system for that half the building had had some catastrophic failure and needed to be completely replaced.
    Some of these schools ought to be condemned.

  • @tdpod6109
    @tdpod6109 Před rokem +6

    "I know my kids are difficult. Sometimes they're little shits. One is probably on the spectrum and ADHD. The other probably oppositional defiant. We're taking them to therapy. We got in home therapy. We are trying meds. We are trying the techniques. We talk to the teachers, give them heads up that the morning went sideways out the gate. I wish I knew how to get them wrangled in so they can function well enough with others. I don't know what to do. I'll try it. I just don't know what to do."

  • @ronlugbill1400
    @ronlugbill1400 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I just left an ESL teaching position. 4th-8th grade. You go through teacher training and you get experience teaching and read the research and get good results with your students. And you get hired based on your training and experience and expertise. Then, they hand you a boxed curriculum and say you have to teach this boring curriculum that the kids hate and is completely ineffective. These poor kids are reading 3 or 4 years behind grade level. They speak English fluently. They may speak English better than their native language. But they are in ESL classes because they keep failing statewide testing because they can barely read. And I go into the school and there is no library. And I go into the classroom and there are no books. Only boring workbooks. And I do not have the flexibility to use my knowledge and my experience and have the kids reading and writing and learning vocabulary. I know how to get their reading score up 2 grade levels per year. But the district bought this boxed curriculum and we have to use it. I had to decide whether to be passive-aggressive and do what I feel the kids need and what works but pretend to be doing the lame workbooks, or to sell my soul and to participate in keeping these kids from even being able to graduate from high school, not to mention college. Because they keep doing these lame workbooks that the district buys and they keep failing the state testing every year and falling further behind. We have this top-down system where the district and the administrators, who don't know each subject area, and don't see the students make the decisions and the teachers feel micro-managed and are unable to do what the students need. I wish I could have helped those kids. I am just not a fit in the school bureaucracy.

  • @amandaholley8068
    @amandaholley8068 Před rokem +3

    As “one of those people off the streets”, I have a masters in accounting and have taught dance since I was a teenager. I was told by a police officer not to do it. I taught for a month in the school from which I graduated. I was hired the Thursday before school started and had two days of PD which was basically listening to an overpaid speaker talking about things I have heard by other overpaid speakers. The pre-cal books didn’t arrive until mid-September. The two rules were 1) No fighting and 2) No vaping. Why did teachers have a dress code but not students? My rule was we all show respect to each other and the classroom. I had a mother who told me her child with a learning disability could show her step-by-step how to work geometry problems because he understand my teaching methods. I was a secondary education major for a time. I was told I”wasn’t a good fit” after the instructional facilitator learned I have ADHD. One student (apparently not the first) wore an ankle monitor and was out on bail for being one of about five people who attacked our police officers with fireworks. I know other students who are in dance or kids of people I know who act like school resource officers using pepper spray in classrooms is normal. Administration is why my niece began attending virtual school in 2015. My students found me on Facebook and messaged me to ask why I left them. They are seniors and I told them the truth. My sophomore principal (my main admin) was fantastic. The senior principal and school principal (who was also an assistant superintendent) were not at all, even when I asked. I had one football player who was reported numerous times for misbehavior and wasn’t punished while others were. While the buildings have issues, there is no problem with the football facilities. I miss my students, but I’m thankful for other businesses wanting me to apply. My sister had sepsis last week and I’m glad I could advocate for my sister at the hospital. I have to call hospital administration to let them know how great their nurses are, even after three years in with a pandemic and they are still wearing masks. Our state’s Department of Education will be hearing the opposite. Every teacher but one was helpful to me and 98% of kids were phenomenal.

  • @jessicalanza5114
    @jessicalanza5114 Před rokem

    Such a great episode. Thank you, thank you, thank you! 👏👏👏

  • @carolynk6559
    @carolynk6559 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for mentioning higher education, I feel like people don't focus on the fact that we are on fire to. I know not everyone will go onto higher education, but its still important to talk about as many of our skilled professionals (like teachers!) do need at least some further education or higher education experience! Lack of funding, lack of support for faculty and staff, lack of students being prepared for college (i.e. COVID learning loss, behaviors, expectations) are all pouring fuel on the fire!!!

  • @sarakis8806
    @sarakis8806 Před rokem +2

    I admire you guys being able to speak up.
    I can relate to a lot of these issues working in the civil service in the UK.
    We are treated with no dignity by either the public we serve or the government that we help run.
    I wish I was able to speak up without me receiving an size and desist from my department. Please do continue to speak up. Your voices matter so much. Hopefully you guys inspire more and more people to speak up about awful work environments. Change starts with good words.

  • @kimcarter129
    @kimcarter129 Před rokem +3

    I live in Iowa, the governor here wouldn’t allow schools to shut down the whole time that most of the country did. We did have some time when they did online, then it was part online and part in person. The smaller schools went back sooner than larger ones. Then they went back full time. They went back full time and bunch of the teachers got COVID and some were hospitalized, they didn’t have school for 2 weeks and then went back full time, they did have to wear masks.
    But the problem with our teacher shortage was because parents were having fits about their kids having to wear masks

  • @ronndapagan
    @ronndapagan Před rokem

    Thank you for this video. Bless you for sharing your experience and talent that you give to your students.

  • @h.kalqahtani9219
    @h.kalqahtani9219 Před rokem +6

    Omg guys I love your videos so much

    • @kittycarla6695
      @kittycarla6695 Před rokem +1

      They already did one about field trips I think it is on this channel.

  • @jonigarciajg
    @jonigarciajg Před rokem +3

    Some kids are also too over scheduled that they don't have any free time to talk with their peers. We are just too out of balance in so many ways.

  • @willowt9196
    @willowt9196 Před rokem +5

    Thank you for addressing this school year. Everyone is acting like this is a normal school year- this so far has been that hardest and weirdest beginning of a school year of my career so far. However, the admin and the people in charge are acting like everything should be normal. It is hard to figure out what exactly is off, but something is off.

  • @oliviapatel2553
    @oliviapatel2553 Před rokem +3

    I am a first year HS teacher and I have no support. All of the discipline/intervention is placed on us. Scores show that 90% of my students are below grade level, and so many of them are grade school reading levels. These are the kids who act out the most. They talk over me, cuss and blurt out, ignore my directions, and cannot keep their phones away. I am talking about 15 years olds who cannot stay in their seats, stop talking across the class to their friend, or stop tossing things. I have students who will watch videos out loud! They become so aggressive when they are confronted or face consequences. I asked a kid why he would throw something to someone across the room when I had just kicked a kid out for throwing something, and he kept talking back--saying the only reason I am saying something to him about it is because I have a bad attitude. These kids blame me for their behaviors and their grades. They have no sense of responsibility or accountability. I hear excuses and begging/whining all day from the kids who use their phones or want to sleep or talk over me in class.

  • @melissaurushidani4986

    Thank you for saying all of these things!

  • @nikkifunke4597
    @nikkifunke4597 Před rokem +1

    I left a 15 year retail career this year to work in special ED. I have volunteered at my 3 children's school for the last 8 years and been their Volleyball coach for the last 2 years. You are so right that these teachers AND students need support and encouragement so badly. It is a completely different world right now.

  • @nicoleolson1347
    @nicoleolson1347 Před rokem +10

    Do you think that a lot of the inability to listen has to do with the amount of time we’ve all spent on computers?

    • @shanenanigans27
      @shanenanigans27 Před rokem +5

      Not computers. But I think it is TikTok and the push for Shorts on every device which is lowering attention spans so much. As someone who was in school during early social media, andused computers in my learning, it wasn't this bad. Until Tik Tok, and the pandemic. It's like no matter how much teachers try to make their lessons engaging, the kids would rather watch Tik Tok all day than pay attention.

  • @HopeGardner3amed
    @HopeGardner3amed Před rokem +7

    I went to puberty classes with my school nurse and mom after school, so that my mom had more of a jumping off point to fill in the blanks as opposed to explain everything in a medical unage appropriate way. This was in 06 though

  • @JonasBrotherLuver122
    @JonasBrotherLuver122 Před rokem +4

    As a new daycare teacher at a center, I can't wait to watch this!

  • @reviewswithtamia
    @reviewswithtamia Před rokem +2

    As a first year teacher, I am saddened that many teachers are leaving the field. I teach 4th-8th orchestra and was so lucky to be hired into my school district. I have a mentor (another orchestra teacher) who helps me with navigating my way through things and a learning support coach who is helping me prepare for my first observation but also on ways to improve my instruction. I think if many school districts gave mentors and had a learning support coach (a person you can confide in about work and stress), then many teachers would not be leaving. Not to mention, other factors such as pay, classroom size, scheduling, and other things that can be greatly improved. Lastly, I think we need more individuals who are closer to the average teacher age in administration positions who understand what their colleagues are having trouble. Many admin people have been "out" of the classroom so long that they may not realize that things are changing and so the way the handle their staff needs to change too!

  • @heathn2206
    @heathn2206 Před rokem +2

    Just now watching after a few months off. I am certified, and I recently participated in a zoom interview involving four principals. The district is desperately starving for educators yet I was disrespected so much. They would ask me a question and cut me off while I tried to respond. I was offered a 6th ELA position. I accepted with a heightened sense of apprehension and fear! A day later I rescinded. Now I'm working with a special needs foster child also in 6tg grade. So rewarding

    • @YTuser874
      @YTuser874 Před rokem +3

      Yes, that’s the part that amazes me. How these schools can be so desperate for help yet will quickly disrespect the help that they do have!

  • @elsaguiles
    @elsaguiles Před rokem

    Snaps to you Tell!!! I have been in education for 30 years, almost left 4 years ago. I realized this is my calling. Thanks y’all!!!

  • @ANN-pg6bz
    @ANN-pg6bz Před rokem +1

    I am in my 25th year as a middle school teacher. My school district just passed a referendum worth millions! We will have beautiful, well set up buildings and classrooms with no teachers to teach in them! It’s currently November, many teachers in my district are leaving at semester. Also, we have no substitutes and are unable to fill some important positions. Behaviors that occur daily are unbelievably CrAZY! Education in America is in a state of emergency! But, let’s keep talking about the economy…..cause they aren’t connected, RIGHT??!! 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @LostNTranslations
    @LostNTranslations Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for this helpful podcast. I was just wondering about the balance that needs to be struck between parents and teachers and if you've had any guests that were both a parent AND a teacher and if they can come back and talk about this? I realize the irony in what I'm asking cause you guys just talked about being told how to do your job, lol. However, I would love it if such guests could return for this topic. I don't have kids, so I only know one side of this struggle and I know they'll have an insight that could prove helpful. Big-time appreciate y'all. 🙏

  • @lexuslloyd5576
    @lexuslloyd5576 Před rokem

    I see this every single day in my school I am a special ed aide for kindergarten and 1st grade. And I see this every day and I appreciate my own teachers ten times more.thank you for all you do

  • @melaninatedunicorn5545
    @melaninatedunicorn5545 Před rokem +3

    I've worked in schools for over 10 years. I've been a para, a one to one and now a IA. I have been asked to go back to school to be a teacher.. but even with all the experience I have with working in a class and help create lesson plans I still don't think I can handle being a full teacher. Much respect to all teachers.. I have lots of teachers in my family I'm happy to be class support and back up but teachers pay for way too much out of pocket and all the other time and energy they should be treated better and paid waaaaaaaay better

  • @bethc7243
    @bethc7243 Před rokem +10

    I have a theory on the talking. These kids are making up for lost socialization from the pandemic, and they want to talk. Also, there’s less unstructured play time today than when I was a kid. That’s just a theory, but I don’t have a solution, other than I tell my kid everyday to just stop and listen to the teacher.

  • @shadyshandalear
    @shadyshandalear Před rokem +5

    Never been this early! I’m not a teacher, but I’ve been a HS/MS school social worker, just YAS 👏🏾
    Love your content. Keep up the advocacy❤

  • @kati_ichigo
    @kati_ichigo Před rokem +2

    i have so much respect for teachers, my mum was a teacher for 25 years before she had to quit because of a health issue. she'd come home tired every week, swamped with marking and fed up because she wasnt getting support at school (especially at the last school she taught at which was a private school) as a student in secondary school now i can see what teachers are put through, they all look so tired all the time but put a smile on for us, seeing the teachers so demotivated makes us feel demotivated too because we understand how disrespected teachers are. it's just bad in the uk as well because of the cost of living crisis, schools are having to choose between paying teachers and heating classrooms. everything is a mess

  • @loganrobinson2671
    @loganrobinson2671 Před rokem +5

    15:10 everyone in my 3rd grade class gave me wide eyes when I shared that my mom let me go see Saw II in the IMAX theater. My teacher cut me off when I started talking about the details.

  • @michellem3925
    @michellem3925 Před rokem +2

    The episode really resonated to me. The gov’t & higher admin’s obsession with determining “learning loss” is not as relevant as the change in the students’ ability to self regulate, sense of entitlement, resentment of routines, even just regulating going to the bathroom a dozen times a day that teachers are trying to reacclimate students to rooms with 30+ bodies. Deadlines, working in a focused manner even if you personally aren’t thrilled about the topic or activity, accepting behavior norms are the challenges I haven’t seen as much in 20+ years of teaching.

  • @jessicasawyer5320
    @jessicasawyer5320 Před rokem +12

    There’s a school district that I know of that wants to pass a policy that is so intense that if a teacher even says the word “diversity” they could get fired. They’ve also just set a precedent on banning books in classrooms and the school libraries too. It’s absolutely insane how bad things have gotten.

  • @trendylosercat
    @trendylosercat Před rokem +1

    omg, we also didn’t have AC in our schools. i cannot explain how terrible it was on 80° days - in uniforms, tucked in shirts, belts, etc - and just dripping in sweat. even as a kid i knew how bad that was for holding anyone’s attention.

  • @danamiller1578
    @danamiller1578 Před rokem +1

    I started student teaching in September. I started in 1st grade and it’s no joke! Curriculum assumes all kids are on level and doesn’t allow for accommodations. We have kids that don’t know their letter sounds. On top of that, this is their first year without restrictions. THEY WILL NOT STOP TALKING!! it’s absolutely insane.

  • @emilykrumvieda
    @emilykrumvieda Před rokem +3

    Completely understand coming as a prior para-professional now custodial, I get it! I got out of being a para, because of the trauma it was causing my day to day life! I have a wonderful admin that understands these issues, but I wish every school could have an admin like I do. We at our middle school have created Good News call of the day across the board at our middle school and admin gets involved to call parents with good news, to try and build those relationships again. That being said there are still alot of bad things still happening in our schools at no fault by teacher or parents but as ADULTS. Teaching empthy is so important now days for these kids! I hope I can look back in 4 years and pray that these kids now are going to feel these good effects and be able to use their emotions and body's in the correct fashion! Way to go Bored Teachers your on the right track! Let's stop pointing blame and try to fix it right?!

  • @danavila04
    @danavila04 Před rokem +3

    Students are still having issues paying attention, listening, fallowing directions at this point of the year. I was soooo happy for thanksgiving break. I think parents didn’t teach their kids how to be respectful during Covid. I blame parents.

  • @Donley76
    @Donley76 Před rokem +3

    100% they don't know how to human. Parents, if you want to help teachers and help your children learn at school, do some of these things with your children:
    -Take them in public WITHOUT a screen in their face. Require excellent behavior from them while there. Practice often.
    -Play board games, etc. Teach them how to take turns and to wait to speak when others are speaking.
    -Teach empathy, how to imagine what others are feeling. Use books, lessons, conversations, etc.
    -Reduce screen time at home. Set a concrete screen allowance they must earn. Hold firm. These kids are straight-up addicts.
    For the most part, behavior patterns start at home.

    • @AshaSara
      @AshaSara Před rokem +1

      ugh yes, the damn iPads (and the cute little tablets they make for kids, no clue why they thought that was a good idea 🙄) are becoming an EPIDEMIC they just stare at it and can't turn away from the screen it's so sad honestly

  • @georgiasmith5655
    @georgiasmith5655 Před rokem +2

    Coming from a parent that had a very rough experience dealing with headstart, the only contact I got from my daughter's teacher was negative. It in school during covid and I literally ddnt even meet her teacher until something bad happened.
    My daughter has speech needs and they would not answer any emails or phone calls I had just for questions (bc I am her parent and I can probably help you deal with my autistic child if she's having a panic attack) and now that she's in kindergarten I feel horrible bc I haven't heard anything at all from her teacher. So I assume everything is going well, but I don't know what theyre learning about or books they should be reading at home, anything. I'm just patiently waiting on "that call" bc they only reach out to parents if something is wrong

    • @willowt9196
      @willowt9196 Před rokem +1

      The staff does not have the time to reach out to each parent individually. We are overwhelmed and spread too thin. We have so much on our plate as it is and keeps just being piled on. We are not reaching out on purpose - we are at the end of our rope also.

  • @adiahcondee1377
    @adiahcondee1377 Před rokem +1

    My favorite Sunday podcast 💖

  • @kelliknight7006
    @kelliknight7006 Před rokem

    You guys are amazing!