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Teachers Are Not Okay













At the staff meeting the other day, one of my fellow teachers turned to me and said he was having trouble seeing.














He rushed home and had to have his blood pressure meds adjusted.














Another co-worker was sent home because one of her students had tested positive for Covid-19 and she had gone over to his desk to help him with his assignment.














I, myself, came home on Friday and was so beat down I just collapsed into bed having to spend the next week going from one medical procedure to another to regain my health.















The teachers are not okay.














This pandemic has been .














Through every twist and turn, teachers have been at the center of the storm.














When schools first closed, we were heroes for teaching on-line.














When they remained closed, we were














Then there was a vaccine and many of us wanted to reopen our schools but only if we were prioritized to be vaccinated first. .














When our students got sick, we sounded the alarm – only to get that kids don’t catch Covid and even if they do, they certainly never catch it at school.














We were asked to redo our entire curriculums on-line, then in-person for handfuls of students in funky two-day blocks, then teach BOTH on-line and in-person at the same time.














The summer was squandered with easing of precautions and not enough adults and teens getting vaccinated. Then schools reopened in August and September to














It’s been a rough year and a half, and I can tell you from experience – TEACHERS ARE EXHAUSTED.














As of Sept. 17, 2021, at least 1,116 active and retired K-12 educators have died of COVID-19, . Of that number, at least 361 were active teachers still on the job.














I’m sure the real number is much higher.














the Covid pandemic has triggered a spike in teacher retirements and resignations not to mention a shortage of tutors and special aides.














Difficulties filling teacher openings have been reported in Tennessee, New Jersey and South Dakota. In the Mount Rushmore State, one district started the school year with 120 teacher vacancies.














In Texas, districts in Houston, Waco and other neighborhoods reported teacher vacancies in the hundreds as the school year began.














Several schools nationwide have had to shut down classrooms because there just weren’t enough teachers.














The problem didn’t start with Covid.














due to poor compensation, lack of respect, autonomy and support.














For instance, . A














This isn’t rocket science. If people refuse to work for a certain wage, you need to increase compensation.














But it’s not just pay.














According to a survey in June of , 32% said the pandemic was likely to make them leave the profession earlier than expected. That’s almost a third of educators – one in three – who plan to abandon teaching because of the pandemic.














Another . said the pandemic increased teacher attrition, burnout and stress. In fact, educators were almost twice as likely as other adult workers to have frequent job-related stress and almost three times more likely to experience depression.














The  – 27% of teachers reporting depression and 37% reporting anxiety.














However, the RAND survey went even deeper pinpointing several causes of stressful working conditions. These were (1) a mismatch between actual and preferred mode of instruction, (2) lack of administrator and technical support, (3) technical issues with remote teaching, and (4) lack of implementation of COVID-19 safety measures. 














I have to admit that’s what I’m seeing in the district where I teach.














We have had several staff meetings in the four weeks since students have been back in the classroom and none of them have focused on how we are keeping students and staff safe from Covid. In fact, administration seems happy to simply ignore that a pandemic is even going on.














We’ve talked about academic standards, data driven instruction, behavior plans, , dividing the students up based on standardized test scores but NOTHING on the spikey viral ball in the room!














from the district about how many students and staff have tested positive and if close contacts were identified. But nothing is done to stop the steady stream of illness.














And these communiques willfully hide the extent of these outbreaks. For example, here’s an announcement from Sept. 13:














“We have learned that a Middle School staff member has tested positive for COVID-19. There were no close contacts associated with that case. We also have learned that a Middle School student has tested positive. Close contacts for this case have been identified and notified. Thank you.”














This announcement failed to disclose that contacts for the student were the entire middle school girl’s volleyball team. That’s 16-17 students who were all quarantined as a result.














Teachers are tired of this.














And I don’t mean palm-on-my-head, woe-is-me tired.














I mean collapsing-in-a-heap tired.














We are getting physically ill – even when it isn’t directly attributed to Covid, .














At my district, the school board even refused to mandate masks. . Do you know how much these kind of senseless shenanigans drain educators who just want to make it through the day without catching a potentially fatal illness!?














There are so many teachers absent every day. We know because there aren’t enough subs, either, so those of us who do show up usually have to cover missing teachers classes between teaching our own classes and fulfilling our other duties.














Things cannot continue this way.














We need help and support.














We can’t be anymore.














You can’t just put us in a room with kids and tell us to work it all out.














You can’t refuse to listen to us but blame us when things go wrong.














No one’s going to stay for that – not even for the kids.














We are literally falling apart here.














, to give as much as we can, but many of us are running out of things to give.














The system is built on the backs of teachers.














And we are ready to collapse.















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