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Study: 2 in 5 teachers 'disheartened' with profession
New survey confirms teachers in low-income schools have little support, suggesting the scope of the challenges facing education reformers

 

Primary Topic Channel:  Research

 

Teachers' faith in their ability to make a difference with their students varied notably by group.

Recognizing the importance of teacher quality in transforming underperforming schools, Education Secretary Arne Duncan has made retaining and rewarding effective teachers a cornerstone of his school reform agenda. But a recent report that suggests 40 percent of U.S. teachers are disheartened with their profession indicates how difficult these challenges will be.

The report is based on a nationwide study, "Teaching for a Living: How Teachers See the Profession Today," and was conducted by Public Agenda, a New York City-based nonprofit research organization, and by Learning Point Associates, a nonprofit education research and consulting organization based in Chicago, Ill., in partnership with Education Week.

Underwritten by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Joyce Foundation, the study is based on a nationally representative phone and online survey of about 900 teachers throughout the United States between April 16 and June 22, preceded by six focus groups. The survey was intended to provide a comprehensive look at how teachers view their profession, why they entered teaching, the atmosphere and leadership in their schools, the problems they face, and their ideas for reform.

"This snapshot of America's four million K-12 teachers comes as economic stimulus dollars ... are focused on dramatically improving student learning and ensuring that effective teachers are more equitably distributed among all schools," said Sabrina Laine, chief program officer of Learning Point Associates. "Additionally, as Congress considers reauthorization of [the No Child Left Behind Act], it is even more critical to have a better understanding of what motivates teachers to excel in the classroom and what support they need to sustain high levels of effectiveness with all students."

What the survey found was disheartening in itself: 40 percent of teachers reportedly are disheartened, 37 percent are merely content, and only 23 percent of teachers are idealists.

The survey said it divided teachers into these three categories based on their common responses.

Disheartened teachers are more likely to give their principals poor ratings for supporting them as teachers, and they express concerns about working conditions, bad student behavior, and poorly focused testing. These teachers are twice as likely as other teachers to agree strongly with the view that teaching is "so demanding, it's a wonder that more people don't burn out." More than half teach in low-income schools, and 61 percent cite lack of support from administrators as a major drawback to teaching. Eighty-seven percent of these teachers are 33 or older.

Contented teachers are more likely to report excellent working conditions, be experienced in their profession, work in middle or higher-income schools, and believe their students' test scores have increased a lot because of their teaching. These teachers are more likely to say that their schools are "orderly, safe, and respectful." Also, a majority of these teachers hold a graduate degree. Sixty-three percent strongly agree with the statement, "teaching is exactly what I wanted," which is supported by the fact that 94 percent have been teaching for more than 10 years.

 
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Disheartened to Idealistic

I started out in a low income, unsupportive environment. Though I did pretty well considering I'd never taught before, I could have done better. I took education course work and went to an upper middle class school, however, I'm actually one of the highest performing teachers in my school. I went from disheartened to idealistic but believe my early experience forced me to be a more innovative and creative teacher. I was forced to fend for myself and find things on my own. Though I also teach during the evenings with low income students I am still idealistic. The difference between my idealism and disheartened outlook are: 1. Experience, Knowledge of Teaching, Support 2. Supportive Administration Your first years of teaching are the hardest but we can loose some really good teachers if we don't support them and provide them with the training they need to do well. I'm sure many of my colleagues assumed I would not be a good teacher my first few years. However now I'm outperforming them in the same evening schools....

Posted By: monica2williams, 2009-11-18 8:06 PM

Re: Disheartened?-you betcha

Please read the article more carefully. The study was not done by the U.S. Dept. of Education. It was done by two nonprofit research groups for Education Week!

Posted By: howe.janet, 2009-11-10 2:33 PM

maybe I am an idealist

I always like inner city kids. They think the teacher is God, or at least an extension of the person who can do no wrong, Mama. They don't try to undermine the teacher or throw their parents' weight around like middle class kids do. They don't try to get the teacher fired. They don't think they are superior to the teacher because their daddy makes more money and they drive a better car than the teacher does. You don't usually have to worry about an inner city mama being in the principal's office talking about you. You can get a room mother who will be there when you need her, even if she has to ride the bus with her child and can barely read and write. Sometimes the parents think you are God too, especially if you say positive things about their disabled child and they see progress. I got much more joy teaching inner city children than I ever did with middle class children. Inner city kids actually need their teachers. Sometimes they don't have anyone else to be their advocate, to believe in them, to motivate them. And the right teacher can make the difference between a student choosing early parenthood or selling drugs and going to college and maybe becoming a teacher. Disheartened I have gotten from incompetent, uncaring, abusive (to me, my paraprofessional, her para or the children) or racist coworkers and sneaky principals who only give kudos to their pets no matter how good you are but cannot find a single thing wrong about how you teach. I have burned out on unsupportive administrators, but never on my children. Inner city kids are not really that hard to teach. You just have remember to take them from where they are to where they need to go and remember that their steps have cracks, their halls have potholes and they are coming from the subbasement instead of the second floor like the wealthier kids so it might take longer and require more support. Their environment has made them handicapped compared to their more advantaged peers, but often without making them eligible for special ed, so they cannot get help and get stuck and drown. I have worked with disheartened teachers. They start as idealists, are overwhelmed by the lack of support and mentoring, the incompetence of the administration or sometimes by co-workers who just chew them up. Sometimes their placement is not right. Sometimes they have personal issues or mental health problems, especially OCD or ADHD. I have known some where that was obviously the case. Sometimes, especially if they are young, they need to be parented. If the veterans will be placed in postions to mentor the rookies, some of the disheartenment can be prevented, but it has to be done carefully because some veterans are just hanging on until they can retire, disheartened by bad adminstrations or their personal issues. They need to be helped by the veterans with "the gift". We all know what "the gift" is, but cannot describe it. Those with the gift, must be nurtured, put in leadership and given time to find and feed the rookies who are also meant to be teachers. Then things will get better. It must get better. After all those years of suffering through the destruction of education under No Child Left Behind, an active search needs to occur to flag the good teachers and the potentially good ones; to try to nurture the moderates into quality; to give the marginal special help and training so they can become competent; and to discreetly send the ones who have missed their calling off to Walmart---instead of to the inner city schools where they go now.

Posted By: twinkie1cat, 2009-11-10 12:02 AM

ctdahle's commentary

I certainly hope it was offered, as dcrawford states, as verbal irony - stating exactly the opposite of what he/she really believes.

Posted By: carolyn.stanley, 2009-11-04 12:02 PM

to CTDAHLE . Just beat them more frequently

ust beat them more frequently... How DARE you? You obviously have NO idea of what it is like to be surrounded by ill-mannered, hostile, insulating teenagers all day long, many of whom only wish to disrupt learning. There's nothing lazy here, but there is a need for better support from administrators and built-in opportunities to learn to be a better teacher. Clearly they are overly burdened not given sufficient training opportunities to function well in these challenging environments. We MUST demand that their days INCLUDE time and pay to obtain effective training and support. I don't know any teacher that doesn't have to spend extra time (and money) outside the school on professional development, lesson planning, and re-planning. The length of their work days goes far beyond the hours of actual teaching. When students are ill-prepared, only interested in socializing with their friends, come to high school without actually possessing the ability to read, write, compute and think at 6th grade levels, then it's easy to see how teachers might be viewed as "overpaid babysitters." It is more likely the students need the "whipping" into shape and their families should set a proper example for the kids by valuing education and respect for ALL. You can't be serious??? "Teachers with their unreasonable demands for a lower middle class lifestyle and their insistence on such luxuries as a reliable cars and the wherewithal to feed their families are destroying the school system." If you wrote this as high sarcasm, it can easily be read otherwise. Only this last paragraph hints at other intentions.

Posted By: lynnemb, 2009-11-04 11:23 AM

Thank you glycotsh!!! You are so right!! People who make negative comments need to stay at least one week in an overcrowded classroom. Add to that, low performing students, behavior problems, little support from administration, new demands from the district, lots of accountability, lack of respect, and low salaries, and voila...you will get disheartened teachers.

Posted By: mirkih, 2009-11-03 11:27 PM

pretty sure ctdahle's comments are sarcastic...

That's about it.

Posted By: dcrawford, 2009-11-03 3:10 PM

Teachers are saints

Ok. The truculent post by ctdahle is not fit to print. I am assuming ctdahle is not a teacher. Most teachers who are lazy and incompetent do not last in a profession that demands not only your brains but your heart as well. Students are the future of our country and the future social fabric of our society. Students need teachers who see them as the precious ,unique human beings who matter in every way.I am appalled by ctdahl's degrading comments about teachers. I challenge this person to spend a week in a classroom in any school system and then rethink the scathing remarks that are an insult to every teacher. It is precisely this attitude and lack of respect that makes it very hard for young people to choose teaching as a profession.

Posted By: glycotsh, 2009-11-03 5:50 AM

Cultural paradigm shift of students not new

We all know the problem. Students are rarely held to any real accountability - all the while not being able to write a cogent sentence. We are only getting what we have corporately sewn for years. Now, it's finally biting us in the butt. So...do we need to hold teachers MORE accountable? Absolutely not. Students will rise to the level of the expectation placed upon them. But...if you do something stupid, like inform your students that they won't be failed [actually happened in my previous district...] you'll only exacerbate the problem. Buying little Johnnie or Susie the iPod, Xbox, and cell phone isn't looking so hot anymore, is it?

Posted By: thekingster, 2009-11-02 7:11 PM

DISHEARTENED? YOU BETCHA.

Well, Golll-eeee, Mr. Duncan! You paid someone to confirm what any school employee today could tell you....how could you not be disheartened when every newspaper, radio and tv pundit, and "man on the street" is pointing the finger of death at you, the teacher, the cause of all that is wrong in life as we know it on this planet? How could you not be stressed in classrooms with too many misbehaving students, in fact, with too many students, period. How could you not be uptight about your personal situation..unpaid, over extended and vilified? Would you encourage your son or daughter to become a teacher today? I think not. Teaching is not respected because teachers themselves have no control over their working lives...politicians do. And we all know how well that kind of situation works out. When and if we have the will to really change how we educate our children, and stop blaming the teaching profession for being unable to accomplish mission impossible, take some of the blame on ourselves for allowing politics to run (make that ruin) our schools, and insist that nonsense like bubble in tests do not adequately measure knowledge, we will continue to fail.

Posted By: lindam, 2009-11-02 4:14 PM

 

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