Studies have found that the character of the workplace influences whether educators stay or leave and impact student learning.
Key factors determining educator working conditions include, but are not limited to,
- teacher and school leadership,
- educator voice,
- community support and parent engagement,
- time for teaching,
- class size and caseload,
- student conduct,
- physical and cultural environment,
- professional learning and collaboration, and
- assessment cultures.
These factors were all well-known prior to the pandemic.
Yet, the pandemic and subsequent labor shortages in our schools have caused educators to work even more hours than ever before, whether teaching, driving buses, preparing meals, counseling students, or supporting students in so many other ways.
The stresses of the pandemic—including changing models of teaching to virtual or hybrid, personal safety concerns, loss of loved ones, student and educator mental health challenges, and so on—have pushed many to the breaking point, with K–12 workers reporting the highest level of burnout of any sector and teachers more than twice as likely to report frequent job-related stress than other working adults.
Educators are exhausted, demoralized, stressed, and overwhelmed. As a result, any serious solution to the educator shortage must address educator working conditions.
Solutions on how to improve working conditions for educators include the following:
For citations and more details, read NEA's full report on educator shortage solutions.