IEA study: Nearly 3 of 5 teachers weigh leaving classroom
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[October 22, 2024]
By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Former Republican state Sen. Darren Bailey is
sounding the alarm about a new Illinois Education Association survey
that finds almost three out of every five state educators concede they
have envisioned themselves walking away from the classroom.
In a poll conducted earlier this summer from a pool of 500 active IEA
members, researchers found 59% of teachers, professors in higher
education and support staff all admit that they have harbored such
thoughts.
“This data should set off massive alarm bells for parents, students and
community members. We are in a dire situation with teacher and support
staff shortages,” IEA President Al Llorens said. “We know districts
cannot attract and retain enough talented adults to work with our
students.”
Bailey said the study results are “a shame.”
“What’s going on is government has far too much involvement in our
schools,” Bailey told The Center Square. “We're not allowing our
children to think on their own anymore. They're losing interest.
Therefore the teachers are missing the value and the love of teaching.”
Bailey argued in some ways its advocacy groups like IEA that have become
a big part of the problem.
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“They're the ones that continually go to government and make demands
and tell them what they need, especially at the hand of J.B.
Pritzker,” he said. “Here in Illinois, we give the teachers’ unions
whatever they want. We're failing our children. We're teaching them
to memorize just so they can take a state test and the state can get
more money to build gymnasiums and soccer fields and football fields
instead of classrooms.”
With more than 4,000 teaching positions across the state being
unfilled as recently as the 2023-24 school year, Bailey, who
challenged Pritzker as the GOP nominee in 2022, said it’s clear what
needs to happen.
“It's time for government to get out of education and let the local
school boards decide how they want their children educated,” he
said. “That’s the only process that will work and that's how this
was set up in the very beginning.”
While still in Springfield, Bailey filed legislation designed to
address the state’s growing teacher shortage by eliminating the
requirement that teachers pass the controversial edTPA test, which
he’s long argued falls short of being the best indicator of future
success as a teacher.
As part of the IEA survey, researchers found the top three reasons
more educators were thinking of walking away are not earning enough
money, lack of respect for the profession, and increasing workload.
“Just think about that for a second. Would you want to pour your
heart and soul into a job where you’re not appreciated and
constantly being asked to do more for less money? Probably not,”
Llorens said. |