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Mindset & Motivation   |   Feb 17, 2014

There is still hope for you in this profession: a message for disheartened teachers

By Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

There is still hope for you in this profession: a message for disheartened teachers

By Angela Watson

I know that so many of you are frustrated, tired, and worn down. You’re tired of testing your students to death, of not having support from your administration or parents, and trying to understand curriculum and teacher evaluation systems that seem designed to trap and fail you.

This breaks my heart. My friends, I’m begging you today: please don’t judge the profession or your effectiveness as an educator based on a lousy teaching placement.

Teacher morale is not in the gutter in every school.

There are supportive administrators out there and parents who will have your back.

There are schools where you are allowed to teach and not just test, where kids are allowed to be kids and not just data-processing robots.

There are places out there where you CAN love teaching again.

I’m not saying those schools are easy to find, or that you can saunter in and demand a job. I know this is complicated stuff and I can’t fix a tough job market. I’m simply encouraging you not to give up on a career you once loved because you have a particularly challenging group of students or a misguided, micromanaging superintendent.

Don’t blame yourself or question your abilities as a teacher.

Don’t blame the entire teaching profession and lose faith that this can be one of the most fun and rewarding jobs on the planet.

Sometimes the problem is not YOU. And it’s not teaching, in general. It’s your particular placement.

I know firsthand the power of changing teaching positions. After just three years of teaching PreK, I was certain I was burned out and not meant to be a teacher anymore. Then I moved up four grade levels, and my passion was completely renewed. There was nothing wrong with the teaching placement itself, it just wasn’t right for me anymore. I needed a change.

Later, I relocated and ended up at a school where the working conditions were so depressing, I came home and cried every night. This time, the problem was the school, so I transferred to a nearby district as soon as I could find an opening, and once again, I loved my job. Eventually another principal was assigned to the school and made my life miserable. I suffered for two years before finding another position—and all that enthusiasm for my work came rushing back once again.

The message here is not that you can run from all the problems in education, or that it’s simple to find the right job for you. What I want you to understand is this:

The right school and grade level make all the difference in the world. You can love your work, and you can make a difference. Don’t give up your dream just because you don’t love your placement, or people in positions of power have lost sight of what matters.

Once a month, I’m going to feature an interview with a teacher who still loves his or her job and is excited to go to school each morning. Believe it or not, I’ve got dozens of teachers who are willing to share their stories. Some of them are in their ideal teaching placements, and others have simply learned to adjust and make the best of what they’ve got.

These educators are going to tell us how they keep from getting overwhelmed by their students’ needs and prevent the demands of the school system from weighing on them, their advice for balancing work and their families/personal life, and practices or mindset shifts they recommend that other teachers try in order to increase their sense of motivation, purpose, and enthusiasm.

If you are a teacher who’s found a teaching position you love, please, share your story with us and spread the message that teaching can still be a great job. Tell us in the comments, or email me and I’ll send you the interview questions and feature your story in a future post.

And if you are a discouraged teacher, please, hang in there. Hold onto your vision and keep trying to make it work. There is hope for you in this profession.

Angela Watson

Founder and Writer

Angela created the first version of this site in 2003, when she was a classroom teacher herself. With 11 years of teaching experience and more than a decade of experience as an instructional coach, Angela oversees and contributes regularly to...
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Discussion


  1. This is so very true! And sometimes after years in the same subject, school, or grade you find you need to change just to get out of the same old routine. This is the first year in a long time that I’ve felt I’m where I’m supposed to be and I actually look forward to going to work in the mornings. My school is a very urban school and my kids have a lot of needs but I love it. The teachers who feel the most discouraged by the top-down mandates and creativity squashing curriculums are often the ones who need to stick around because they see what can be.

  2. My first year was typical text book worst year of teaching. I had thoroughly enjoyed my student teaching and undergraduate years in college and felt I had found my true calling. My first year made me heavily question my career choice. With an unsupportive principal who openly criticized and belittled by calling me kiddo alongside my students, I still cried when I was pink slipped and told I didn’t have a chance of being called back the next school year. Over the summer I contemplated my options, but still interviewed and found a position in another district the very next fall. It was a commute and again I was warned that many teachers who don’t live out in the community don’t last long. I have been teaching in this district for the past 9 years and have grown to love the community, my students, and the commute! I’m glad I didn’t give up, others didn’t know what was best for me, I did. My career as an educator is as important as my own family, and I cherish the wonderful life lessons it has given to me as I hope to give my own children and students everyday.

  3. This message comes at just the right time. I am so discouraged. I feel unappreciated and undervalued and I feel absolutely powerless to change things. I spend 6.5 weeks pulled from my SLP duties to administer state tests each year. My evaluations are based on my effectiveness, but it seems I hardly have time to make any impact at all with my kids. All of the little and big things pile up until I can’t take it and burst into tears in the evening. This happened today and I am so thankful for your message tonight. Trying to remain positive and carry on is so difficult to do sometimes. Thank you for your words of encouragement.

  4. I’m from Sao Paulo, Brazil and I’ve been teaching junior high for 4 years. Most days I love my job, but it is always good to read posts like this and feel inspired again. Thank you for sharing!

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