Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumPennsylvania teachers are quitting in big numbers. Here's why some Pittsburgh teachers left for good
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette link: https://www.post-gazette.com/news/education/2023/07/09/pennsylvania-teachers-quitting-pittsburgh/stories/202307060139
That tough decision is one that teachers across the country also face. A survey conducted last year by the National Education Association found that 55% of them were considering quitting. In Pennsylvania, the number of teachers leaving classrooms has risen to alarming rates.
An assessment by the Penn State Center for Education Evaluation & Policy Analysis found that 7.7% of Pennsylvania teachers, or a total of 9,587, left their positions between the 2021-22 and 2022-23 school years.
That number has slowly risen over the past two years reaching 5.4% in 2020-21 and 6.2% in 2021-22 and exceeds the 7.5% attrition rate recorded in 2014-15. This makes it the largest number of teachers leaving on record.
- more at link -
It's even more urgent that the Governor and the legislature figure out how to fix the school funding issues - and "public vouchers for private schools" isn't the answer.
appalachiablue
(42,984 posts)keithbvadu2
(40,321 posts)Watch it... it's worth the 9 minutes
debm55
(37,398 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,714 posts)jimfields33
(19,214 posts)One was 55 and retired. Another 48 and just quit. Its a living hell teaching in Pennsylvania as this article also alludes to. Better fix it or the education system will fall apart. I grew up in Pennsylvania and Left in 1987. Its definitely not the state I left. I go back twice a year and three time for class reunion years. I like it but glad I no longer live there.
BlueIn_W_Pa
(842 posts)left in '90 to Ohio to go to OSU, and moved back 4 years ago with my kids.
Can't possibly be more happy, and the state and schools are far better than Ohio...
jimfields33
(19,214 posts)Thats what is most important.