I am leaving teaching.
There, I said it.
It feels like I’ve said something vile, unspeakable, something that shouldn’t be uttered out loud.
I have been tormented with the notion that I need to leave for at least six months, making me sick worrying about resigning but sicker thinking about staying.
Did you pick up on the use of the word 'need'? Let me show you why this decision is no longer mine to make but first I’ll explain why it’s taken so long to make this decision.
Watch: The things teachers never say. Post continues after video.
I am acutely aware that my resignation affects a lot of people and this is why I’ve stalled for so long. I worry about telling my students, particularly my Year 12s because there is never a time in the year where you are not letting down a Year 12 group. Year 12 goes from Term 4 to Term 3 in NSW, which means as the old Year 12s graduate, the Year 11s take their place. So irrespective of which term you leave, you’re upsetting someone. This has played on my mind for so long.
I feel like I am betraying my students and abandoning my colleagues in a teacher shortage crisis but there are certain attitudes and expectations towards teachers that are unfair, unreasonable, and most definitely unsustainable. I have reached my limit. These expectations are often thrust upon us by students, parents, members of the executive, the school board and/or the Department of Education.