Tuesday, March 25, 2025

AV #284 - Listening to a Colorado teacher. Our schools in 2024-25.

 

Reflections of one veteran teacher - responsibility and respect 


  What are teachers seeing in their classrooms and in their school buildings this year? How do they feel about a range of issues?

  We hear them protest against inadequate funding, as in last week’s rally at the Colorado Capitol. We hear of other concerns in various surveys. I include such accounts here.

   They are useful. But brief quotes, or data and percentages, these cannot capture what is in the hearts of our teachers, as they experience school life in 2024-25.

   This past year I have been fortunate to hear a high school teacher open up about her deepest worries. She has taught for over three decades. I also taught for many years; not everything she tells me is new. But I found her words powerful.  

   When we sit down, she talks about student behavior and how expectations and standards have fallen. Immediately after COVID, she suggests, understandable. But not anymore.

Hearing teachers’ concerns - the media & surveys

From the March 20 rally at the Colorado Capitol, where many teachers spoke to the media of concerns related to a lack funding and their work. Addendum A – three teachers.

From surveys:

·        Results from the Colorado Education Association’s latest annual report (State of Education – 2024-25) can open our eyes to what teachers see this year. The January report tells us: “More than 40% of those who completed the survey said they feel significantly or somewhat less safe than they did last year.”[i]

·         Education Week reported on a national survey, conducted in December. It found that “nearly half of teachers, school leaders, and district leaders this school year—48 percent—said … that students’ behavior was a lot worse this fall when compared to their pre-pandemic behavior…” (Jan. 9, 2025). Such “misbehavior … is hurting staff morale.”[ii]

·        A more recent Education Week survey, “What Teacher Morale Looks Like in Every State,” includes state-by-state results. I summarize key findings from the report in Teacher Morale in Colorado - at Another View's website. It notes several large gaps between U.S average results and what Colorado teachers have to say.[iii]

   “There are a few students who disrupt the learning for others.” In her view, without consequences. “I think the district is limiting what schools can do.”

  “We’ve had kids who threaten staff and still go to their class.”

   She sees timidity. Fear of parents, or fear of “looking too harsh.”

   Her own school could do more to set clear expectations.

   “I think they are afraid to hold kids accountable.”

   “Kids mouth off to teachers.” A teacher speaks to students roaming the halls during class time, and apparently “they think it’s OK not to answer” – and walk on. 

   “I think there are a fair number of teachers here who do not feel safe in this building … because of the way kids can talk to us.” [See the CEA survey.]

   It affects how willing the faculty is to take a stand. “Too many teachers are afraid to speak up.”

   “The building has a right to create an environment in which all kids can be educated. But no one's willing to do it.” In her experience, “when you start enforcing the rules, it’s bad for a while,” but in time, she says, it becomes the norm.

   She believes schools should be more transparent about what is happening. Such information, she believes, would motivate parents to expect something better. “Parents should be appalled at the learning environment other kids are creating for their kids.”

  “Why,” she asks, “is the bar so low? Is it because we want to graduate kids?”

Academics

   Academic expectations have suffered, too. “So many students who don’t even try to do homework … If we keep accepting no work from kids and they can get away with that, if that’s what kids see,” she says, they won’t feel motivated to do the work.

   This is compounded, she believes, by “terrible grade inflation.”

   “How can students have a B and they haven’t been to class half the time?”

   “We are doing a tremendous disservice to the kids by lowering the bar. We’re not helping them learn to be good adults, good members of society, educated members of society.”

   I try to change the topic. But when I ask about the current push to educate-for-the-workplace, she returns to her theme.

   “To me the two are the same.” Even if we see our role as preparing students for a job, she says, students need to learn to be responsible. To show up and do the work. Whatever their future after high school, she says, “our students need to show respect for other people. I call it being a human being.”

   Leading to a simple question she believes good schools will ask of their students: “How are you learning to be a human being?”

   “You have to be a decent human being. You don’t get to infringe on other people’s education. Be respectful, watch your mouth, treat people decently.”

   She tells me this in a calm voice. She has seen a lot. At present, she is clearly disheartened.

   I ask how young teachers respond to this lack of respect from a number of their students. How does it make new teachers feel about the job, given this environment? Do they question staying in the profession?

   Her response is immediate. “Not just young teachers – mid-career teachers too.”

   Leading to this devastating remark. A warning – if current trends continue.

   “I couldn’t in good conscience recommend anyone become a teacher anymore.”

**

   These words from one teacher in 2024-25, alone, might not move you. What if she speaks for many educators?

   Recently two of my favorite former middle school students (from 20 years ago), who have been teaching most of the past 10 years, tell me they are planning to step away from public education.

   I have followed their careers with great interest. I admire their skills and passion. I am sure their students have been well served. 

   Their districts, I can assure you, are lucky to have such remarkable young adults working in their schools.

   So I ache to hear of their frustration and disappointment. The experiences they share with me reveal why many teachers today are desperate for more support, why many feel overwhelmed. They don't have the historical perspective of that 30-year-veteran, above, but there is some overlap in their outlook. That “old pro,” if you will, can no longer make the case that a 20-year-old should go into teaching. My two former students seem disillusioned enough to agree with her. 

   Tough to swallow, at age 33, when you had dreams, fresh out of college, that teaching might be the career for you. When you have given your very best for a decade. When you know the kids need good teachers in their lives. But it has become too much.  

   I hope we are listening. I hope we are searching for answers.    

                                                                                          **

 

Addendum A – three teachers speak up – March 20 rally at Colorado Capitol

Jason Malmberg - teaches music at four elementary schools in Adams County School District 14.

“‘You can only do so much, and even with that we still have teachers living in their aunts’ basements who have been to college in America. We should all be appalled. That doesn’t match up to the American Dream.’”

“Malmberg said the state’s inadequate funding of schools has trickled down to directly impact his students. At one elementary school, he teaches music out of an office space. Another school converted a stage to a classroom for his music classes. And many of the district’s school buildings are in desperate need of significant repairs and replacements.”

“If the state better prioritized educating funding, he added, teachers could have smaller classes, schools could hire more trained professionals to meet the escalating needs and school facilities could have all the amenities they need to accommodate students’ learning.”  (The Colorado Sun)

**

Stories of crowded classrooms, little support”

Jill Massa, a special educator in Pueblo.

Massa “oversees 10 high-needs students including children with cerebral palsy, severe seizures and children with severe autism.”

“She said they really need one-on-one support and she has two classroom aides. ‘We just don't have enough help.’” 

“She said she lacks an adequate curriculum for her students and must develop a lot of it herself. She wants her students and teachers to get the support they deserve.

“‘You can only get so much blood out of a person, and it's not working. We have to fight it. We need to fund education.’”

Lisa Dameron, an instructional coach at Carbondale Middle School.

“There is a lot on teachers' minds. We are all very stressed for a multitude of reasons. We want to focus on the kids and educating them and having to do the same job with fewer dollars makes everything harder.”  (Colorado Public Radio)

 


Endnotes



[i] Colorado Education Association, “State of Education - 2024-25” (Jan. 2025), https://coloradoea.org/state-of-education.

[ii] Is Student Behavior Getting Any Better? What a New Survey Says,” by Caitlynn Peetz, Education Week (Jan. 8, 2025), https://www.edweek.org/leadership/is-student-behavior-getting-any-better-what-a-new-survey-says/2025/01#.

[iii] “Teacher Morale in Colorado – 2024-25” (from Education Week), https://anotherviewphj.blogspot.com/2025/03/teacher-morale-in-colorado-2024-25-from.html

“What Teacher Morale Looks Like in Every State,” Education Week (March 2025), https://www.edweek.org/state-of-teaching/teaching-learning/what-teacher-morale-looks-like-in-every-state/2025/03

 

Monday, March 24, 2025

Teacher Morale in Colorado - 2024-25 (from Education Week)

 

Education Week - “What Teacher Morale Looks Like in Every State”

from Education Week’s Teacher Morale Index for 2024-25 

The Index is “a year-over-year, multifaceted gauge of how teachers feel about the profession.”

“… the national Teacher Morale Index is +18 on a scale of -100 to +100, suggesting that teachers, overall, view their jobs more positively than negatively. That core is a significant climb for last year’s -13.”

“While the overall measure of +18 presents an improving picture nationally, morale levels look quite different depending on the state teachers are working in. That’s why the EdWeek Research Center’s survey of teachers last fall set out to capture representative samples of educators in all 50 states. We wanted to show the variability in the state-specific findings in order for district and school leaders, along with policymakers, to better understand the mood of their teacher workforces closer to home.”

https://www.edweek.org/state-of-teaching/teaching-learning/what-teacher-morale-looks-like-in-every-state/2025/03

 

Teacher Morale in Colorado –

Another View’s summary - from the report’s breakdown: “What Teacher Morale Looks Like in Every State.” Below, how Colorado teachers responded.

I note the larger GAPS between the Colorado response and the U.S. average.

Teacher Morale in Colorado in 2024-25, with comparisons to four neighboring states.

 

2024-25

Utah

+25

New Mexico

+15

Wyoming

+6

Kansas

-3

COLORADO

-5

                                

                                     School climate and culture

How—if at all—would the following rules/policies impact your morale at work?

  

Capping the number of students per class to reduce the class size

 Colorado

U.S. average

Would increase my morale

94%

89%

No impact

6%

11%


On the next three questions below, instructions included “Select all that apply.”

“What scheduling shifts would improve your morale at work a lot?” 

 

Colorado

U.S. average

GAP

More planning time during the workday

76%

56%

20

Fewer meetings

63%

44%

19

Less time required for lunch duty, hall duty, and other non-teaching supervisory tasks

59%

34%

25

Replacing a 5-day school week with 4 longer days

44%

50%

 

More non-student contact days for planning/PD

32%

29%

 

Ability to work from home at least some of the time

29%

30%

 

 

“My morale at work would improve a lot if my district/school hired more:” 

 

Colorado

U.S. average

GAP

Teachers [full-time/permanent]

69%

49%

20

Paraprofessionals

64%

42%

22

Special educators

57%

39%

18

Mental health professionals/school counselors

50%

39%

11

Substitute teachers

38%

35%

 

Co-teachers who could work with me

36%

27%

 

 

“What changes to school leadership would improve your morale at work a lot?”  

 

Colorado

U.S. average

GAP

More advocacy for teachers’ needs

68%

55%

13

More/better support for student discipline-related issues

64%

48%

16

Better communication

54%

45%

10

More acknowledgement of hard work/successes

52%

44%

 

Less micro-management

52%

41%

11

A commitment to providing each teacher what they need and want than on treating everyone the same

50%

30%

20

More advocacy for resources at our school

37%

28%

 

 

“Other than a pay raise, what type of change would be most likely to improve your morale at work?” 

 

Colorado

U.S. average

More staff to support teachers, students

21%

22%

Shifts in school leadership approaches and styles

21%

14%

Changes to scheduling/calendars

10%

6%

Changes to employee benefits

10%

4%

Changes to curriculum/pedagogy

8%

5%

Changes to prof. development, mentoring /or coaching

8%

4%