After working as a teacher for three years in the same school district that educated me, I resigned in February 2021. I’d been weeping, constantly, for months: when the alarm went off, while listening to my students describe their fears and anxieties during class, in the car on the way home from work, during meetings with my colleagues. I couldn’t do the job—which I loved more than any job I’ve ever had—anymore.
COVID-19 has affected every aspect of life and work. Among the hardest hit industries were healthcare and education. Being a teacher is a stressful job on a good day, but during the pandemic, teachers have had to battle lax hygiene protocols, exacerbated workloads, sudden switches to remote learning, and malfunctioning technology associated with virtual teaching, all while continuing to prepare lesson plans, grade homework, and take care of their own loved ones. The ensuing chaos, according to the National Education Association, is causing a 55% of educators to consider leaving the profession in 2022, up from 37% in August 2021. Worse still, Black and Hispanic educators, who are already underrepresented in the field, are even more likely to consider leaving (at 62% and 59% respectively).
If you’re a teacher who is struggling as I did and considering making a change, I hope this will help you. The following is a list of 14 jobs teachers can transition to if they’re leaving the classroom—whether you want to stay in education or not—followed by a few tips to help you pivot and land a new gig.
And maybe someday, when teachers get more respect for the Herculean work we do for this country, we can all rejoin the classroom with the resources, unions, and salaries we deserve.