New Teachers Are Drawn To The Profession By A Strong Desire To Teach

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New teachers are drawn to the profession by a strong desire to teach. They go into teaching aware of the demands of the job and the salary levels they can expect. Once in the profession, new teachers feel a tremendous sense of fulfillment and job satisfaction, much more so than college graduates of the same age working in other jobs. Despite this, teachers leave their chosen profession at higher rates than professionals in many other fields do. By some estimates, 40 to 50 percent of new teachers leave after five years on the job. The numbers speak to the difficulty new teachers face during the first few years of teaching. Research shows that after one year, 11 percent leave; after two years, 21 percent quit; and after five years, 39 percent quit teaching. Teacher attrition rates then remain very low during the mid-career period and rise again as teachers approach retirement age. Researchers have attempted to identify the factors that cause teachers to leave a profession to which they were initially so strongly attracted. Various studies have shown that working conditions, more so than anything else, are the primary source of teacher dissatisfaction and play a large role in the decision to leave the profession. Stressful working conditions, notably large class size, inadequate instructional materials, and endless paperwork-coupled with a lack of support from


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