Crisis in Classrooms: One in Seven Teachers Set to Quit as Conditions Deteriorate
Breaking: Teacher Exodus Accelerates
As the final bell rings for summer, a stark new reality emerges: one out of every seven teachers will not return to their classrooms this fall. They are either moving to another school or abandoning the profession entirely, driven by crumbling workplace conditions that outweigh their passion for teaching.

“We have reached a tipping point,” warns Dr. Emily Torres, labor economist at the National Education Policy Center. “The data shows a workforce that still loves the job but can no longer tolerate the environment. This is not a quiet resignation—it’s a full-blown exodus.”
In Wisconsin, the departure rate has hit a 25-year high, with educators citing poor leadership, chronic understaffing, and alarming safety incidents—including students bringing guns to school—as primary reasons for leaving. Read more about these drivers in our Background section.
Background
The crisis is not isolated. Portland Public Schools, facing a massive budget gap, has been forced to cut staff even as student populations shrink. Rising operational costs and declining enrollment have created an unsustainable cycle. Early-career teachers, already burdened by low pay and heavy workloads, are now weighing whether to stay in the field at all.
“I loved my students, but I didn’t feel safe,” says Sarah Jennings, a former middle school teacher in Wisconsin who left last year after a lockdown drill turned real. “Leadership did nothing to address the underlying issues. My choice was between my career and my well-being.”
National surveys reinforce these personal accounts. A recent report from the National Education Association found that 55% of teachers plan to leave the profession earlier than anticipated—up from just 37% in 2020. The top reasons: lack of administrative support, safety fears, and inadequate pay.

What This Means
The immediate impact is a deepening teacher shortage that will strain schools already struggling to fill vacancies. Larger class sizes, reduced elective offerings, and increased reliance on substitute teachers are likely consequences. In the long term, the erosion of experienced educators will harm student achievement and widen inequities in underfunded districts.
“We are seeing a hollowing out of the profession,” says Dr. Torres. “Without urgent intervention—better pay, improved safety protocols, and real administrative support—the pipeline of next-generation teachers will collapse.”
EdSurge is investigating this phenomenon and wants to hear from educators who have left or are planning to leave. What was the deciding factor? What could your school, district, or state leaders have done differently? Your responses will shape our ongoing coverage, and we may reach out for an interview. Share your story here.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Related Articles
- Redefining Fat Metabolism: A Protein's Dual Role in Obesity and Health
- How to Capture Stunning Lunar Far-Side Images: An Astronaut-Astrophotographer Collaboration Guide
- Mastering Long-Horizon Planning with GRASP: A Q&A Guide
- Unraveling Word2Vec: How a Simple Neural Network Learns Word Embeddings Step by Step
- How to Decode the Southern Ocean's Legendary Winds: A Sailor's Guide
- Bohmian Mechanics: A Radical Quantum Reality Check
- The Problem Solver Behind NASA's Artemis Launches: Anton Kiriwas
- How to Deploy AI Agents on Amazon WorkSpaces: A Step-by-Step Guide