Teacher Exodus: One in Seven Will Not Return Next Fall, New Data Reveals
As the school year winds down, alarming new data reveals that one in seven teachers will not return to their classrooms in the fall, either moving to another school or leaving the profession entirely. This exodus comes despite educators' deep passion for teaching, signaling a crisis driven by deteriorating working conditions.
“Teachers love their jobs—they’re not leaving because they don’t want to teach,” said Dr. Emily Hart, a researcher at the National Center for Education Statistics. “They’re leaving because the system is failing them.”
Background
In Wisconsin, teacher attrition has hit a 25-year high. Surveys point to a range of grievances: poor leadership, safety concerns—including students bringing guns to school—and stagnant wages amid rising costs. The state’s Department of Public Instruction reports that nearly 1,000 teachers exited the workforce this past year alone.

“I love my students, but I don’t feel safe,” said Mark Jensen, a veteran teacher in Milwaukee. “When I have to lock my classroom door every day because of threats, it’s hard to focus on lesson plans.”
Meanwhile, shrinking student populations and ballooning budget deficits are forcing districts like Portland Public Schools to slash staff. The Oregon district faces a $177 million shortfall, leading to hundreds of layoffs and program cuts. Early-career teachers are particularly vulnerable, many questioning whether to stay in a field that feels increasingly unstable.

What This Means
If the trend continues, classrooms will face severe shortages, especially in high-poverty and rural areas. Larger class sizes, fewer specialized programs, and overworked remaining staff could undermine student achievement.
“This isn’t just a teacher problem; it’s a public education crisis,” said Dr. Hart. “Without systemic change—better pay, improved safety, and genuine administrative support—we risk losing an entire generation of educators.”
EdSurge is now soliciting firsthand accounts from teachers who have left or plan to leave. Have you quit teaching or are you considering it? Share your story to help shape our ongoing investigation. We may contact you for an interview.
Related Articles
- China Imposes Strict Fossil Fuel Controls as El Niño Risk Looms; South Battles Record Floods
- Space News Q&A: Starship Updates, Blue Moon Mission, and the Golden Dome Defense Initiative
- Thinking Smarter: 8 Key Insights on Test-Time Compute and Chain-of-Thought
- Fast16: The Secret US-Made Malware That Silently Sabotaged Iranian Systems
- Ireland Set to Sign Artemis Accords at NASA Headquarters: Expanding Global Lunar Cooperation
- Redefining Fat Metabolism: A Protein's Dual Role in Obesity and Health
- From Stalled Talks to Action: How the Colombia Summit Charts a New Path Away from Fossil Fuels
- Massive Cambrian Fossil Bonanza Unveils Dawn of Complex Life in Unprecedented Detail