USA TODAY US Edition

Teachers: Stress is getting worse

Union chief: Politics has coarsened the classroom

- Greg Toppo

A long list of anxieties — around school budget cuts, bullying, coarse political discourse and the shaky status of immigrant students — is taking a toll on teachers, a new survey shows, with more educators now saying their mental health is suffering than just two years earlier.

More than half of the educators point out their mental health is an issue: 58% said their mental health was “not good” for seven or more of the previous 30 days.

A similar survey in 2015 found just 34% of respondent­s felt the same.

The findings are being released Monday by the American Federation of Teachers and the Badass Teachers Associatio­n, a national grass-roots organizati­on focused on social justice.

Randi Weingarten, president of the teachers’ federation, said that over the past few years, teachers have swapped one kind of stress — an intense national focus on standardiz­ed skills tests — for another.

After President Obama signed the Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015, Weingarten said, many observers believed that educator stress would ease. “You would have expected the numbers to go down, not up,” she said.

But stress over the coarseness of our political debate, she said, has become a big dilemma for schools, she said.

“This notion that being coarse and tough and enabling hate is OK is highly, highly, highly disruptive and problemati­c in schools and goes completely against what parents and teachers know is absolutely important for kids, which is a safe and welcoming environmen­t,” Weingarten said in an interview.

The survey of nearly 5,000 educa- tors, most of them responding online, found that the vast majority — 86% — did not feel respected by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who has made expanding private- and charter-school choice a centerpiec­e of her career.

Weingarten said the negative findings on DeVos, a Michigan billionair­e and Republican mega-donor who has championed school choice, are telling.

“People get what she’s doing — and she’s doing the same thing nationally as she tried to do in Michigan ... which is to completely disrupt public schooling, find ways to undermine it, defund it, destabiliz­e it, at the same time actively promoting private alternativ­es, even though the private alternativ­es don’t have a good track record,” she said.

Weingarten also criticized DeVos for not stepping in more forcefully, as past administra­tions have done, to help educators after recent natural and man-made disasters.

“That has never happened with this administra­tion: Not after Charlottes­ville, not after the hurricanes, not after the fires, not after Las Vegas. It has never happened (with DeVos),” Weingarten said. “Instead, she spends the time sitting with (Republican pollster) Frank Luntz trying to figure out how to sell vouchers.”

The Education Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the findings.

 ??  ?? Randi Weingarten, president of American Federation of Teachers, said teachers are stressed by a coarsening of political debate. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES
Randi Weingarten, president of American Federation of Teachers, said teachers are stressed by a coarsening of political debate. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES

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