Teaching Profession The State of Teaching, 2024 Edition

Teachers Say the Public Views Them Negatively

Seven out of 10 teachers believe the public holds a negative view of their profession, according to EdWeek’s 2024 State of Teaching report.
By Alex Harwin — October 10, 2024 2 min read
Image of a desk with a scale of a frown face to happy face floating above it.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Education Week’s State of Teaching survey, part of our annual project, reveals that most teachers believe they are viewed negatively by the American public.

Feeling undervalued has the potential to affect teachers’ performance, job satisfaction, and ultimately, the quality of education children receive.

As one middle school teacher from North Dakota put it: “Teachers are overworked, underpaid, and disrespected. We deal with our most valuable part of our society, which is children. We are treated as if that does not matter.”

How would you describe the public’s view of teachers?

How would you describe the American public's current view of teachers? 68% of teachers perceive a negative public view. 23% sense a neutral stance. 9% feel the public views them positively. (EdWeek Research Center survey question, 2023)

    "I feel very defeated and am tired 
of being hated by society. Society does not value my profession and neither do the unions," says an elementary teacher from Pennsylvania.
    "I feel teachers are simply undervalued and even less respected by students and families,” says a Missouri middle school teacher.

    The findings come from a nationally representative survey of 1,498 teachers conducted by the EdWeek Research Center in October 2023.


      How and why some teachers feel undervalued

      This widespread perception coincides with multiple challenges in the education sector:

      • Job satisfaction: Teachers report feeling more negatively than positively about their work.
      • Generational shift: Most surveyed teachers wouldn’t want their own children to enter the profession.
      • Practical hurdles: Increased workloads, insufficient resources, and too much professional development strain educators.
      • Political pressure: Some teachers have altered lessons to avoid controversy and potential complaints.

      sot visual stamp words only words only for inline promo

      New national data on the teaching profession, vivid reporting from classrooms, and resources to help support this essential profession.


      The public perception paradox

      Matthew Kraft, a professor of education and economics at Brown University, suggests the gap between the public’s perception and teachers’ reality partly stems from the public’s limited perspective on teaching.

      “I think that gap in perception comes in some ways from the familiarity everyone has with teachers’ work from a student perspective,” Kraft said. “We’ve all been in classrooms, we see teachers doing their work, but as students, it may appear on its surface like something many people would succeed in doing if they chose to.”

      Kraft also noted a paradox in how people view education:

      “When people rate the quality of public schools broadly, they give schools middling grades. But when they rate their own individual school, they give much higher ratings.”

      This suggests that negative perceptions might be more influenced by broader narratives than by personal experiences with local schools and teachers.


      Investing in teachers for the future

      Kraft argues for a shift in perspective: “As a society, we’ve been too focused on trying to make sure that we can staff every classroom instead of asking, who do we want to be in front of students in every classroom?”

      He advocates for policies and investments that would attract “the most highly qualified and most talented members of our society to invest in becoming teachers for the next generation.”

      Bottom line: Addressing the negative perception of teachers requires more than just talk, says Kraft. Kraft emphasizes the need for structural changes in the profession, including improvements in pay and redefining the work of teaching.

      “We’d like to talk about how we need to value and respect educators, but that doesn’t give us any actionable steps for what to do,” Kraft says.

      Next steps: Bridging this perception gap and improving the status of the teaching profession remains a critical challenge for American society. A follow-up State of Teaching report in early 2025 will explore these issues at the state level.

      Events

      This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
      Sponsor
      Assessment Webinar
      Reflections on Evidence-Based Grading Practices: What We Learned for Next Year
      Get real insights on evidence-based grading from K-12 leaders.
      Content provided by Otus
      This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
      Sponsor
      Artificial Intelligence Webinar
      Promoting Integrity and AI Readiness in High Schools
      Learn how to update school academic integrity guidelines and prepare students for the age of AI.
      Content provided by Turnitin
      This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
      Sponsor
      Reading & Literacy Webinar
      What Kids Are Reading in 2025: Closing Skill Gaps this Year
      Join us to explore insights from new research on K–12 student reading—including the major impact of just 15 minutes of daily reading time.
      Content provided by Renaissance

      EdWeek Top School Jobs

      Teacher Jobs
      Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
      View Jobs
      Principal Jobs
      Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
      View Jobs
      Administrator Jobs
      Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
      View Jobs
      Support Staff Jobs
      Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
      View Jobs

      Read Next

      Teaching Profession Quiz Teachers, How Does Your Morale Compare to Others in Your State? Take This Quiz
      Take the quiz to calculate your Teacher Morale Index score and see how it compares to your state’s average.
      Collaged image of teachers gauging their morale
      Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva
      Teaching Profession Team-Teaching Builds Supports in a 'Very Lonely Profession'
      Collaborative teaching gains traction amid staff shortages and rising student need.
      15 min read
      Teachers utilize a team-teaching model developed by the Next Education Workforce Model, at Stevenson Elementary School in Mesa, Ariz., on Jan 30, 2025.
      Teachers use a team-teaching model at Stevenson Elementary School in Mesa, Ariz., on Jan 30, 2025. In the model, more than one teacher at a time assumes responsibility for a group of students at each grade level, and typically class sizes are larger.
      Adriana Zehbrauskas for Education Week
      Teaching Profession Teaching in 2025: ‘Every Day Is a Crazy Day. It’s Fine.’
      The profession is changing, and it's more challenging than ever. Resilient teachers are adapting. But at what cost?
      Clayton Hubert is an art teacher who wears many hats as an educator, including driving the school bus each morning, as seen here on Jan. 16, 2025, in Lamberton, Minn.
      Clayton Hubert, an art teacher, wears many hats as an educator, including driving the school bus some mornings, as seen here on Jan. 16, 2025, in Lamberton, Minn. Many teachers say the expectations of the role have grown far beyond classroom instruction.
      Kaylee Domzalski/Education Week
      Teaching Profession Data What Teacher Morale Looks Like in Every State
      See how teacher morale compares across the states—and where it's highest and lowest.
      4 min read
      Collaged image of teachers and data
      Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva