“The educational pathway is in decline, and I don’t see anything in the near future that sounds like it’s on a positive upswing.”-Stephanie Olsen, leaving the U.S.
While there’s always plenty of reports about students leaving school without getting a high school diploma, you rarely hear about the fact that thousands of good teachers are leaving the U.S., for jobs overseas.
According to one teacher employment agency, TeachAway, the number of U.S. teachers applying with them for foreign jobs is up 50% from last year. TeachAway has also placed 3,000 U.S. teachers with overseas jobs. And that just one teacher employment agency, there are dozens!
In the past all you needed to get a foreign teaching job was an TESOL certificate, but now teachers with just the TESOL are competing against teachers with Masters degrees.
Marie Constant has a Masters degree and could not get a job state side, now she’s moving overseas after getting a job through TeachAway: “Here’s an opportunity for me to not only go to another country where they will pay for me to go, they will pay for me to have living quarters…and I get to practice what I know.”
Stephanie Olsen has two Masters degrees, she’s leaving her teaching job in Arizona for a teaching job in the Middle East: “This is such an opportunity to take, where your employer is helping you get over there. They’re providing everything that is necessary for you to make a life there. It was just too good of an opportunity to pass up.”
And how are U.S. school districts dealing with the brain drain of good U.S. teachers? They’re either pushing for online schools, or hiring foreign teachers! PBS POV will air a documentary about the Baltimore, Maryland, schools bringing in teachers from the Philippines.