Four years ago, I posted about the importance of saying ?Thank You? to staff members who go above and beyond our normal expectations. It?s now three year?s later. Our economy has tanked. In just six months, my profession has gone from a huge teacher shortage to a teacher surplus due to budget deficits in the state budget that resulted in huge teacher layoffs.
With over 120 school systems in North Carolina announcing at least 100 layoff each and some announcing 700+ layoffs, a minimum of 120,000 teachers face unemployment. One would think that with that number of teachers who now don?t know how to pay their family bills, the ones who still have jobs would be overjoyed about their continued employment. Surprisingly, although thankful for their jobs, they still see their future threatened:
In short, teachers are expected to do more and increase learning. They are to do this with more students, for less pay, fewer materials, in less time, and in rooms needing repairs.
In these poor economic times, administrators, including private sector managers, still need to understand that those still employed still need reassurance that they are valued and that their contributions mean something to the organization. Ways to tell employees, ?Thank You?, are even more important now than four years ago when I wrote the original post. Not doing so could mean plummeting staff morale and less productivity.
What are you doing during this rough economic time to tell your employees that you value them?
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