Submitted by New-Vegetable-1274 t3_11hpl6l in WorcesterMA
jg429 t1_jaw1tyy wrote
For me, no, but my commute is super short (less than 5 miles), so the use of utilities at home during the day, esp in the winter and summer made it more expensive for me! I also bring my lunch to work so there is no extra food cost, which I see some folks saying in other comments. Still loved every second of being at home, though, lol
New-Vegetable-1274 OP t1_jaw4yj4 wrote
That's too bad, I think that as work from home becomes more common, employers should be compensating this. It's like they're leasing part of your living space. I just wonder how one goes about framing that conversation with one's employer.
jg429 t1_jaw9b9z wrote
I’m in education so that’s not in the cards for me lol
New-Vegetable-1274 OP t1_jawgrhk wrote
Hi, I have friends who are educators who have left the profession for various reasons. Mostly it was over policy issues. They have all found employment doing other things but all agonized over the decision and are dealing with heartbreak. The consensus with them was they hated working from home during the pandemic. Care to add?
jg429 t1_jawhk45 wrote
I'm in higher ed, so if your friends were in k12, their experience may have been a lot more difficult than mine. I LOVED being at home for myself, but my position was pretty much 100% student facing, and my students really struggled with that modality. The job itself was a lot harder, but remained incredibly challenging even when we came back in person, as our students seem to be facing a lot more barriers after losing so much during remote learning.
I considered leaving higher ed altogether, but recently moved into a new position (QCC to WSU) and I think that change was enough to keep me happy and in the field. My new role is not 100% student facing, which took some of the emotional labor out of the job and that helped a lot! The challenges students face are the same, but I am in a different role and have different responsibilities to try to problem solve. I was at QCC for almost 11 years, so I think I just needed a change overall, too. There's a lot more nuance to it with my specific roles, but I won't get into all of that.
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