Meet the 29-year-old teacher with four degrees who wants to join the Great Resignation because she’s tired of working ‘way above’ her paycheck

It felt like a calling: Nina's parents are both teachers in her home country of France; her brother is teaching back home, too. Her aunts, uncles, even her husband's father is a teacher. "It's insane," she tells Fortune.

There was familial pressure to become a teacher, to say the least, but Nina, 29, says she is passionate about teaching and loves the kids she works so hard to educate. She taught for two years in France and has been an English language arts teacher in an Arizona high school since the pandemic started. But she's not sure she can do it much longer. Like many workers in the waning days of the pandemic—especially teachers—she is seeking a career change. But she's not entirely sure where to begin.

"I just don't want to be a teacher," Nina, a pseudonym Fortune is using to protect her privacy, recently wrote in the career guidance subreddit. "But I've been in education for so long that I don't feel like I am qualified enough to do anything remotely interesting even though I have the fire and willingness to work hard."

The pandemic, which brought about two years of debating how—and what—to teach kids, fueled a teacher shortage that has put more pressure on staff, intensifying burnout and leading more teachers to search for an exit ramp. The effect is similar to what employees in corporate America face amid layoffs and the Great Resignation, in which millions of workers have vacated positions amid continued pandemic fatigue.

A National Education Association poll from earlier this year found that 80% of the union's members say job openings have led to more work and obligations, with more than half of members planning to leave education sooner than planned. Nina counts herself among them, hoping to follow in the footsteps of the 300,000 teachers and public-school staff who have left the profession since the pandemic.

Her reasons are plenty: a lack of trust and support, stress and burnout, contending with historic learning loss, and depleted staffing.

"I thought I would be a high school teacher for a while and maybe be a high school teacher on a reservation, but no," Nina says. "I don’t think it would be good for me to be a high school teacher my whole life... Essentially, every time I’m frustrated with my job, I go on Indeed."

The pandemic has made teaching unbearable

Nina moved to the American southwest fueled by a desire to work with the Native American population there, particularly the Navajo nation. She had goals of teaching native students. What she found was a school system ravaged by the pandemic.