Teaching Profession

Why This Teacher Chose Online Teaching and Plans to Stick With It

By Sarah D. Sparks — March 05, 2026 4 min read
First graders in Kelly Elementary School in Chelsea, Mass. meet with virtual tutors from Ignite Reading in 2025.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

With schools in East Falmouth, Mass., closed for a few days thanks to a late February blizzard, Natalia Berrios tutored students in reading across six different states and taught English as a second language classes online, all while she kept an eye on her own kids—ages 7, 10, and 13—making the most of the nearly three feet of snowfall on their day off.

“I don’t have a lot of family help,” Berrios said, “If I did not work from home and have these little breaks throughout the day where I can feed them, check in with them, and make sure they’re keeping busy, then ... I don’t know what we’d do with them on a snow day.”

Berrios is one of a growing cadre of teachers moving to online instruction and away from an education workplace they say is far less family-friendly than popular perception. They mirror broader trends in the growing popularity of telework.

See Also

artistic collage of teacher under pressure
Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva
The State of Teaching
New national data on the teaching profession, vivid reporting from classrooms, and resources to help support this essential profession.
February 23, 2026

K-12 teachers face significantly less flexibility and more work intrusions into their personal lives, such as availability outside of contract hours, than do other similarly educated professionals, according to data from the research think tank RAND Corp.

Berrios started out as a classroom teacher a decade ago, but for the past six years—since her youngest child was an infant—working from home has been “pretty nonnegotiable.”

She works roughly 25 hours a week for Ignite Reading, a multistate virtual tutoring program, and another 10-15 hours a week teaching English as a second language independently, making roughly $55,000 a year. That’s lower than the average annual teacher salary in her state of more than $90,000 but a bit above the average starting salary of $53,000. And in a region where teachers can spend an hour to 90 minutes a day commuting, the time and money saved by working from home can make virtual teaching tempting, particularly for teachers with young children of their own.

Young mothers who are teachers, in particular, report significantly more stress and burnout risk than their peers without children. They spend, on average, 40 hours a week on chores and caregiving on top of teaching and other education work, RAND found—the equivalent of a second job, and 10 hours more on average than teachers who are fathers, RAND found. Schools’ strict daily schedules and broad requirements for teacher availability can limit teachers’ flexibility to manage these family responsibilities.

“Women historically and typically report spending more time on household and caregiving duties than men, but these differences are much larger than expected for teachers,” said Elizabeth Steiner, lead author of a 2025 RAND study of teacher work-life balance. “And we did find job flexibility matters for teachers’ well-being and retention.”

Online, the flexibility of “just not having to spend the time, effort, and money to have a job outside of the home and also deal with everything inside of the home that I need to do,” Berrios said. “That’s really the biggest thing right now, with having kids.”

Natalia Berrios.

Building one-on-one connections with students is ‘pretty remarkable’

Berrios typically greets her first student of the day from Massachusetts at 8:15 a.m. and then works with two more students back-to-back from Florida and Georgia before 9 a.m.

After her morning lessons, Berrios monitors other tutoring sessions, helping other teachers with tech support and student data, and sometimes steps in to teach if a colleague is late for a session.

“There could be hundreds of sessions going on at a time, but I might be watching 30 or 40 and only need to jump into maybe three or four,” she said. Berrios also continues to tutor other students throughout the day in different time zones, and sometimes, she picks up evening shifts to help students on the West Coast.

The intensity of the lessons makes up for the challenge of engaging students in an online format, Berrios said. “Reading is hard, and so it can be frustrating, but it’s only 15-minute blocks, so the different activities are very short, and I have little reward systems built in,” she said.

While she doesn’t have much direct contact with her students’ main classroom teachers, Berrios does get a virtual window into many physical classrooms during her virtual tutoring.

“I can see that there’s not a lot of help and that the teachers are struggling for more help in the classrooms,” she said. “And if the teachers are struggling a little more, it can be a little harder for the students as well, because there’s so much more going on in the classroom, it’s a little more difficult to focus. So it becomes obviously a larger issue.”

Due, in part, to those observations, Berrios said she is less inclined to return to in-person instruction once her children grow up, unless she could find local teaching that is as personalized and flexible as the online teaching she is doing now.

“I get to build a one-on-one connection with the kids and ... see the progress from the beginning of the school year to the end, which is pretty remarkable,” Berrios said.

Events

Jobs Regional K-12 Virtual Career Fair: DMV
Find teaching jobs and K-12 education jubs at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.
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
Student Well-Being & Movement Webinar
Building Resilient Students: Leadership Beyond the Classroom
How can schools build resilient, confident students? Join education leaders to explore new strategies for leadership and well-being.
Content provided by IMG Academy
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
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar
Blueprints for the Future: Engineering Classrooms That Prepare Students for Careers
Explore how to build career-ready engineering programs in your high school with hands-on, real-world learning strategies.
Content provided by Project Lead The Way

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 Increases in Teacher Pay Offset by Inflation, Union Analysis Shows
The inflation-adjusted increase was less than 1 percent, the National Education Association says.
2 min read
Image of a teacher's desk with the words "Pay Day" ghosted on the background.
Collage by Laura Baker/Education Week with Canva
Teaching Profession Opinion Portrayals of Educators on Film and TV: The Good, the Bad, The Ugly
From "Lean on Me" to "Abbott Elementary," how realistic is Hollywood’s representation of schools?
14 min read
Conceptual illustration of classroom conversations and fragmented education elements coming together to form a cohesive picture of a book of classroom knowledge.
Sonia Pulido for Education Week
Teaching Profession Download 5 Strategies for Supporting K-12 Teachers: Lessons From California
This resource discusses the main takeaways from a March 2026 live event hosted by Education Week and EdSource.
1 min read
Attendees and panelists partake in breakout sessions during the State of Teaching event in San Francisco in March 2026.
Attendees and panelists partake in breakout sessions during the State of Teaching event in San Francisco in March 2026.
Andrew Reed/EdSource
Teaching Profession Q&A Teach For America's Tutoring Focus Is Now Helping Drive Teacher Recruitment
The education corps is rebounding from pandemic losses, thanks in large part to a burgeoning tutor focus.
4 min read
Teach for America teacher Channler Williams with kindergartners at Templeton Elementary School in Riverdale, MD on April 12, 2016. Teach for America has seen its applicants drop in each of the last three years so they are retooling the way they recruit students. One thing they are doing is taking prospects to see TFA teachers at work. Today, students from Georgetown and George Washington University got a glimpse of life in the classroom and Mrs's Williams class was among those visited.
Teach For America has had success getting undergraduates to tutor, some of whom later go into its teaching corps. The organization is seeking ways how to respond to newer teachers' needs and expectations. TFA teacher Channler Williams works with her kindergartners at Templeton Elementary School in Riverdale, Md. on April 12, 2016.
Linda Davidson/The Washington Post via Getty