In this first full episode of Every Voice Matters, Dr. Sherri Rochel sits down with Michelle, an educator from the Anoka-Hennepin School District, at a moment of deep uncertainty for teachers.
At the time of this conversation, educators in the district are working without a finalized contract, continuing under last year’s salary while facing a 22% increase in insurance costs, with a potential teacher strike just days away. Classrooms remain open. Students are being taught. But the strain is real.
Michelle speaks candidly about:
What it’s like to teach amid ongoing contract uncertainty
The emotional and professional toll of feeling unheard
Why teacher exits are rarely impulsive — and often inevitable
Her own exit strategy and the founding of Parents for Good, a 501(c)(4) organization focused on advocacy, accountability, and meaningful reform
What parents, school boards, and communities often don’t see — but need to understand
This conversation isn’t about blame.
It’s about listening.
Every Voice Matters exists to create space for honest dialogue among the people most impacted by education policy — teachers, students, parents, administrators, and school leaders — because lasting change doesn’t happen without understanding what’s happening inside our schools.
🎧 New episodes drop every Friday
📣 Interested in sharing your story?
Email “Talk to Me” to Sherri.Rochel@outlook.com
or visit educationthatmatters.net/reform
If education matters to you — this conversation does too.
Point of Clarification:
During this episode, a reference is made to potential district budget cuts. Upon review, the correct figure discussed in negotiations is approximately $22 million, not $80 million as stated in the conversation.
We are sharing this clarification in the spirit of accuracy and transparency. The broader concerns discussed in the episode — educator uncertainty, rising costs, and the emotional toll of working without a finalized contract — remain unchanged.
Thank you to Michelle for flagging this, and to our listeners for engaging thoughtfully with these conversations.
— Dr. Sherri