‘It’s the Only Way.’ These Teachers Are Working Summer Jobs to Make Ends Meet
Will Dunn's summer break technically started May 18, but he works every day. He wakes up and drives to a space he's rented in an office building in Lawrence, Kansas, starting a seven-hour shift at around 5 a.m. as a transportation consultant, advising on long-distance chemical hauling, before clocking out at noon to go spend time with his kids.
It's all a far cry from Dunn's normal routine — for most of the year, he's a high school math teacher.