Teachers at Barooga Public School have walked out in a protest over staffing shortages.
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It comes just a week after teachers at Finley High School also walked off the job.
Barooga is now the 71st school in NSW to stage a walkout this year.
"Barooga currently has a vacancy and the principal is having to take a class because of it," country organiser for the NSW Teachers Federation Brett Bertalli said.
"Barooga isn't even an incentive transfer school, so they don't have the financial incentives that would attract teachers to rural parts of NSW.
"With the staffing crisis that is biting in the metropolitan areas, we are very concerned that over the next ten years, they are not going to be able to find staff at all in Barooga."
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Secretary of the Finley Teachers Association, of which Barooga is a member, Matt Whitty said changes needed to be made to incentives in order to source staff.
"One thing we're looking at is a change in the incentives to try and get teachers to the Finley area, so that includes Tocumwal, Barooga, Berrigan and Jerilderie," he said.
"Staff are just exhausted, there's teacher burnout everywhere, the workload is unbelievable."
NSW member for Murray Helen Dalton said NSW schools were facing a "chronic shortage of teachers".
"Our children are suffering as a result, missing numerous classes," she said.
"If we want to get teachers to rural areas, we need to pay them enough.
"Finley teachers actually get paid less than those in nearby areas like Hay."