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The Great Demand—How Do We Supply our Students with Quality Teachers?

By: Marissa Alonzo on January 10th, 2017

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The Great Demand—How Do We Supply our Students with Quality Teachers?

Personalized Learning  |  Classrooms  |  Innovative Leadership

Nearly every state in the United States is reporting a teacher shortage. Various states have taken action to address this shortfall by changing teacher requirements. Utah has loosened teacher qualifications to include candidates with no formal teacher training; Hawaii just called for 1,600 teachers to live and work on the island; and last year, Clark County in Las Vegas, the fifth largest district in the nation, launched a "Call for Heroes" as they scrambled to fill positions. These specific states may have been highlighted in various news articles, but the overarching question that audiences across the United States asked was: why is there such a pressing shortage in the first place?

There are many factors contributing to the shortage of teachers throughout the United States, but four predominate in the research literature:

  • High Turnover Rates: Teachers have continued to have a high turnover rate, due in part to the Great Recession of 2008, when many states throughout the United States cut public spending and caused teacher layoffs. Eight years later, many states still have not fully recovered and continue to have difficulties recruiting teachers back.  
  • Teacher Retirement: Retirement has peaked in the last five years for many teachers, with many exiting the workforce for good.
  • Declining Pay Rates: According to a new study from the Economic Policy Institute, a teacher's weekly average wages decreased "$30 per week from 1996 to 2015, from $1,122 to $1,092 in 2015 while average wages for college graduates in other fields rose from $1,292 to $1,416 over the same period."
  • Teaching as a Profession: Partly related to the pay discrepancies seen in recent studies, college students are increasingly opting for careers other than teaching. Women in particular have many new avenues to choose from, especially with the push for diversity in STEM fields, and the appeal of teaching has declined. As education is a field dominated by women, this has intensified the decline in teacher recruitment.

 

What does this mean for the quality of educators in the United States, and are there plans of action to increase the teaching workforce?

In order to first address concerns about a shortage, many states and districts have opted to create alternatives to obtaining teaching certification in order to more easily accept incoming teachers. Many have loosened hiring standards by issuing emergency teaching certificates and allowing teachers to teach in classrooms where they might not otherwise be qualified to teach. In reciprocity, a state may choose to allow educators coming from another state to teach in the classroom as long as they meet minimum requirements.

Some states have recommended financial incentives, such as loan forgiveness and increased pay, as a means of increasing the appeal of becoming an educator. Others have suggested better mentoring and professional development pathways for incoming teachers.

Although many of these suggestions may help to fill the classrooms, the issue of obtaining quality educators is still being debated in many education circles.

What's next?

Ultimately many different strategies exist to enhance and retain teachers at a national level. The Department of Education recommends continued professional development for new and tenured teachers alike. The hope for this movement is that educators can learn effective techniques to incorporate a more personalized and blended approach in their classroom while extending knowledge on the ever-changing technology landscape and keeping up with educational trends that are pertinent for their role.

Even further investigation into the issue has many education advocates across the world looking at the United States from a global perspective. In a global poll from 2015, the United States was shown to have the largest gap between high- and low-performing students in all the industrialized nations, with 16 countries outranking us in science and 23 in math. In the latest comparison trend, many policy groups have begun to compare individual states in the United States with other countries in an attempt to pressure state governments to improve education standards. Recent research has found that some states, including Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, North and South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin, are equal in science to the other 45 developed countries. As more data emerges, it will be obligation of national, state, and local education governance entities to implement continuous plans of improvement to education, both for the students and for the teachers who educate them in the classroom.

 

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About the author: Marissa Alonzo is the Regional Marketing Specialist at Accelerate Learning. In conjunction with Rice University, Accelerate Learning has created the most widely used PreK-12 science curriculum in Texas, STEMscopes—and it's now available nationally. STEMscopes offers a variety of curriculum and professional development solutions that support early learning, NGSS, and customized state-aligned curriculum. For more information on STEMscopes products and Accelerate Learning please visit www.acceleratelearning.com.

 

About Marissa Alonzo

Marissa Alonzo is the Regional Marketing Specialist at Accelerate Learning, Inc. In conjunction with Rice University, Accelerate Learning has created the most widely used PreK-12 science curriculum in Texas, STEMscopes — and it's now available nationally. STEMscopes offers a variety of curriculum and professional development solutions that support early learning, NGSS, and customized state-aligned curriculum. For more information on STEMscopes products and Accelerate Learning please visit www.acceleratelearning.com.

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