This article was
written originally for MultiBriefs Education.
School principals from coast to coast
are reporting that this year may have been one of the most tumultuous for
hiring and staffing. The pandemic disrupted normal staffing patterns for a
variety of reasons, including filling the voids left by teachers who needed to
take leaves of absences and those who needed to work remotely (which means
someone needed to be in the classroom with in person students). Principals had
to get creative on how they would find new teachers, and many answered the call
and gave a teaching career a try for the first time. In my school for example,
I hired no less than fifteen teaching positions over the course of the year for
my sixty teacher school. This is more than double the hiring rate that is
typical for my school community. Many of my new hires were recent college
graduates who didn’t necessarily study to be a teacher but pivoted when their
original industry was having hiring delays as a result of the pandemic.
As school leaders prepare for the
upcoming school year, the first in a post-pandemic world, questions about how
to attract and retain new teachers to the profession have surfaced. According
to this recent article, three school districts in North
Carolina have already started to think-out-of-the-box on ways to attract new
teachers to their schools. In Catawba County Schools, the strategy has been to
raise teacher pay in certain critical shortage positions in an effort to be
more competitive with other districts. They raised their pay scale anywhere
from 2% to 8% depending on the positions. In the Hickory Public Schools, a
signing bonus was added for math and science teachers. The district’s Financial
Officer Adam Steele noted that the strategy seems to be working in terms of
attracting the teachers, but not enough data exists to say whether or not those
teachers are being retained yet. In the Newton-Conover City Schools, teacher
turnover has been decreased by bringing in teachers from an international
teaching program. The district contracts with a company to first recruit the
teachers and then pay their benefits so that the cost to the district is equal
to a typical hire. The district’s superintendent Aron Gabriel stated, “We’re
finding having international teachers come in and work has been amazing.
There’s a little more built-in loyalty.”
Last fall, in the height of the
global pandemic, the National Education Association (NEA) wrote about how the teacher
shortage can be overcome in schools across the country. NEA’s position is that teacher
shortages ultimately harm students, teachers, and the system itself. It is up
to policymakers to find ways to overcome the barriers of underfunding, poverty,
and inequality. NEA’s strategies for improvement include the following:
- Raise
teacher pay to attract new teachers and retain experienced ones;
- Elevate
teacher voice, and nurture stronger learning communities where teachers’
influence and sense of belonging is increased;
- Lower
barriers that make it harder for teachers to do their jobs;
- Design
professional supports that strengthen teachers’ sense of purpose, career
development, and effectiveness.
Teacher pay is, perhaps, the most
obvious barrier to be overcome. According to NEA, “Teachers often have master’s
degrees, even doctorate degrees, and yet they earn far less than other college
graduates. This problem, commonly called the ‘teacher pay penalty,’ has grown
far worse over the past three decades. NEA quoted a study by the Economic Policy Institute which found that teachers
earn about twenty percent less, on average, than their non-teacher college
graduates.
How our systems approach the issue of
teacher hiring and retention over the next few years as they “bounce back” from
the challenges from the pandemic will be important. The profession is expected
to see a high number of retirements, and many more may be looking to pivot to a
different career if teaching can’t be a sustainable option. Our schools need
quality teachers in front of our students. We have to make this a priority in
our policy work.
It was an Interesting blog! Thanks for the Information.
ReplyDeleteSchool In Pune
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