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December 5, 2018

Shortage of Special Educators Adds to Classroom Pressures

Christina A. Samuels and Alex Harwin
Originally posted by Education Week, December 5, 2018

The number of special education teachers nationally has dropped by more than 17 percent over the past decade, a worrisome trend in a career path that has seen chronic shortages for years.

Read the full article.

Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Funding, Nationwide, Special Education, Teachers

May 17, 2017

The Special Education Teacher Crisis: Who’s Teaching Our Most Vulnerable Students?

Desiree Carver-Thomas
Originally posted by the Learning Policy Institute, May 16, 2017

Forty-eight states and the District of Columbia experienced shortages of special education teachers in the 2016–17 school year. As a result, school districts have filled those vacancies with underprepared teachers. Strategic investments in evidence-based programs can alleviate this perennial shortage.

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Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Nationwide, Special Education, Teachers

September 19, 2016

A Coming Crisis in Teaching? Teacher Supply, Demand, and Shortages in the U.S.

Leib Sutcher, Linda Darling-Hammond, Desiree Carver-Thomas
Originally posted by the Learning Policy Institute, September 15, 2016

“Widespread media reports of local teacher shortages have become a hot topic in education since the summer of 2015. After years of teacher layoffs, districts began hiring again as the economy recovered from the Great Recession. Many were surprised to find they had serious difficulty finding qualified teachers for their positions, especially in fields like mathematics, science, special education, and bilingual education/English language development. A number of states greatly expanded emergency permits to allow hiring of untrained teachers to meet these demands—which is the classic definition of shortage. To date, however, there has not yet been a detailed national analysis of the sources and extent of these shortages, and the prognosis for the future.

This report details the outcomes of such a study, which analyzes evidence of teacher shortages, as well as national and regional trends in teacher supply and demand. Using several federal databases, the authors examine the current context and model projections of future trends under several different assumptions about factors influencing supply and demand, including new entrants, re-entrants, projected hires, and attrition rates. They also investigate policy strategies that might mitigate these effects based on research about effective approaches to recruitment and retention.”

Read the full article.

Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Funding, Nationwide, Special Education, State

March 2, 2016

Critical Shortages in Special Education Teachers. Sound Familiar?

Lynn Holdheide, and Jenny DeMonte
Originally posted by American Institutes for Research, February 17, 2016

“Teacher shortages may be the most acute problem in special education. For years, states and districts have struggled to find qualified people to teach students with disabilities… Though not a new challenge, its impact has intensified as the number of students receiving special education services has increased over the past two decades.

Part of the problem may be the recent decline in enrollment in all teacher preparation programs. And retaining special education teachers is especially challenging. Often, school administrators say, it’s difficult to keep new special education teachers for more than a few years.

What drives them out? And how can we keep them?”

Read the full article.

Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Certification, Licensure, Nationwide, Special Education, State

January 15, 2016

Search for Special Ed Teachers Goes National

Alisha Kirby, Cabinet Report
Originally posted by Cabinet Report, January 14, 2016

“Recruitment efforts for special education positions – often the hardest jobs for schools to fill – have been forced to focus on out-of-state candidates as the shortage of teachers across California continues to loom.”

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Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Nationwide

December 14, 2015

Special Education Teacher Shortage Creates Opportunity for Students

Nika Anschuetz, USA Today
Originally posted by USA Today, December 14, 2015

The nation is in need for trained and qualified special education teachers. “Special ed teachers are so in demand that those pursuing general ed might consider this: The certification makes them more marketable.”

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Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention Tagged With: Certification, Nationwide, Special Education, Teachers, Training

October 15, 2015

To Address Teacher Shortages, Create Conditions for Educators to Thrive

Teaching Ahead Contributor, Education Week: Teacher
Originally posted by Education Week: Teacher, October 13, 2015

“Many observers see teacher shortages as a result of districts and states underpaying and overworking teachers. However, increasing teacher pay is not the entire answer to the problem. Shortages persist even in areas in which teachers are being paid adequately, and increasing pay will not begin to address the ways in which teaching often feels too challenging and, at times, unsustainable—sentiments that cause issues with both retention and recruitment.

What can states and districts do to attract and retain teachers? How can we reimagine the profession as one that is not just sustainable but desirable and engaging?

Dan Pink’s TED Talk, “The Puzzle of Motivation,” argues that humans are motivated by three things: autonomy, mastery, and purpose. As a teacher, I’d like to point out that these qualities are all too often absent from the teaching profession. If states and districts can create schools in which teachers see autonomy, mastery, and purpose clearly in their profession, they will go a long way toward solve teacher-shortage problems…”

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Filed Under: News, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Accreditation, Certification, Licensure, Nationwide

October 14, 2015

Governor Signs Bill to Help Schools Hire More School Nurses

By Reporter Staff, The Reporter: News
Originally posted by The Reporter: News, October 12, 2015

“Last week Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. signed into law legislation by Senator Lois Wolk, D-Davis, to help schools take a lead role in managing chronic childhood diseases and hire more school nurses.

…Senate Bill 276, signed last Thursday, allows school districts, County Offices of Educations, and other Local Education Agency Medi-Cal providers (LEAs) to receive reimbursement for services provided to all Medi-Cal eligible students. LEAs currently cannot bill Medi-Cal for health services provided to special education students if those services are also provided to regular education students.

Under the new law, LEAs can now be reimbursed for providing services including health and mental health evaluations, medical transportation, nursing services, occupational therapy, physical therapy, physician services, mental health and counseling services, school health aide services, speech pathology services, audiology services and targeted case management services.”

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Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Funding, Nationwide, Nursing

September 17, 2015

America’s Teaching Force, by the Numbers

By Laura McKenna, The Atlantic
Originally posted by The Atlantic, September 10, 2015

“Solutions to the teacher-shortage problem must take into account its complexities; across-the-board initiatives to increase the number of education majors are unlikely to address each state’s specific set of issues. Teacher-training programs could do a better job of providing students with concrete information about the employment realities—which subject areas need teachers and which ones don’t. Given that 14 percent of 20-somethings are unemployed, that information is certainly valuable. And greater certification portability would reduce barriers to relocation, while streamlined recertification options could help teachers who struggled to find work or were laid off during the recession return to the profession.”

Read the full story.

Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Accreditation, Bilingual, Certification, Funding, Licensure, Nationwide, Special Education, Speech-Language Pathologists, State, Teachers, Training

August 6, 2015

Districts Facing Teacher Shortages Look for Lifelines

By Ross Brenneman, Education Week
Originally posted by Education Week, August 6, 2015

“The most recent data from the U.S. Department of Education have in fact shown significant drops in teacher-education enrollment in many states, including in large states like Texas, New York, and California. Many experts chalk up such declines, as well as regional teacher shortages, to the Great Recession and ensuing cutbacks in public spending. Others have charged that poor teacher working conditions, such as low salaries and test-driven school cultures, are nudging existing and potential educators toward other professions, especially with the economy improving…

…Drops in education-school enrollments don’t necessarily equal shortages, though. According to data from its state education department, for instance, New York has a major surplus of certified teachers.

In shortage areas, demographic trends and school-enrollment changes tend to combine with other factors to spur greater demand for teachers…”

Read the full story.

Filed Under: News, Recruitment, Retention, Special Education Shortages Tagged With: Accreditation, Certification, Funding, Licensure, Nationwide, Retirement, Special Education, State, Teachers, Training

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