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TEACHER RETENTION. Management, Content Implementation, Evaluation, and Sustainability. Trends in Teacher Attrition. Trends in Teacher Attrition. Trends in Teacher Attrition. Trends in Teacher Attrition. Generation X. Generation Y. Teacher Leavers. Better in current position.
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TEACHER RETENTION Management, Content Implementation, Evaluation, and Sustainability
Trends in Teacher Attrition GenerationX GenerationY
Teacher Leavers Better in current position Better in teaching
In 10 years, we… • Hired 2.25 million new teachers • Lost 2.8 million teachers • Lost 677,000 teachers to retirement • Lost 2.12 million teachers to non-retirement
New Teachers Leave Early & Experienced Teachers Take Other Education Positions Second 10-12 years Teacher Effectiveness After 20-24 years First 7- 10 years Teacher Experience Adapted from data from data by William Sanders
Turnover is Expensive $7.3 Billion A Year High Turnover Schools Struggle to Improve Teaching Quality and Rarely Close the Student Achievement Gap Because They Are Constantly Rebuilding Their Staff(NCTAF.ORG 2007)
Turnover Can Be Reduced • Hire well-prepared teachers, who have strong content knowledge and extensive clinical practice experience. • Provide Induction support for new teachers that includes mentoring and coaching by a collaborative team. • Create continuous professional development and growth opportunities embedded in the day-to-day work of the school. Organize Schools for Success NCTAF.ORG 2007
Teachers Inducted into a Professional Community by Mentors & Coaches are Half as Likely to Leave – Less Than 2 % Have it. Source: Figure 3 in Reducing Teacher Turnover: What are the Components of Effective Induction? Thomas M. Smith and Richard M. Ingersoll. April 2003. Working paper draft. Please do not cite, quote, or use without first consulting authors.
Age Distribution of Public School Teachers # of Teachers Age
VETERANS (63 plus)(Silent Generation) • 38 Million Americans • Respect experience • Duty before pleasure • Eager to conform to group roles • Equate age with status and power • See change as disruptive and undesirable
BABY BOOMERS (43-62) • 76 million Americans • Enjoy and value teamwork • Want to get with the program • Are willing to go the extra mile • Have good people skills • Embrace equity and fairness • Like to receive credit and public recognition • Less flexible when it comes to change • Retiring but want to stay engaged
GEN-XERS (26-45) • 39 million Americans • Technical savvy and creativity • Work best with members of their own choosing • Self-reliant, skeptical of authority • Embrace alternative workplace structures • Prefer informal roles and freedom to complete tasks their own way • Willing to challenge higher ups • Core of the work force —but the trough in the teaching chart!
NEXTERS (25 and under)GEN Y or MILLENNIALS • Diversity as a norm • Idealistic • Collaborative • Communication is constant • Open to new challenges • Prefer a flattened hierarchy • Wired – grew up digital • Should be replacement for retiring teachers, but they are leaving at an increasing rate
Teaching 2.0: Teaching is a Team Sport • Staged entry – tiered expertise and certification. • Entry through teaching residencies. • Multiple teaching roles, positions, and levels of expertise during a teaching career. • Staged options for exiting the profession: part-time positions, mentors, coaches, job-sharing, team leaders, tutors, digital media specialists, etc. • A blend of face-to-face and online teaching & learning created and led by teachers who become learning experts. (Bricks and Clicks Schools). When Educators Join Forces They Can Improve Learning Beyond What Any of Them Can Accomplish Alone
In Teaching 2.0 Multigenerational Teams Create Genuine Learning Organizations • Collaboration – will eventually replace solo. teaching in self-contained classrooms. • Modularized and personalized. • Constant communication and assessment to improve teaching and learning. • Digital technology is fully exploited. • A user driven learning economy.
MANAGEMENT • LEADERSHIP • Specific goal leaders • Direct contact for each goal • Explore resources in other sections of the department • Build on capacity already in place