Recruiting, Preparing, and Retaining Teachers for Urban Schools

Recruiting, Preparing, and Retaining Teachers for Urban Schools
Author: Kenneth R. Howey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2006
Genre: Employee retention
ISBN:

How can the "revolving door" at the nation's high-poverty schools be slowed down? How can diversity be taught in teacher preparation that relates to teaching and learning? How can teachers learn to use the diverse urban classroom as a rich asset? By focusing on reconceptualizing general education studies, addressing key urban understanding and abilities throughout the professional program, implementing multiyear induction programs, and integrating outstanding veteran urban teachers, the authors of this volume take an affirming look at preparing teachers for the complexities of urban teaching. They candidly present lessons from a variety of urban settings for attracting, preparing, and supporting teachers who are both caring and qualified. The book contains the following chapters: (1) The Urban Context and Urban Schools (Kenneth R. Howey); (2) Sociocultural Strategies for Recruiting Teachers Into Urban Classrooms (Elizabeth C. Rightmyer, Ann E. Larson); (3) Urban Immersion: A Prototypical Early Clinical Immersion Experience (Andrea J. Stairs); (4) Recruiting, Preparing, and Retaining Urban Teachers: One Person's View From Many Angles (Michael J. Froning; (5) UWM's Collaborative Teacher Education Program for Urban Communities and the Pursuit of Program Coherence (Marleen D. Pugach, Hope Longwell-Grice, Alison Ford); (6) Professional Development of Reading Teachers: Biography and Context (William E. Blanton, Alison Shook, Anne Hocutt, Adriana Medina, Jeanne Schumm; (7) Growing Teacher Leadership in the Urban Context: The Power of Partnerships (Elizabeth MacDonald, Dennis Shirley); (8) Voices From the City: The Patrick Henrey High School Residency Program (Sharon Cormany Ornelas, Particia Thornton); and (9) Retaining Highly Effective Teachers in an Urban School District: Challenges and Opportunities (Vivian Gunn Morris, Allan D. Sterbinsky).

6 Types of Teachers

6 Types of Teachers
Author: Todd Whitaker
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2013-09-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1317925793

This book helps you sharpen your ability to hire better teachers for your school, improve the ones who are already there, and keep your best and brightest on board.

Recruiting Strategies for Public Schools

Recruiting Strategies for Public Schools
Author: Herbert Frederick Pandiscio
Publisher: R & L Education
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Delivers a strong message to school superintendents and governing board members that recruiting efforts must be fair to all candidates.

Recruitment, Retention and the Minority Teacher Shortage. CPRE Research Report # RR-69

Recruitment, Retention and the Minority Teacher Shortage. CPRE Research Report # RR-69
Author: Richard M. Ingersoll
Publisher:
Total Pages: 61
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

This study examines and compares the recruitment and retention of minority and White elementary and secondary teachers and attempts to empirically ground the debate over minority teacher shortages. The data we analyze are from the National Center for Education Statistics' nationally representative Schools and Staffing Survey and its longitudinal supplement, the Teacher Follow-up Survey. Our data analyses show that a gap continues to persist between the percentage of minority students and the percentage of minority teachers in the U.S. school system. But this gap is not due to a failure to recruit new minority teachers. Over the past two decades, the number of minority teachers has almost doubled, outpacing growth in both the number of White teachers and the number of minority students. Minority teachers are also overwhelmingly employed in public schools serving high-poverty, high-minority and urban communities. Hence, the data suggest that widespread efforts over the past several decades to recruit more minority teachers and employ them in hard-to-staff and disadvantaged schools have been very successful. This increase in the proportion of teachers who are minority is remarkable because the data also show that over the past two decades, turnover rates among minority teachers have been significantly higher than among White teachers. Moreover, though schools' demographic characteristics appear to be highly important to minority teachers' initial employment decisions, this does not appear to be the case for their later decisions to stay or depart. Neither a school's poverty-level student enrollment, a school's minority student enrollment, a school's proportion of minority teachers, nor whether the school was in an urban or suburban community was consistently or significantly related to the likelihood that minority teachers would stay or depart, after controlling for other background factors. In contrast, organizational conditions in schools were strongly related to minority teacher departures. Indeed, once organizational conditions are held constant, there was no significant difference in the rates of minority and White teacher turnover. The schools in which minority teachers have disproportionately been employed have had, on average, less positive organizational conditions than the schools where White teachers are more likely to work, resulting in disproportionate losses of minority teachers. The organizational conditions most strongly related to minority teacher turnover were the level of collective faculty decision-making influence and the degree of individual classroom autonomy held by teachers; these factors were more significant than were salary, professional development or classroom resources. Schools allowing more autonomy for teachers in regard to classroom issues and schools with higher levels of faculty input into school-wide decisions had far lower levels of turnover. (Contains 6 figures, 10 tables and 7 endnotes.) [Funding for this paper was provided by the Center for Educational Research in the Interest of Underserved Students, University of California, Santa Cruz and the Sally Hewlett and the Flora Family Foundation.].

Migrant Teachers

Migrant Teachers
Author: Lora Bartlett
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2014-01-06
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0674727525

Migrant Teachers investigates an overlooked trend in U.S. schools today: the growing reliance on teachers trained overseas. This timely study maps the shifting landscape of American education, as federal mandates require K-12 schools to employ qualified teachers or risk funding cuts. Lora Bartlett asserts that a narrowly technocratic view of teachers as subject specialists has spurred some public school districts to look abroad. When these districts use overseas-trained teachers as transient, migrant labor, the teachers have little opportunity to connect well with their students, thereby reducing the effectiveness of their teaching. Approximately 90,000 teachers from the Philippines, India, and other countries came to the United States between 2002 and 2008. These educators were primarily recruited by inner-city school districts that have traditionally struggled to attract teachers. From the point of view of school administrators, these are excellent employees. They are well educated, experienced, and able to teach in areas like math, science, and special education where teachers are in short supply. Despite the additional recruitment of qualified teachers, American schools are failing to reap the possible benefits of the global labor market. Bartlett shows how the framing of these recruited teachers as stopgap, low-status workers cultivates a high-turnover, low-investment workforce that undermines the conditions needed for good teaching and learning. Bartlett calls on schools to provide better support to both overseas-trained teachers and their American counterparts. Migrant Teachers asks us to consider carefully how we define teachers' work, distribute the teacher workforce, and organize schools for effective teaching and learning.

Hiring Practices in High Performing Schools

Hiring Practices in High Performing Schools
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

Abstract Hiring Practices in High Performing Schools Highly effective teachers have a greater impact on student achievement than any other factor controlled by school systems. Unfortunately, schools don't always hire the most effective teachers. Results of research surrounding teacher-hiring practices indicate that practices are inconsistent, very little training is required or given before educational leaders are asked to hire new staff, and the decisions about who to hire are often influenced by factors other than student achievement. Absent from the literature is research on characteristics of hiring practices in high performing schools and the role cognitive decision-making plays within that process. This case study adds to the literature by investigating two major questions: (1) In what ways does the design and implementation of the hiring process support or impede the ability of a school principal to hire desirable teacher candidates? (2) What are the characteristics of decision-making tendencies used during the process of hiring teachers? This study utilized research of behavioral decision-making, specifically cognitive biases and heuristics to conceptualize how decisions within hiring processes are made by educational leaders. Seven elementary schools in Wisconsin were identified through the Wisconsin State Report Card. This study used information and documentation gathered from hiring protocols, semi-structured interviews, and the results from an online survey. The multi-case study design attempted to examine whether differences in hiring practices could explain differences in student learning outcomes. While the study did not find a relationship between hiring practices and student learning in high performing, versus average performing schools, there were patterns across the seven schools in hiring processes and practices that suggest a need for additional professional learning and development in the area of hiring teachers. Principals in the seven schools relied on cognitive biases and heuristics that in some cases strengthen, and in other cases undermine the hiring of high quality teachers.

Hiring for Diversity

Hiring for Diversity
Author: Donna Alonzo Vaughan
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

The focus of this study was on hiring practices in Texas school districts of over 500 students containing ethnic minority students as the majority of the student population. It examined differences between the practices of districts with ethnic minority teachers as the majority of the teaching population as compared to districts with ethnic minority teachers as the minority of the teaching population. The study compares the role and title of human resource administrators, method of attracting a candidate pool, and if a formal statement of intent to hire a diverse staff existed. Surveys were mailed to human resource administrators in 227 Texas school districts. The following practices have been observed at a statistically significant level: There is an administrator responsible for teacher recruitment employed 100% for human resources and that individual does not have the title 0́Superintendent.0́+ There is a formal statement of intent to have a diverse or reflective staff. Posting job vacancies through local newspapers and major statewide universities were the methods used by a statistically significantly higher proportion of districts with a diversified staff. Posting at the Texas Education Agency Service was used by a statistically significant higher proportion of districts where the teacher population is less diverse and reflective of the student population. In districts where the teacher population is more diverse and reflective of the student population, there is a significantly lower proportion of districts that utilize statewide universities in recruiting and obtaining a pool of candidates to hire. The difference between the proportions of districts that utilized all other types of specific postings, including technological methods listed in this observational study, was not statistically significant. The traditional practices of hiring teachers for our school systems must change to reflect the pluralistic society of today. The findings of this research support that leadership, as expressed by a clear mission statement with intent to hire a reflective staff and the assignment of an administrator whose sole responsibility is for human resources, can and will overcome barriers toward hiring a reflective staff.