Indiana’s got a problem: Too many teachers don’t want to work there anymore

88m3

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Indiana’s got a problem: Too many teachers don’t want to work there anymore




By Valerie Strauss August 13 at 4:00 AM
[Teacher: Why ‘I just can’t work in public education anymore’]

And, the Greensburg Daily News reported in a story in early July, that fewer students are enrolling in teacher preparation programs at Indiana universities. It said:

At Indiana State University, enrollment in the elementary education program has remained steady, but other areas, especially sciences, are seeing fewer students, said Judy Sheese, assistant dean for teacher education at the university’s Bayh College of Education.

She said she gets weekly — if not daily — calls from principals asking whether the university has any seniors who will soon graduate with a degree in math or English.

“We don’t have any,” she said.

The Muncie Star-Press reported in December 2014 that enrollment in the program to train kindergarten and elementary school teachers fell by 45 percent over the previous decade.

What’s going on? Pretty much the same thing as in Arizona, Kansas and other states where teachers are fleeing: a combination of under-resourced schools, the loss of job protections, unfair teacher evaluation methods, an increase in the amount of mandated standardized testing and the loss of professional autonomy.

[Why teachers can’t hotfoot it out of Kansas fast enough]

The teacher shortage in Indiana is becoming such a problem that some state lawmakers want a legislative committee to study the issue and come up with solutions. According to the Indianapolis Star, the Republican chairmen of the House and Senate education committees have asked General Assembly leaders to approve having the legislative education study committee review what is causing the drop and how the state could respond.

For one thing, they can look in the mirror. The Republican leadership of the state — including Gov. Mike Pence — showed their respect for teachers by working very hard this year to strip power from Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz, a veteran educator who won election to the post in 2012 (by defeating Tony Bennett, the incumbent who was a protege of former Florida governor Jeb Bush). Oh, by the way, she is a Democrat. David Long, the Republican president of the Indiana Senate, said while explaining why the legislature would want to remove Ritz as chairman of the state Board of Education: “In all fairness, Superintendent Ritz was a librarian, okay?”

No, not okay. Ritz worked as an educator and media specialist who won teacher of the year awards at two different schools.

For 2015-17, the state Legislature gave less funding to urban schools and more to charter schools and private schools that accept students with vouchers. A new school funding formula, according to Chalkbeat Indiana, has led to this situation:

Of the 25 school districts with the highest family income, all of them will get more per-student state aid over the next two years.

But what about the 25 with the lowest family income? Just 12 of them get more money in 2016 and 2017 across the board — in overall state aid and per-student aid. The rest get less in one or both areas.

This all helps explain why fewer teachers are finding Indiana a desirable place to work.


Indiana’s got a problem: Too many teachers don’t want to work there anymore


Yay politicians
 

hashmander

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that's why i don't have time for people, especially college graduates bytching about the job market. get a useful degree. principals calling desperately to find out if a senior with an english major is close to graduating and i still have to read bullshyt about the college graduate barista. fukk off people.
 
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wheywhey

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Or increase the pay.....

Between state budget cuts and obligations to fund pensions, most districts don't have the money to increase pay.

If politicians and business leaders would stop criticizing the teaching profession and stop evaluating teachers based on student test scores, more people would teach. There are enough elementary teachers, what schools need are STEM teachers, people who aren't desperate enough to put up with educational bureaucracy.
 

FaTaL

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Indiana’s got a problem: Too many teachers don’t want to work there anymore




By Valerie Strauss August 13 at 4:00 AM
[Teacher: Why ‘I just can’t work in public education anymore’]

And, the Greensburg Daily News reported in a story in early July, that fewer students are enrolling in teacher preparation programs at Indiana universities. It said:

At Indiana State University, enrollment in the elementary education program has remained steady, but other areas, especially sciences, are seeing fewer students, said Judy Sheese, assistant dean for teacher education at the university’s Bayh College of Education.

She said she gets weekly — if not daily — calls from principals asking whether the university has any seniors who will soon graduate with a degree in math or English.

“We don’t have any,” she said.

The Muncie Star-Press reported in December 2014 that enrollment in the program to train kindergarten and elementary school teachers fell by 45 percent over the previous decade.

What’s going on? Pretty much the same thing as in Arizona, Kansas and other states where teachers are fleeing: a combination of under-resourced schools, the loss of job protections, unfair teacher evaluation methods, an increase in the amount of mandated standardized testing and the loss of professional autonomy.

[Why teachers can’t hotfoot it out of Kansas fast enough]

The teacher shortage in Indiana is becoming such a problem that some state lawmakers want a legislative committee to study the issue and come up with solutions. According to the Indianapolis Star, the Republican chairmen of the House and Senate education committees have asked General Assembly leaders to approve having the legislative education study committee review what is causing the drop and how the state could respond.

For one thing, they can look in the mirror. The Republican leadership of the state — including Gov. Mike Pence — showed their respect for teachers by working very hard this year to strip power from Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz, a veteran educator who won election to the post in 2012 (by defeating Tony Bennett, the incumbent who was a protege of former Florida governor Jeb Bush). Oh, by the way, she is a Democrat. David Long, the Republican president of the Indiana Senate, said while explaining why the legislature would want to remove Ritz as chairman of the state Board of Education: “In all fairness, Superintendent Ritz was a librarian, okay?”

No, not okay. Ritz worked as an educator and media specialist who won teacher of the year awards at two different schools.

For 2015-17, the state Legislature gave less funding to urban schools and more to charter schools and private schools that accept students with vouchers. A new school funding formula, according to Chalkbeat Indiana, has led to this situation:

Of the 25 school districts with the highest family income, all of them will get more per-student state aid over the next two years.

But what about the 25 with the lowest family income? Just 12 of them get more money in 2016 and 2017 across the board — in overall state aid and per-student aid. The rest get less in one or both areas.

This all helps explain why fewer teachers are finding Indiana a desirable place to work.


Indiana’s got a problem: Too many teachers don’t want to work there anymore


Yay politicians
the teacher shortage seems to be a problem all over the place

ca, hawaii

etc
 
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