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Georgia Teacher Shortages, Supply and Demand

Georgia Teacher Shortages, Supply and Demand. Georgia Professional Standards Commission Kelly C. Henson, Executive Secretary August 27, 2008. Teacher Demand. Georgia P-12 Actual and Projected Teacher Staffing 1997-1998 through 2011-2012 School Years.

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Georgia Teacher Shortages, Supply and Demand

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  1. Georgia Teacher Shortages, Supply and Demand Georgia Professional Standards Commission Kelly C. Henson, Executive Secretary August 27, 2008

  2. Teacher Demand

  3. Georgia P-12 Actual and Projected Teacher Staffing1997-1998 through 2011-2012 School Years Teacher staffing projections developed with Gaussian curvilinear regression model using student enrollment and student-teacher ratios © 2008 GPSC

  4. Georgia Fall Student Enrollment by School Level, 1994-1995 through 2007-2008 School Years Based on FTE-1, October 1995 - 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  5. Teacher Shortage

  6. Teacher Shortage, Federally Defined By the Federal definition, shortage is identified as a lack of full certification, or in Georgia terminology Clear Renewable certification. The Federal definition is more stringent than the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) “Not Highly Qualified” or the more commonly used “Out-of-Field” definitions in which a teacher has no certification for the field being taught. Produced for the 2007-2008 school year by GPSC for Federal reporting of teacher shortage from GADOE CPI08-1 and GPSC certification data. © 2008 GPSC

  7. Number & Percent of Georgia Teachers Without Full Certification, Highest Twelve Subject Areas Produced for the 2007-2008 school year by GPSC for Federal reporting of teacher shortage from GADOE CPI08-1 and GPSC certification data. © 2008 GPSC

  8. Sources of New Teachers

  9. Sources of Newly Hired Georgia Teachers, 2006-2007 School Year Based on CPI-2, March 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  10. Contribution of Certificated New Teachers by Georgia Institutions of Higher Education, 2006-2007 School Year Program completers reported by IHE’s for the 2007 school year; program completers certified in a teaching field first time in Georgia between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  11. Number of Newly Hired Georgia Teachers fromMajor Sources Past Three School Years Based on CPI-2, March 2005, 2006, 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  12. Percentage of Newly Hired Georgia Teachers from Major Sources Past Three School Years Based on CPI-2, March 2005, 2006, 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  13. Georgia Traditional Higher Education Fully Certified Teacher Yield, First Three Years After Completion, Six Year Average (2000-2005) Based on CPI-2, March 2000 – 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  14. Yield of Newly Certified Teachers by Public IHEsStudents Completing an Education Program in the 2006-2007 School Year Program completers reported by IHE’s for the 2006-2007 school year; completers certified in a teaching field first time between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. Employment shown on GADOE CPI08-1. © 2008 GPSC

  15. Yield of Newly Certified Teachers by Private IHEsStudents Completing Education Program in the 2006-2007 Academic Year Program completers reported by IHE’s for the 2006-2007 school year; completers certified in a teaching field first time between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. Employment shown on GADOE CPI08-1. © 2008 GPSC

  16. Public & Private Georgia Higher Education Yield:Core Area Certificates, 2006-2007 School Year Program completers reported by IHE’s for the 2006-2007 school year; program completers certified in a teaching field first time in Georgia between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  17. Public & Private Georgia Higher Education Yield:Elementary and Middle School Certificates, 2006-2007 School Year Program completers asserted by IHE’s for the 2006-2007 school year; program completers certified in a teaching field first time in Georgia between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  18. Public & Private Georgia Higher Education Yield: Special Education Certificates, 2006-2007 School Year Program completers asserted by IHE’s for the 2006-2007 school year; program completers certified in a teaching field first time in Georgia between July 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  19. Teacher Attrition

  20. Annual Percent Attrition of Teachers from the Georgia Public School Workforce, 1997-1998 through 2006-2007 School Years Based on CPI-2, March 1998 – 2008 © 2008 GPSC

  21. Two-Year Average Annual Teacher Attrition Ratesby Subject Areas Average of two years attrition using CPI-2, March 2005 – 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  22. Two-Year Average Annual Teacher Attrition Counts by Subject Areas Average of two years attrition using CPI-2, March 2005 – 2007. © 2008 GPSC

  23. Teacher Hiring Demand from Student Enrollment & Policy Change, Teacher Attrition & Promotion,1997-1998 through 2007-2008 Academic Years Based on CPI-2, March 1997 – 2008 © 2008 GPSC

  24. Comparison of Teacher Ages, 1997-1998 and 2006-2007 School Years Based on CPI-2, March 1998 and 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  25. Comparison of Traditional and Actual Retention of Teachers in the Georgia Public School System Based on CPI-2, March 1997 through 2007 © 2008 GPSC

  26. Summary

  27. Number of New Teachers Needed by the 2012 School Year By 2012, 28,749 new teachers will be needed that year to meet growth and replacement demands Based on projected student enrollment growth and a stable 9.14% teacher attrition rate © 2008 GPSC

  28. Mathematics and ScienceTask ForceRecommendations

  29. Introduction • Georgia is the third fastest growing state in the nation • Four years of mathematics and science are now a requirement for graduation • A more rigorous and integrated secondary curriculum has been implemented • Current production of mathematics teachers falls short of both current and future needs • The requirement for four years of sciences will increase demand for specific certifications • Only three physics teachers were produced last year • Georgia students must have available high-level science and mathematics courses in order to compete nationally and internationally

  30. Diane Bradford, Deputy Superintendent, Office of Education Support & Improvement, Georgia Department of Education Renee Byrd-Lewis, Director, Community Relations, Scientific Atlanta Cindi Chance, Dean, College of Education, Georgia Southern University Ann Cramer, Director of North America IBM Corporate Citizenship Steve Dolinger, President, Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education Adrian Epps, Associate Dean, College of Science & Mathematics, Kennesaw State University Herb Garrett, Executive Director, Georgia School Superintendents Association Stephanie Gordy, Executive Director, Griffin Regional Education Service Agency Kelly Henson, Executive Secretary, Georgia Professional Standards Commission Phil Horton, Professor, Covenant College Sheila Jones, Senior Executive Director of P-16 Programs, Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia Jan Kettlewell, Vice Chancellor, Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia Connie Kopcsak, Master Teacher, Mathematics, Whitfield County Schools Teresa MacCartney, Division Director, Educational Development Division, Office of Planning & Budget Kathleen Mathers, Director of External Relations, Governor’s Office of Student Achievement Bill McCargo, Vice President of Community Relations, Scientific Atlanta Paul Ohme, Director, Georgia Institute of Technology Center for Education Integrating Science, Mathematics & Computing (CEISMC) Trish Paterson, Executive Director, Teacher Quality Initiatives, Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia José Perez, Member, Georgia State Board of Education Mark Pevey, Senior Executive Director, P-16 Data and Operations, Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia Stephen Pruitt, Director of Academic Standards, Georgia Department of Education Bettye Raye, Superintendent, Social Circle City Schools Jennifer Rippner Buck, Executive Director, Governor’s Office of Student Achievement Holly Robinson, Commissioner, Bright from the Start, Georgia Department of Early Care & Learning Bobby Stephens, Consultant, Metro Regional Educational Service Agency Pam Walker, Master Teacher, Science, Douglas County Schools. Task Force Members

  31. Task Force Recommendations • Attract New Mathematics & Science Teachers With Differentiated Pay • Increase Elementary Teacher Mathematics & Science Endorsements • Create an Efficient Alternative Middle & High School Teacher Preparation Route • Create Adjunct Faculty Certification for High Need Subjects • Redirect Teacher Scholarship Loan Funds • Increase Science Teacher Education Programs • Improve Teacher Retention

  32. 1. Attract New Mathematics and Science Teachers With Differentiated Pay • Pay new fully-certified mathematics and science teachers at Step 4 of the Georgia Teacher Salary Scale • Raise current fully-certified mathematics and science teachers at Steps E, 1, 2 or 3 to Step 4 of the Teacher Salary Scale • Require mathematics and science teachers to earn Master Teacher status to retain pay increase

  33. 2. Increase Elementary TeacherMathematics and ScienceEndorsements • Increase opportunities for elementary teachers to earn the endorsements • Provide differentiated pay for elementary teachers with the endorsements

  34. 3. Create an Efficient Alternative Middle &High School Teacher Preparation Route • Subjects Mathematics, Science, English/Language Arts, Foreign Language, Social Studies, History, Geography, Economics, Political Science, Behavioral Science • Initial Requirements • Bachelor’s Degree or Higher (2.5 GPA) • GACE Basic Skills Assessment • GACE Content Assessment • Initial Placement • Employment • Three Year Non-Renewable Credential • Clear Renewable Certificate Requirements • Coaching (One year minimum) • Georgia Special Requirements • GACE Professional Pedagogy Assessment

  35. 4. Create Adjunct Faculty Certificationfor High Need Subjects • Enable mathematics and science experts to teach part-time • One-year renewable license • Mentoring for teaching skills

  36. 5. Redirect Teacher ScholarshipLoan Funds • For college students who intend to become mathematics or science teachers • Redirect $1 million each year for the Promise Teacher Scholarship Loan Program • Redirect $2 million each year for the HOPE Teacher Scholarship Loan Program

  37. 6. Increase Science TeacherEducation Programs • Simplify program approval process • Increase flexibility for institutions to design preparation programs • Streamline current program approval and review procedures

  38. 7. Improve Teacher Retention • Design and implement statewide intensive new teacher induction program

  39. Task Force Recommendations • Attract New Mathematics & Science Teachers With Differentiated Pay • Increase Elementary Teacher Mathematics & Science Endorsements • Create an Efficient Alternative Middle & High School Teacher Preparation Route • Create Adjunct Faculty Certification for High Need Subjects • Redirect Teacher Scholarship Loan Funds • Increase Science Teacher Education Programs • Improve Teacher Retention

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