Teacher Retention
Teacher Retention – The Teacher Shortage: A Case of Wrong Diagnosis and Wrong Prescription
Teacher Retention – Richard M. Ingersoll University of Pennsylvania rmi@gse.upenn.edu.
Teacher Retention -The Abstract:
This article investigates the possibility that the organizational characteristics and conditions of schools are driving teacher turnover. The data used in this investigation come from the Schools and Staffing Survey and its supplement, the Teacher Follow-up Survey, conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES, 1996). This analysis indicates that the amount of turnover accounted for by retirement is relatively minor when compared with that associated with other factors such as teachers’job dissatisfaction and teachers’pursuit of other jobs. In fact, school staffing problems are not principally due to teacher shortages; they do not seem to stem from an insufficient supply of qualified teachers but from an excess demand. The data indicate that a revolving door exists, that large numbers of qualified teachers are departing their jobs for reasons other than retirement. Popular education initiatives, such as teacher recruitment programs, will not solve schools’ staffing problems if they do not also address the organizational sources of low teacher retention.
Access the Abstract Here
Todayâs newest teachers face tough job odds, high turnover
Why Do Teachers Quit?And why do they stay?
Other scenarios where the popular educational initiative will not solve the schools problem of effectively, efficiently and consistently empowering ALL students with relevant, sustained success:
Education Crisis or Poverty Crisis?
Education Change Teaching to Learning
Research Available, BUT Not Properly Utilized
Online Teaching vs Online Learning
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Tom McDonald, tsm@centurytel.net; 608-788-5144; Skype: tsmw5752