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The US needs 307,000 more teachers than it currently has — but few are taking the job...
Business Insider ^ | October 12, 2019 | Allana Akhtar

Posted on 10/15/2019 8:33:28 PM PDT by DoodleBob

FULL TITLE: The US needs 307,000 more teachers than it currently has — but few are taking the job due to low pay

The student population is growing — and not enough teaching jobs are available to keep up.

A new report found that since the Great Recession of 2008, the country lost 60,000 jobs in education. Not only that, but 247,000 more teaching jobs should have been created to keep up with growing student enrollment as the population increases.

This has resulted in a shortfall of 307,000 teaching jobs — meaning there are over 300,000 educators currently needed right now.

The data sheds light on an ongoing national teacher shortage. Back in 2008, teaching jobs increased at the same pace as student enrollment. Since the Great Recession, or after 60,000 jobs were lost, job creation in education never kept pace with the growing student enrollment.

Other data centers have similarly staggering estimates of the teacher shortage crisis. The independent research group Learning Policy Institute estimated a 112,000 teacher shortage in 2018.

The study uses data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics analyzed by the liberal think-tank Economic Policy Institute. Educator jobs include mostly K-12 public school teachers, but also administrators, guidance counselors, and paraeducator.

(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bs; businessstuff; education; employment; teachers
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To: GailA

Yes but we had better teachers and better parents in those days. Also classes were taught in only one language and if a student couldn’t keep up they were kept behind.

The results were kids who actually learned something. They should do away with unions and only keep teachers who want the kids to learn.


61 posted on 10/16/2019 5:27:37 AM PDT by McGavin999
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To: rintintin

Yup. I can teach at major universities but not highschool. Just silly.


62 posted on 10/16/2019 5:41:22 AM PDT by fuente (Liberty resides in three boxes: the ballot box, the jury box and the cartridge box--Fredrick Douglas)
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To: DoodleBob
I think the reality is that there way too many administrators and not enough people teaching, yet I bet the non-teachers have better pay.

You are correct on both counts. Administration is bloated and they do get higher pay. Locally here, a lot of administrators getting the big bucks have very little classroom experience...like two years or less, but they're piloting the ship.

63 posted on 10/16/2019 5:50:11 AM PDT by damper99
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To: DoodleBob

Teachers support their unions, who, like all socialists, support those at the top. Socialism is nothing but a money and power grab. So, teachers don’t get all that money the school systems take, the administrators do.

We spend more on the school systems than we ever have, yet, teachers still make peanuts. It’s their own fault for supporting socialism.


64 posted on 10/16/2019 5:53:03 AM PDT by CodeToad ( Hating on Trump is hating on me and Americans!)
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To: rintintin

My daughter is a teacher. Her pay is frankly not all that bad.

She is in a charter school. She has interviewed for many public school teaching jobs. None have been offered. The hiring practices of the public schools are a thoroughly corrupt cesspool of cronyism and nepotism. A district in this area famously got 3000 resumes for one job opening, and the job went to a relative of a school board member. That’s pretty much the norm.

It’s not the pay that drives people away from teaching.
One of two things:

1) Their ability to actually do the job is stifled by political correctness, pea-brained bureaucrats, and suffocating regulation from the States and the Feds.

2) Student discipline is so utterly lacking that in the best case scenario trying to teach them anything is a total waste of time (and in the worst your physical safety is in danger).


65 posted on 10/16/2019 6:57:36 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog (Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer)
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To: fwdude
Why, yes, it makes so much sense for conservatives to refrain from becoming teachers in order to balance the schools system. It is so much better for those positions to be filled by insane liberals or foreigners. Why, sure, it is a sure thing that the public schools will be abolished. < /sarcasm>

I find that conservatives don't know how to be citizens.

66 posted on 10/16/2019 7:28:20 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Grimmy

Yes! Why should conservatives make even the most feeble attempts to infiltrate and turn what clearly belongs to liberals.


67 posted on 10/16/2019 7:30:42 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Bringbackthedraft

Schools can’t find people to teach Computer Science classes. So they rework the standards enabling marketing teachers to handle it. Yes people, our system is in dire need of STEM teachers. And, no, teachers aren’t paid anywhere near the wage scale of an engineer.


68 posted on 10/16/2019 7:34:47 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: txrefugee

WINNER!!


69 posted on 10/16/2019 7:35:19 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Trump.Deplorable

Oh sure. Online curriculum made by the same people would be so much better. < /sarcasm>


70 posted on 10/16/2019 7:37:30 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: GingisK

I have a Masters in Computer Science.
I changed careers in 2004 and got a teaching cert.

Couldn’t get a teaching job anywhere near where I live - my house and property is paid for, housing market was bad and selling it a loss equivalent to 2 years salary didn’t make sense.

Computer Science is NOT core curriculum and therefore doesn’t help.

Also certified in Business - have degrees there and ran my own business for years.

Passed the boards for Social Studies - what a joke - but they wouldn’t cert me because I hadn’t taken the classes - never mind I’d been in 30 countries on 4 continents, am a political junkie and a history buff.

I live in Michigan, and a recent study showed that accounting for cost of living Michigan had the highest paid teachers in the nation.

The classrooms are a zoo, can’t discipline, and way to much overhead.


71 posted on 10/16/2019 8:04:52 AM PDT by NorthernTraveler
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To: NorthernTraveler
I have a BS in Computer Science and retired after 47 years working as a hardware/software engineer. Mostly I designed and implemented sensor-based instruments.

I gained a three year teaching PERMIT that put me in the classroom while working on certification. My course was titled "Embedded Computing", and mine was the only one in Georgia at the time. I had a wonderful time with my students, and most were starved for a class that had some content. In three years I had seven students tell me that I provided them with a clear career path and plans for higher learning. Many told me that my class was their favorite in all of high school. I had no discipline problems whatsoever.

At my age I do not want to go back to school for a teaching certificate; therefore, I left the system once the permit expired.

I sometimes think that I should have retired earlier from industry in order to teach. The school was very happy with me and allowed me to go beyond course standards as I pleased. They also bought anything I wanted. In short, the school and the students were indeed hungry for a teacher who could handle such a class.

72 posted on 10/16/2019 8:25:38 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: GingisK
They also bought anything I wanted. In short, the school and the students were indeed hungry for a teacher who could handle such a class.

Well, competent teachers among the sea of union water treaders is a hot commodity I would imagine.

73 posted on 10/16/2019 8:31:20 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: DoodleBob

Deport all illegals. No exceptions. If you pretend that only 50% of illegals are in school and that there are only 12 million illegals, that would be 6 million fewer children in school. By itself, that would completely solve the teacher “shortage”, even ignoring the fact that illegals require smaller classes because of the language issues and other special needs.


74 posted on 10/16/2019 9:21:38 AM PDT by Pollster1 ("Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed")
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To: GingisK

I am just saying, why do we spend billions on buses, buildings, teachers etc when all of this can be replaced with a data center at 1/100th of the cost


75 posted on 10/16/2019 9:26:10 AM PDT by Trump.Deplorable
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To: Pollster1
As I wrote elsewhere, we have (and for 18 years have had about) 49.5 million school-age children and about 8 million teachers and educators/bureaucrats. That gives us a kid/teacher ratio of 6.19.

However, most people report class sizes of 30-40. Thus, of that 8 million "teacher" count, to get to an avg class size of 35 you find we have 1.4 million actual teachers.

If we got rid of the 6 million illegal kids we’d have avg class sizes of 31 across 1.4 million teachers. That's great.

...but we still have too many bureaucrats.

If we deported 6 million bureaucrats too, THEN we'd be talkin'.

76 posted on 10/16/2019 9:44:32 AM PDT by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s^2)
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To: GingisK

Yes! Why should conservatives make even the most feeble attempts to infiltrate and turn what clearly belongs to liberals.

*******************

That’d be great.

Break the national teachers’ union first. Destroy the national education department, second. Decorate the street lamps and telephone polls with the rotting carcasses of the grotesquely incompetent and overwhelmingly commiescum district management personnel in most districts.

Then having teachers that aren’t thumb-sucking stupid leftards could be useful.


77 posted on 10/16/2019 10:13:39 AM PDT by Grimmy (equivocation is but the first step along the road to capitulation)
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To: Trump.Deplorable
It can't be replaced with a data center. An important part of the school experience includes things like band and orchestra, team sports, after school clubs, and social interaction. How much would students get out of Shakespeare if they couldn't act it out in class. The list goes on and on.

Besides, most online curriculum does not include much student/teacher discussions including a flexible question/answer opportunity. Most of it is even of lesser quality than what students can get in the classroom.

Given the phone/Facebook social environment, how would taking away even more face-to-face time be of much help? We are supposed to be living in a society, not separate cocoons interconnected by the Internet.

78 posted on 10/16/2019 11:37:33 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Grimmy
Exactly right! When and how do we get started? If we don't fix this problem, our Nation is sure to die; and, we don't have much time left.

Of course, conservatives won't actually do anything. They will angrily blog.

79 posted on 10/16/2019 11:39:53 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: Grimmy
Teachers' unions are a problem in just some states. In Georgia, for example, teachers are forbidden by law to strike. The union, if there is one, never extracted dues from me nor did I hear a peep out of them. The teachers are NOT the problem in Georgia. Local and state administration are entirely the problem.

Non-core curriculum is formulated by drooling idiots at the highest levels.

80 posted on 10/16/2019 11:44:06 AM PDT by GingisK
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