Wendy Lecker is a civil rights lawyer who specializes in education and writes frequent newspaper columns.
In this article, she shows how some districts and states are strengthening the profession while others–notably Connecticut– are contributing to a teacher shortage.
She writes:
“A serious teacher shortage is plaguing school districts across the country. The Learning Policy Institute (“LPI”) recently found that in addition to teachers leaving the profession, enrollment in teacher preparation programs has dropped 35 percent.
“It is no wonder. Over the past decade, teachers have been subjected to a barrage of unproven mandates “that hamper learning. They are judged by evaluation systems, based on student test scores, that experts and courts across this country have rejected as arbitrary and invalid. And, as one former teacher and current Colorado state senator remarked, “Teachers are constantly being bashed … It’s not the same job it used to be.”
“Connecticut is no exception to the teacher shortage, nor to its causes. Teachers have undergone a revolving door of evidence-free mandates, invalid evaluations and vilification from our governor who infamously declared that all teachers have to do for four years is “show up” to get tenure. Every year, hundreds of positions go unfilled in Connecticut classrooms.
“LPI issued a report in 2016 on the causes of the teacher shortage, based on a review of an extensive body of research. Of particular note for Connecticut is the finding that inadequate preparation is a major factor in teacher attrition.
“Alternatively certified teachers have markedly higher turnover rates than traditionally certified teachers, with the largest disparities in high-minority schools. Teachers with comprehensive preparation were 21/2 times less likely to leave than those with weak preparation. Accordingly, LPI recommends providing scholarships and loan forgiveness for strong teacher preparation programs, and robust induction programs.
“Some districts are making strides in identifying and addressing the root causes of teacher shortages.
“In Niagara Falls, New York, for example, the district embarked on a multipronged effort to cultivate teachers, particularly teachers of color. The district provides a scholarship for a graduate of its high school entering the teaching program at Niagara University. It also received an endowment at Niagara University for paraprofessionals who want to be trained as teachers; and provides financial assistance, reduced workloads and other supports to ensure success.
“Niagara Falls public schools provide high school seniors with the opportunity to shadow teachers as an internship. Twelfth-grade teachers partner with Niagara University to ensure that students will not incur the expense of remedial education once they matriculate. They have also partnered with the local community college to establish academies such as the physical education academy. The superintendent reaches out to local African-American churches to request contact with graduates who have left the area in order to entice them to return. However, the superintendent does not favor lowering certification standards or weakening preparation. Those avenues would not only devalue the profession but also would harm the needy children in his district.
“As featured in my previous column, Long Beach, California, also partners with its local university to train teachers, who student teach in the district’s schools. The high-poverty district has a 92-percent retention rate and credits its partnership with the university for protecting it against teacher shortages.
“Connecticut had promising programs for growing teachers. Last year, Bridgeport initiated a comprehensive minority recruitment program for paraprofessionals to become teachers. Hartford, Waterbury and CREC had similar programs. Just as this program was to expand, the state pulled the funding. The State Department of Education (“SDE”) had a successful program, Teaching Opportunities for Paraprofessionals, however its funding was eliminated in 2002.
“Connecticut also has high quality, university-based teacher preparation programs, which have made efforts to identify and address specific shortage areas and minority recruitment.
“Rather than build on these successful efforts, SDE and the State Board of Education seek to weaken teaching. Last year, they approved an unproven fly-by-night outfit called Relay to provide alternative certification.”
“Now, they intend to lower teacher certification requirements. One idea they are considering is abandoning the requirement that bilingual teachers have content certification, as if English Language Learners do not deserve a teacher who knows the subject she teaches.”
By the way, the North Carolina legislature killed the funding for its highly successful Teaching Fellows Program–which produced career teachers– and transferred the funding to Teach for America, which hires itinerant teachers from out of state.

My “like” is for Niagara Falls and Long Beach public schools, et al. I want the others that are deliberately destroying the teaching profession to rot in the ninth circle of Dante’s hell.
As for the governor of Connecticut who infamously declared that all teachers have to do for four years is “show up” to get tenure, the ninth circle of Dante’s hell is too good for him.
Those first few years of teaching when teachers are working toward earning their due process rights, they are being evaluated and can be fired without cause if the administrators evaluating them decide they can’t teach. Those first few years are when teachers must prove they have what it takes to be a teacher. It isn’t skating across a frozen pond. I still remember one new teacher, at the high school where I taught, who was fired before he finished his first week because he was teaching his English students how to cheat like he did while earning his college degree. Some of his students went to their counselors and complained. There was a quick investigation that came up with more witnesses, and bam, snap your fingers, he was gone.
I am a former U.S. Marine who fought in Vietnam and being a Marine in combat was and still is easier than being a teacher in public schools that have been turned into a war zone with never ending pressure because of plague, puss-buckets like Bill Gates, the Koch brothers, the Walton family, and the governor of Connecticut, et al.
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Don’t forget Eli Broad & Silicon Valley tech ‘geniuses’
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I didn’t forget them. There are too many to name beyond the top few. That’s why I threw in et al. Didn’t I?
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Lloyd
Next time you can just write “et Bill” or “et Eli” and have it pretty well covered
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lol…that was good
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SDP,
Did you mean “Et tu, Bill” and “Et tu, Eli”?
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“Over the past decade, teachers have been subjected to a barrage of
unproven mandatescalculated lies”LikeLiked by 1 person
Well said, poet. After all these years, I’m still appalled at how brazenly dishonest these shysters really are.
BTW: How did you do the strike out option? Do you know how to italicize and boldface, too?
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{strike}words_to_cross_out_here{/strike}
But use the angle brackets “<” and “>” instead of the curly brackets “{” and “}”
(If I use the angle brackets to demonstrate, they won’t show up because the HTML interpreter recognizes them as indicating a command so what would appear instead would be
words_to_cross_out_herewhich would not help you much😀To do italics or bold, simply replace the word “strike” between angle brackets with either the letter i or the letter b. This is the basic format for HTML.
If you want to do a link, you use the “anchor” tag “a”
{a href=”web address/URL here”}link title here{/a}
Again replacing curly brackets with angle brackets. You need to include http:// before the http://www…. And the web address needs to be in quotes “http://www.webpage.com”
But since WordPress automatically converts URLs to links, it’s actually easier just to insert the address in the comment box. No brackets and other stuff required.
Hope that helps.
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WordPress is awful. Many, many readers have been kicked off the blog for no reason. I don’t understand it, and WP can’t explain it.
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Http:// before the “www…”
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yes.
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Students entering teacher prep programs will continue to decline. As students cycle through their K-12 educations, they are miserable thanks to the test, test, test regime. Who would want to enter the profession that oversaw their misery?! So sad and angry I can barely see straight most days.
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Calculated lies’ is the operant phrase, SomeDAM poet. This shortage is no accident- a feature not a bug. Heck, politicians would rather spend tax money to prosecute teachers and poor brown & black people than white collar criminals. The prosecutors in the Atlanta cheating scandal used RICO laws to convict teachers. http://www.colorlines.com/articles/ryan-coogler-and-michael-b-jordan-reunite-ta-nehisi-coates-penned-wrong-answer
No other group has been held to such unreasonable & invalid accountability standards yet, excluded from all input & governance of those standards. It’s shameful. History will not be kind.
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We should ponder another major cause of the teacher shortage: students’ misbehavior driving teachers out of the profession. Especially the gentle souls. Some of the very people who have the most to give –learned, thoughtful people –are the most vulnerable to student bullying and harassment. This is happening now to a gentle older woman who was recently hired at our school. Instead of cracking down on kids’ gratuitous cruelty and disruptiveness, we turn a blind eye lest we tarnish our romantic notion of children as innocents, or frequently blame the victim, as in the case of white teachers in heavily minority schools where the default assumption is that deep-seated racism in teachers is a major cause of students’ odious behavior. A shell-shocked young music teacher in a nearby school gets inundated with psychological abuse from his students every day. Rather than support him, he and his colleagues are made to attend a week-long training on institutional racism –as if teachers’ impure consciousness is the root of their suffering. This training was mandated by the Justice Department because his district was cited for suspending minority students at a disproportionately high rate. So now suspensions are down, and odious behavior is up. This is an ongoing crisis that no one seems to want to face honestly.
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Surely couldn’t be worse now then 10, 20, 30 years ago, could it?
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I think the new taboo on discipline, fostered in large part by Eric Holder, is making things worse, though the problem is indeed an old one. I’m teaching about Confucius and China now. I think about East Asian societies and realize it doesn’t have to be this way. The bad behavior is gratuitous and stoppable. But modern Western culture militates against implementing the means to stop it. I hope we can develop the will to stop it.
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I think public school kids would benefit if we made them safe for nerd teachers.
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Badly written sentence: by “them” I mean public schools.
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I agree, Ponderosa
The disrespect that politicians and others show for teachers on a regular basis percolates into the schools in the form of disrespect for teachers shown by students and even administrators.
This is the primary reason I left teaching.
Teachers don’t get any respect from anyone any more.
Ironically,they are some of the most creative, competent, ethical people in our society but get bashed by incompetent, uncreative unethical people all the time.
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I don’t believe there is such a thing, but if, perchance, there is a Hell, I’m sure there is a special place reserved for those who bash and otherwise disrespect teachers.
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I subbed in both general and special ed classes when I first began teaching.
General ed had classes of about 25-30 kids with nobody to help me out and no school wide system in place for dealing with problem students. At least 1/4 of the kids in every class I taught treated me like complete garbage and did all they could to take control of the class.
Special ed (emotionally disturbed) had classes of 12 kids with at least one para professional working with me at all times. There was a school wide system of discipline including a crisis resolution room with a trained crisis teacher.
I ended up choosing special ed as my area of focus. The kids who acted out in the general ed classes could so easily have been placed in the special ed classes I taught. I appreciated the supports and extra flexibility (in terms of academics until Bloomberg came along) that were offered.
Can’t let the kids run the show and that’s exactly what was happening in the general ed schools I taught in.
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I first started teaching at age 40. Some of the people I’d been working with, previously, would joke (with a serious edge to it) about what a cake job it was, with the summers off and the shorter work days. Said I was leaving the “real” work force and moving into slacker central.
Those “jokes” have become less and less “funny” over the years. The media campaign has very been very effective in demonizing the unions and minimizing the importance of the teacher’s role. The tech barons are doing their utmost to make us subservient to their “just add water” approach.
Seriously sick stuff.
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