Title: Trends in Teacher Attrition
1(No Transcript)
2Trends in Teacher Attrition
3 of Retirement vs. Non-Retirement
Generation X
Generation Y
4Age Distribution of Public School Teachers
of Teachers
Age
5Beginning Teacher Attrition is a Serious Problem
New teacher turnover remains high --Â one third of
beginning teachers leave after three years, and
almost fifty percent have left after five years.
6Public School Teacher Age Distribution(2003-2004)
- Total Teachers 3,250,625 (Public Schools)
- Less than 40 1,338,039 41.2
- (Gen X Y)
- Between 40 58 1,732,134 53.3
- (Boomers)
- Over 58 180,462 5.6
- (Veterans)
For decades, Boomers have been at the core of our
public education enterprise and now they are
ready to retire, taking decades of experience and
accomplished teaching with them. Â
7A School Staffing Tsunami
The Great Wave by Hokusai 1832
8Consequences of Teacher and Principal Churn
Teacher experience at current school?
Principal experience at current school ?
Average School
43.6 have 3 years or less
4 years
9Teacher Leavers
Better in current position
Better in teaching
10Teacher Turnover Costs 7.3 Billion
- Cost per teacher in first three years is from
4,300 in rural schools to 17,800 in large urban
districts. (NCTAF) - After five years lost teaching effectiveness
could push the cost as high a 35,000 per
teacher. (Milanowski Odden) - Students lose the most high turnover schools
rarely improve teaching effectiveness or student
learning, because they are constantly rebuilding
their staff. (NCTAF) - www.nctaf.org
- Cost Study and Cost Calculator
11Change the Business Model of SchoolsFrom
Teaching Organizations To Learning Organizations
A Crisis and an Opportunity
12Teaching 1.0 Stand and deliver to maximize
teaching efficiency.
- Teaching 2.0
- Teaching becomes a team sport
- to maximize learning effectiveness.
New tools empower teachers to engage students in
personalized learning
13- You cant afford to lose a single teacher.
- Every teacher must be as effective as possible
as quickly as possible and for as long as
possible. - Effective teachers, who have the support and
tools they need to succeed and who know they
are making a difference dont leave and
continuously improve their practice. - Effective teaching is not an individual
accomplishment. Quality teaching is a team
sport.
14BABY BOOMERS (45-62)
-
- Want to make a personal difference
- Are willing to go the extra mile
- Work well in teams
- Value public recognition
- Reluctant to change positions
- Retiring but want to stay engaged
15GEN-XERS (26-45)
- Tech savvy and inventive
- Self-reliant, skeptical of authority
- Work well with colleagues of their own choosing
- Embrace workplace structures they can control
- Prefer informal roles and freedom to complete
tasks their own way - Seek opportunities to improve their performance
- The core of the new economy but the trough in
the teaching workforce.
16NEXTERS (25 and under)GEN Y or MILLENNIALS
-
- Embrace diversity
- Collaborative
- Constant communication
- Prefer flat organizations
- Seek new challenges
- Multi-task
- Grew up digital
- Manage their life online
- Could replace retiring teachers, but are
abandoning factory-era schools.
17- Move from schools organized around stand-alone
teaching in self-contained classrooms - To learning communities organized around
cross-generational learning teams empowered with
digital technology
18From Dr. Kildare to Medical Teams
19From Perry Mason.to Legal Teams
20From Superheroes to Super Teams
21From Flash Gordon to NASA Teams
22From the Stand Alone Teacher of the 1950s
23to the Stand Alone Teacher of the 21st Century
24Learning Teams ImproveTeaching Quality
- Manage Effective Teaching and Improve Student
Learning with Digital Technology - Improve Retention and Accelerate Effectiveness
Among Novice Teachers - Establish New Roles for Accomplished Teachers as
Learning Team Managers - Create New Pathways for Career Changers
25NCTAF PLEDGE
- Empower educators to close the gaps between
preparation, practice, and learning. - Create genuine learning organizations that manage
teaching effectiveness with cross-generational
learning teams. - Establish teaching residencies that embed
preparation and professional development in the
day-to-day work of schools. - Develop multiple career paths that recognize and
reward collaboration, effective teaching, and
improved learning. - Employ authentic assessments that become
essential tools for improving teaching
effectiveness and student learning. -
262100 M Street, NW Suite 660 Washington, DC
20037 202-429-2570
Tom Carroll, President
WWW.NCTAF.ORG