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Exclusive: Biden administration partnering with job search companies to help fill teacher shortages

  • August 31, 2022
  • Technology

 address teacher shortages that have plagued many of the country’s school districts – moves that aim to boost a profession increasingly under attack.

According to a White House memo provided exclusively to USA TODAY, the companies will set up ways school districts can recruit and hire prospective teachers and for teachers looking for jobs to find openings.

ZipRecruiter is launching an online job portal specifically for K-12 schools. Indeed will set up virtual hiring fairs for educators and other staff across the country. And Handshake, which helps college students find jobs, is creating new ways of sharing job openings with undergraduate students in education, including a virtual event in October for college students interested in the field.

Distance learning affected disadvantaged students most. The teacher shortages are just piling on.

First lady Jill Biden, a longtime community college professor, was set to host a White House discussion Wednesday on the teacher shortage to formally announce the partnerships. She will be joined by Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, other administration officials, governors and executives from Recruiter, Handshake and Indeed.

In other efforts to boost teacher recruitment, the Education and Labor departments will encourage state and local officials in a letter Wednesday to use funds provided in the American Rescue Plan, which congressional Democrats passed in 2021, to increase teacher pay. Schools received $130 billion from the rescue law, and local and state governments received an additional 350 billion in direct funding. 

The Biden administration said it is committing more than $100 million in the Labor Department’s next round of apprenticeship grants to the education sector. 

The students most affected by school staffing challenges

But a recent USA TODAY analysis of existing research suggests many of the vacancies are related to shortages that predated the coronavirus pandemic and concentrated in schools serving large percentages of nonwhite students or children living in poverty. Meanwhile, another study found persistent and widespread shortages of nonteaching personnel, such as bus drivers and custodians.

Cardona said the teacher shortage is a symptom of a “teacher respect issue” in an interview Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He said that new college graduates earn 33% more than the average teacher and that teachers have seen just a $29 salary increase over the past 25 years when adjusted for inflation.

More:Is there a teacher shortage? Here’s what the data says.

“That’s unacceptable,” Cardona said, describing teachers forced to work as ride-share drivers on weekends. “We have to lift the profession.”

Experts have told USA TODAY much of the focus should be on removing barriers that often prevent people of color and low-income people from entering the profession. One significant hurdle: the cost of enrolling full-time in a traditional teacher preparation program. Nontraditional pathways such as residencies sometimes allow participants to earn money while they’re preparing for their teaching careers.

But the same experts said just as much emphasis should be on retaining the teachers who remain in the classroom. The rate of educators who say the stress of their job is worth it has dropped steadily since the onset of the pandemic. 

Contact Alia Wong at (202) 507-2256 or awong@usatoday.com. Follow her on Twitter at @aliaemily. Reach Joey Garrison on Twitter @joeygarrison.

Article source: http://rssfeeds.usatoday.com/~/708808648/0/usatoday-techtopstories~Exclusive-Biden-administration-partnering-with-job-search-companies-to-help-fill-teacher-shortages/

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