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Teacher retention

Teacher retention is a field of education research that focuses on how factors such as school characteristics and teacher demographics affect whether teachers stay in their schools, move to different schools, or leave the profession before retirement. The field developed in response to a perceived shortage in the education labor market in the 1990s. The most recent meta-analysis establishes that school factors, teacher factors, and external and policy factors are key factors that influence teacher attrition and retention.[1] Teacher attrition is thought to be higher in low income schools and in high need subjects like math, science, and special education. More recent evidence suggests that school organizational characteristics has significant effects on teacher decisions to stay or leave.[2]

Factors edit

Schools edit

Researchers and policy makers have identified some commonalities across schools and districts that affect teacher retention.[3][4] Some school factors are "push" factors that push teachers to leave their current school or the profession. Other school factors are "pull" factors that encourage teachers to stay in their current school. Teacher attrition and retention also vary based on the sector of the school (e.g., traditional public vs. charter) and whether it is located in an urban or rural area.[5][6]

Push factors edit

Certain factors are linked to teachers leaving schools or leaving the profession before retirement. Researchers have used data from school districts and national surveys of teachers and schools to demonstrate that there are common factors that push teachers to either leave their schools or leave the profession. The most significant factors include low salary, student behavior issues, lack of support from school administration, and inability to participate in decision-making.[3] Teachers may also be more likely to leave if they are resistant to using prescribed curriculums or are discouraged from modifying their instruction.[7] Over time, individual school environments affect teacher attrition more than district measures like teacher salary, student demographics, or urban settings.[8]

Pull factors edit

Other factors encourage teachers to stay at their current school. Teachers are more likely to stay in elementary schools than middle or high schools.[4] Teachers who earn at least $40,000 per year are most likely to stay through their fifth year at the same school.[4] Teachers stay longer in schools that have missions in alignment with the teacher's personal mission.[9] One of the most successful strategies used to retain teachers includes mentoring and teacher teaming.[10] Others point to the importance of teachers being treated as professionals who are trusted and collaborate with one another to meet student needs.[11] These professional practices can include individuality, creativity, high expectations for students, and community building with mentors or peers.[7] Teachers are also more likely to stay when they report being satisfied with their school.[4] School location and student demographics are not major factors in either pushing teachers away or pulling them in.

Teacher factors edit

Researchers and policy makers have also collected information about teacher demographics to better understand teachers' choices to stay or leave their schools. Most studies include research on teacher age, experience, and gender as well as teacher qualifications.

Age, experience, and gender edit

Teachers are most likely to stay in their schools if they are between the ages of 30–50.[3] Teachers under 30 are more likely to move schools within districts, move districts, or move to other states to teach. Younger teachers often still have preliminary credentials which allows them more flexibility within states as states often have their own standardized licensure and testing requirements that discourage teachers from moving. Younger teachers are also less likely to be vested in their pension systems and more likely to move districts before choosing a district which may offer a higher salary or better benefits and retirement options.[12] Relatedly, novice teachers are more likely to turn over than more experienced teachers, particularly when they work in traditionally disadvantaged schools.[13]

Salary increases can draw younger teachers to particular districts with the promise of higher payment for teaching in the long term.[14] The relationship between life cycle events such as marriage or having children and teacher attrition can be difficult to measure, but teachers who leave the profession are more likely to have recently had children.[15] Teachers with children under 5 are increasingly likely to leave the profession. Gender also plays a role in this trend: young female teachers are more likely than young male teachers to leave.[8] Women who leave the profession are also more likely to return to teaching than men.[4] Teachers over 50 are also more likely to leave the profession, but this is generally explained by teachers who are closer to retirement.

Qualifications edit

Researchers are examining teacher preparation in relation to retention, including the quality of higher education curriculum and student teaching experiences. Mentorships and inductions have been shown to help early-career teachers and other educators adapt and stay in the job.[16] Teachers with better academic qualifications including grades, test scores, graduate degrees, and undergraduate college selectivity are more likely to leave the profession. There is no major retention difference between teachers who completed traditional preparation programs and teachers who completed alternative certification programs, like Teach for America.[8] Teachers are more likely to stay when students are high achieving.[17]

Teachers with certain teaching qualifications and teaching assignments are more likely to leave their schools or the profession. Special education teachers are not more likely to leave teaching, but they are more likely to transfer to positions as general educators.[18] Elementary teachers are more likely to stay than middle and high school teachers. Teacher who feel effective in their jobs are also more likely to continue teaching.[19]

External and policy factors edit

This is a new area of research that examines how policy factors and factors beyond school and teacher correlates influence teacher attrition and retention. This is an increasingly important strand of research linking how external policies such as accountability and evaluation may affect turnover. The policies are evolving to address specific needs in various educational contexts. For instance, many accountability-based policies such as merit pay, retention bonuses, and teacher evaluation aim to change the teacher composition in school.[1] A more recent approach provides districts with flexible financial support to create targeted strategies locally, moving away from "one-size-fits-all" policies. This flexibility allows for more customized solutions based on specific district needs. [20]

Retaining teachers of color edit

Retaining teachers of color is an important element of teacher retention. Students of color perform better with race congruent teachers of color[21] and American students are increasingly non white. In 2014 50.3% of American public school students were Latino, Asian, and African-American with demographic data suggesting that the percentage of students of color will continue to grow.[22] Some evidence suggests that teachers of color have higher attrition rates than white teachers and other evidence suggests the opposite.[8]

Teachers of color are more likely to stay in a school in which they are led and supervised by administrators of color. Overall, 84% of white teachers have a race matched principal while only 44% of Black teachers have a race matched principal and 8% of other races have a matched principal. Teachers with a race matched principal are more likely to report earning additional pay, feeling autonomy, and experiencing additional support, all of which are linked to overall teacher retention. Race matched teachers are also more likely to report being satisfied with their jobs.[4][23] Race matching also affects exits from the profession more than transfers to another school. Also, white men are more likely to leave the profession when there are more students of color. In contrast, teachers of color have higher exit rates overall but are less likely to leave when they have more non white students.[14]

Retaining effective teachers edit

Federal policy initiatives during the Obama Administration have emphasized the importance of retaining effective teachers, rather than just working to retain all teachers. This is partly due to President Obama and the United States Department of Education’s Race to the Top initiative which granted money to states pledging to institute policies which retained and released teachers based in part on their evaluations.[24] The measurement of teacher success is often based on “value added” determinations based on student standardized test scores. Value-added measurements assess the effect of a teacher on student test scores by quantifying teacher ability. These measurements are seen by some as “noisy” and only partly a measure of teacher performance, but still useful.[25] The American Education Research Association cautions against using value added models in most situations due to scientific and technical limitations.[26]

The Race to the Top incentives represented a major shift in how districts and administrators evaluated and retained teachers. Prior to Race to the Top, teacher effectiveness had been determined by years of experience and years of graduate study. Now, in many states, value added modeling is used alongside principal evaluations of teacher observations and teacher progress on student learning outcomes. One controversial use of value-added teacher evaluation was in Washington D.C. under the leadership of Michelle Rhee.[21] The D.C. program was unique in rewarding high performing teachers with higher salaries and bonus pay while also threatening to dismiss low performing teachers. Teachers in D.C. under threat of dismissal made greater gains in their teaching practice than teachers who stood to gain financially. The dismissal threat also increased voluntary attrition of lower performing teachers by 50%.[21] Statistics suggest that having a top performing teacher rather than a low performing teacher “four years in a row would be enough to close the black-white test score gap.”[24]

Teacher effectiveness has also been linked to how often teachers move schools. Overall, leavers are less effective than movers. More effective teachers are more likely to stay in the same schools, unless they being their careers in lower performing schools.[17] Teachers with low performing students are more likely to leave their schools in the first 1–2 years. Low performing teachers are more likely to move to schools that are similar to the schools they currently teach in, while higher performing teachers will move from low performing schools to higher performing schools.[17] This evidence indicates that some teacher attrition may be beneficial to students.

Retention of Early Career Teachers edit

The most comprehensive nationally-representative study on early career teachers in the United States is a study that examines early career teachers using the Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS) and its supplement, the Teacher Follow-Up Survey (TFS) from 1987-88 to 2011-2012.[13] The authors find that novice teachers are more likely to be certified than before and they are more likely to begin their careers in schools with more racially and ethnically diverse students. While they do turn over more frequently than more experienced teachers, supportive colleagues and administrators as well as induction supports are associated with lowering attrition rates.[13]

A Canada-wide survey revealed that most cases of teacher attrition occur within the first five years of teaching, with 50% of cases occurring within the first two years.[27] It is therefore important to consider a) the factors that lead to early career teacher attrition and b) viable interventions that aim to retain beginning teachers.

One study found factors that contribute to early career teacher attrition to include: a difficulty with balancing work and home life and the time constraints involved, issues in classroom management and students' challenging behaviours, strained relationships with parents, staff and/or administration, and feeling incompetent in one's role as a teacher.[27] Another study considered teacher perceptions' of the workplace environment, and how these perceptions play a role in motivating teachers to stay or leave their current positions.[28] School climates that were perceived to be nurturing were characterized as open to both collaboration and differences in instructional preferences, uplifting, and supportive.[28] When aspects of this environment were perceived to be missing, teachers more often noted their negative experiences in the workplace environment.[28] An Australian study suggested that decisions to leave the profession are influenced by the quality of mentoring and induction programs in a school, as well as relationships with other teachers and school leadership.[29]

Organizational-level interventions aimed to retain early career teachers can involve the monitoring of workload amounts, mentorship programs that help early career teachers create a better work-life balance, guidance from administration and/or mentors in navigating the specific socio-cultural environment of the school, mentor modeling of effective teaching practices, and providing feedback on teaching practices.[30] It is also important to consider interventions at the individual-level. One might investigate how early career teachers in remote schools manage negative aspects of their workplace environment. One study noted that in the absence of professional or organizational supports, teachers may still develop resilience by relying on "personal" supports, such as relationships with family and friends and the construction of a teaching identity.[31] Future research in the area of the retention of early career teachers may therefore look at how the construction of a teaching identity affects one's likelihood to stay or leave his or her teaching post.

Conceptual Frameworks of Teacher Attrition and Retention edit

There are few comprehensive conceptual frameworks of teacher attrition and retention since individual studies present their specific framework to focus on a narrow range of factors within their own study. However, a systematic review of the empirical international literature has established a comprehensive conceptual framework of teacher attrition and retention. Synthesizing nearly 160 studies from forty years of research on teacher turnover, the authors organize the determinants of teacher attrition and retention into nine categories grouped into personal correlates, school correlates, and external correlates.[32]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nguyen, Tuan D.; Pham, Lam D.; Crouch, Michael; Springer, Matthew G. (November 2020). "The correlates of teacher turnover: An updated and expanded Meta-analysis of the literature". Educational Research Review. 31: 100355. doi:10.1016/j.edurev.2020.100355. S2CID 224967353.
  2. ^ Nguyen, Tuan D. (January 2021). "Linking school organizational characteristics and teacher retention: Evidence from repeated cross-sectional national data". Teaching and Teacher Education. 97: 103220. doi:10.1016/j.tate.2020.103220. S2CID 226316946.
  3. ^ a b c Ingersoll, Richard M. (January 2001). "Teacher Turnover and Teacher Shortages: An Organizational Analysis". American Educational Research Journal. 38 (3): 499–534. doi:10.3102/00028312038003499. S2CID 8630217.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Raue, Kimberley; Gray, Lucinda (September 2015). "Career Paths of Beginning Public School Teachers: Results from the First through Fifth Waves of the 2007-08 Beginning Teacher Longitudinal Study. Stats in Brief. NCES 2015-196". S2CID 147732128. ERIC ED560730.
  5. ^ Crouch, Michael; Nguyen, Tuan D. (3 April 2021). "Examining Teacher Characteristics, School Conditions, and Attrition Rates at the Intersection of School Choice and Rural Education". Journal of School Choice. 15 (2): 268–294. doi:10.1080/15582159.2020.1736478. S2CID 216441377.
  6. ^ Nguyen, Tuan D. (July 2020). "Examining the Teacher Labor Market in Different Rural Contexts: Variations by Urbanicity and Rural States". AERA Open. 6 (4). doi:10.1177/2332858420966336. S2CID 226338013.
  7. ^ a b Achinstein, Betty; Ogawa, Rodney (1 April 2006). "(In)Fidelity: What the Resistance of New Teachers Reveals about Professional Principles and Prescriptive Educational Policies". Harvard Educational Review. 76 (1): 30–63. doi:10.17763/haer.76.1.e14543458r811864. OCLC 425073080. INIST 17647331 ProQuest 212261339.
  8. ^ a b c d DeAngelis, Karen J.; Presley, Jennifer B. (September 2011). "Toward a More Nuanced Understanding of New Teacher Attrition". Education and Urban Society. 43 (5): 598–626. doi:10.1177/0013124510380724. S2CID 145466479.
  9. ^ Egalite, Anna J.; Jensen, Laura I.; Stewart, Thomas; Wolf, Patrick J. (2 January 2014). "Finding the Right Fit: Recruiting and Retaining Teachers in Milwaukee Choice Schools". Journal of School Choice. 8 (1): 113–140. doi:10.1080/15582159.2014.875418. S2CID 144042584.
  10. ^ Ingersoll, Richard; Smith, Thomas (May 2003). "The Wrong Solution to the Teacher Shortage". Educational Leadership. 60 (8): 30–33. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.182.106.
  11. ^ Cochran-Smith, Marilyn (November 2004). "Stayers, Leavers, Lovers, and Dreamers: Insights about Teacher Retention". Journal of Teacher Education. 55 (5): 387–392. doi:10.1177/0022487104270188. S2CID 145058509.
  12. ^ Goldhaber, Dan; Grout, Cyrus; Holden, Kristian L.; Brown, Nate (1 November 2015). "Crossing the Border? Exploring the Cross-State Mobility of the Teacher Workforce". Educational Researcher. 44 (8): 421–431. doi:10.3102/0013189X15613981. S2CID 147626898.
  13. ^ a b c Redding, Christopher; Nguyen, Tuan D. (July 2020). "Recent Trends in the Characteristics of New Teachers, the Schools in Which They Teach, and Their Turnover Rates". Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education. 122 (7): 1–36. doi:10.1177/016146812012200711. S2CID 238748068.
  14. ^ a b Imazeki, Jennifer (August 2005). "Teacher salaries and teacher attrition". Economics of Education Review. 24 (4): 431–449. doi:10.1016/j.econedurev.2004.07.014.
  15. ^ Boe, Erling E.; Bobbitt, Sharon A.; Cook, Lynne H.; Whitener, Summer D.; Weber, Anita L. (January 1997). "Why Didst Thou Go? Predictors of Retention, Transfer, and Attrition of Special and General Education Teachers from a National Perspective" (PDF). The Journal of Special Education. 30 (4): 390–411. doi:10.1177/002246699703000403. S2CID 145498710.
  16. ^ "The Educator Pipeline: Turnover, Fewer Applicants Will Impact Student Achievement" (PDF). Learning First Alliance. 2016.
  17. ^ a b c Boyd, Donald; Grossman, Pamela; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James (March 2009). "'Who Leaves?' Teacher Attrition and Student Achievement". ERIC ED508275.
  18. ^ Boe, Erling E.; Bobbitt, Sharon A.; Cook, Lynne H. (January 1997). "Whither Didst Thou Go? Retention, Reassignment, Migration, and Attrition of Special and General Education Teachers from a National Perspective". The Journal of Special Education. 30 (4): 371–389. doi:10.1177/002246699703000402. S2CID 143107656.
  19. ^ Hughes, Gail D. (June 2012). "Teacher Retention: Teacher Characteristics, School Characteristics, Organizational Characteristics, and Teacher Efficacy". The Journal of Educational Research. 105 (4): 245–255. doi:10.1080/00220671.2011.584922. S2CID 145201429.
  20. ^ Tran, Henry; Babaei-Balderlou, Saharnaz; Smith, Douglas A (2022-10-27). "The promises and pitfalls of government-funded teacher staffing initiatives on teacher employment in hard-to-staff schools: Evidence from South Carolina". Policy Futures in Education. 22: 43–65. doi:10.1177/14782103221135891. ISSN 1478-2103. S2CID 253189668.
  21. ^ a b c Dee, Thomas S.; Wyckoff, James (March 2015). "Incentives, Selection, and Teacher Performance: Evidence from IMPACT: Incentives, Selection, and Teacher Performance" (PDF). Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. 34 (2): 267–297. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.593.8357. doi:10.1002/pam.21818. JSTOR 43866371. SSRN 2342009.
  22. ^ "Table 203.50. Enrollment and percentage distribution of enrollment in public elementary and secondary schools, by race/ethnicity and region: Selected years, fall 1995 through fall 2023". nces.ed.gov. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  23. ^ Grissom, Jason A.; Keiser, Lael R. (2011). "A supervisor like me: Race, representation, and the satisfaction and turnover decisions of public sector employees". Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. 30 (3): 557–580. doi:10.1002/pam.20579. JSTOR 23018964. OCLC 5152406559.
  24. ^ a b Green, Elizabeth (2015). Building a Better Teacher. W.W. Norton & Company.
  25. ^ Winters, Marcus A.; Cowen, Joshua M. (August 2013). "Who Would Stay, Who Would Be Dismissed? An Empirical Consideration of Value-Added Teacher Retention Policies". Educational Researcher. 42 (6): 330–337. doi:10.3102/0013189X13496145. S2CID 144827731.
  26. ^ "AERA Issues Statement on the Use of Value-Added Models in Evaluation of Educators and Educator Preparation Programs" (Press release). American Educational Research Association. 11 November 2015.
  27. ^ a b Karsenti, Thierry; Collin, Simon (2013). "Why are New Teachers Leaving the Profession? Results of a Canada-Wide Survey". Education. 3 (3): 141–149. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.668.252.
  28. ^ a b c Schuck, Sandy; Aubusson, Peter; Buchanan, John; Varadharajan, Meera; Burke, Paul F. (15 March 2018). "The experiences of early career teachers: new initiatives and old problems". Professional Development in Education. 44 (2): 209–221. doi:10.1080/19415257.2016.1274268. hdl:10453/77021. S2CID 151642600.
  29. ^ Kelly, Nick; Cespedes, Marcela; Clara, Marc; Hanaher, Patrick (March 2019). "Early career teachers' intentions to leave the profession: The complex relationships among preservice education, early career support, and job satisfaction". Australian Journal of Teacher Education. 44 (3): 93–113. doi:10.14221/ajte.2018v44n3.6.
  30. ^ Hudson, Peter (1 July 2012). "How Can Schools Support Beginning Teachers? A Call for Timely Induction and Mentoring for Effective Teaching". Australian Journal of Teacher Education. 37 (7). doi:10.14221/ajte.2012v37n7.1. ERIC EJ995200.
  31. ^ Sullivan, Anna; Johnson, Bruce (2012). "Questionable practices?: Relying on individual teacher resilience in remote schools". Australian and International Journal of Rural Education. 22 (3): 101–116. doi:10.47381/aijre.v22i3.624. S2CID 142157368. Gale A327989291.
  32. ^ Nguyen, Tuan D.; Springer, Matthew G. (13 July 2021). "A conceptual framework of teacher turnover: a systematic review of the empirical international literature and insights from the employee turnover literature". Educational Review. 75 (5): 993–1028. doi:10.1080/00131911.2021.1940103. S2CID 237790964.

teacher, retention, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, united, states, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, june, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, messa. The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Teacher retention is a field of education research that focuses on how factors such as school characteristics and teacher demographics affect whether teachers stay in their schools move to different schools or leave the profession before retirement The field developed in response to a perceived shortage in the education labor market in the 1990s The most recent meta analysis establishes that school factors teacher factors and external and policy factors are key factors that influence teacher attrition and retention 1 Teacher attrition is thought to be higher in low income schools and in high need subjects like math science and special education More recent evidence suggests that school organizational characteristics has significant effects on teacher decisions to stay or leave 2 Contents 1 Factors 1 1 Schools 1 1 1 Push factors 1 1 2 Pull factors 1 2 Teacher factors 1 2 1 Age experience and gender 1 2 2 Qualifications 1 3 External and policy factors 2 Retaining teachers of color 3 Retaining effective teachers 4 Retention of Early Career Teachers 5 Conceptual Frameworks of Teacher Attrition and Retention 6 ReferencesFactors editSchools edit Researchers and policy makers have identified some commonalities across schools and districts that affect teacher retention 3 4 Some school factors are push factors that push teachers to leave their current school or the profession Other school factors are pull factors that encourage teachers to stay in their current school Teacher attrition and retention also vary based on the sector of the school e g traditional public vs charter and whether it is located in an urban or rural area 5 6 Push factors edit Certain factors are linked to teachers leaving schools or leaving the profession before retirement Researchers have used data from school districts and national surveys of teachers and schools to demonstrate that there are common factors that push teachers to either leave their schools or leave the profession The most significant factors include low salary student behavior issues lack of support from school administration and inability to participate in decision making 3 Teachers may also be more likely to leave if they are resistant to using prescribed curriculums or are discouraged from modifying their instruction 7 Over time individual school environments affect teacher attrition more than district measures like teacher salary student demographics or urban settings 8 Pull factors edit Other factors encourage teachers to stay at their current school Teachers are more likely to stay in elementary schools than middle or high schools 4 Teachers who earn at least 40 000 per year are most likely to stay through their fifth year at the same school 4 Teachers stay longer in schools that have missions in alignment with the teacher s personal mission 9 One of the most successful strategies used to retain teachers includes mentoring and teacher teaming 10 Others point to the importance of teachers being treated as professionals who are trusted and collaborate with one another to meet student needs 11 These professional practices can include individuality creativity high expectations for students and community building with mentors or peers 7 Teachers are also more likely to stay when they report being satisfied with their school 4 School location and student demographics are not major factors in either pushing teachers away or pulling them in Teacher factors edit Researchers and policy makers have also collected information about teacher demographics to better understand teachers choices to stay or leave their schools Most studies include research on teacher age experience and gender as well as teacher qualifications Age experience and gender edit Teachers are most likely to stay in their schools if they are between the ages of 30 50 3 Teachers under 30 are more likely to move schools within districts move districts or move to other states to teach Younger teachers often still have preliminary credentials which allows them more flexibility within states as states often have their own standardized licensure and testing requirements that discourage teachers from moving Younger teachers are also less likely to be vested in their pension systems and more likely to move districts before choosing a district which may offer a higher salary or better benefits and retirement options 12 Relatedly novice teachers are more likely to turn over than more experienced teachers particularly when they work in traditionally disadvantaged schools 13 Salary increases can draw younger teachers to particular districts with the promise of higher payment for teaching in the long term 14 The relationship between life cycle events such as marriage or having children and teacher attrition can be difficult to measure but teachers who leave the profession are more likely to have recently had children 15 Teachers with children under 5 are increasingly likely to leave the profession Gender also plays a role in this trend young female teachers are more likely than young male teachers to leave 8 Women who leave the profession are also more likely to return to teaching than men 4 Teachers over 50 are also more likely to leave the profession but this is generally explained by teachers who are closer to retirement Qualifications edit Researchers are examining teacher preparation in relation to retention including the quality of higher education curriculum and student teaching experiences Mentorships and inductions have been shown to help early career teachers and other educators adapt and stay in the job 16 Teachers with better academic qualifications including grades test scores graduate degrees and undergraduate college selectivity are more likely to leave the profession There is no major retention difference between teachers who completed traditional preparation programs and teachers who completed alternative certification programs like Teach for America 8 Teachers are more likely to stay when students are high achieving 17 Teachers with certain teaching qualifications and teaching assignments are more likely to leave their schools or the profession Special education teachers are not more likely to leave teaching but they are more likely to transfer to positions as general educators 18 Elementary teachers are more likely to stay than middle and high school teachers Teacher who feel effective in their jobs are also more likely to continue teaching 19 External and policy factors edit This is a new area of research that examines how policy factors and factors beyond school and teacher correlates influence teacher attrition and retention This is an increasingly important strand of research linking how external policies such as accountability and evaluation may affect turnover The policies are evolving to address specific needs in various educational contexts For instance many accountability based policies such as merit pay retention bonuses and teacher evaluation aim to change the teacher composition in school 1 A more recent approach provides districts with flexible financial support to create targeted strategies locally moving away from one size fits all policies This flexibility allows for more customized solutions based on specific district needs 20 Retaining teachers of color editRetaining teachers of color is an important element of teacher retention Students of color perform better with race congruent teachers of color 21 and American students are increasingly non white In 2014 50 3 of American public school students were Latino Asian and African American with demographic data suggesting that the percentage of students of color will continue to grow 22 Some evidence suggests that teachers of color have higher attrition rates than white teachers and other evidence suggests the opposite 8 Teachers of color are more likely to stay in a school in which they are led and supervised by administrators of color Overall 84 of white teachers have a race matched principal while only 44 of Black teachers have a race matched principal and 8 of other races have a matched principal Teachers with a race matched principal are more likely to report earning additional pay feeling autonomy and experiencing additional support all of which are linked to overall teacher retention Race matched teachers are also more likely to report being satisfied with their jobs 4 23 Race matching also affects exits from the profession more than transfers to another school Also white men are more likely to leave the profession when there are more students of color In contrast teachers of color have higher exit rates overall but are less likely to leave when they have more non white students 14 Retaining effective teachers editFederal policy initiatives during the Obama Administration have emphasized the importance of retaining effective teachers rather than just working to retain all teachers This is partly due to President Obama and the United States Department of Education s Race to the Top initiative which granted money to states pledging to institute policies which retained and released teachers based in part on their evaluations 24 The measurement of teacher success is often based on value added determinations based on student standardized test scores Value added measurements assess the effect of a teacher on student test scores by quantifying teacher ability These measurements are seen by some as noisy and only partly a measure of teacher performance but still useful 25 The American Education Research Association cautions against using value added models in most situations due to scientific and technical limitations 26 The Race to the Top incentives represented a major shift in how districts and administrators evaluated and retained teachers Prior to Race to the Top teacher effectiveness had been determined by years of experience and years of graduate study Now in many states value added modeling is used alongside principal evaluations of teacher observations and teacher progress on student learning outcomes One controversial use of value added teacher evaluation was in Washington D C under the leadership of Michelle Rhee 21 The D C program was unique in rewarding high performing teachers with higher salaries and bonus pay while also threatening to dismiss low performing teachers Teachers in D C under threat of dismissal made greater gains in their teaching practice than teachers who stood to gain financially The dismissal threat also increased voluntary attrition of lower performing teachers by 50 21 Statistics suggest that having a top performing teacher rather than a low performing teacher four years in a row would be enough to close the black white test score gap 24 Teacher effectiveness has also been linked to how often teachers move schools Overall leavers are less effective than movers More effective teachers are more likely to stay in the same schools unless they being their careers in lower performing schools 17 Teachers with low performing students are more likely to leave their schools in the first 1 2 years Low performing teachers are more likely to move to schools that are similar to the schools they currently teach in while higher performing teachers will move from low performing schools to higher performing schools 17 This evidence indicates that some teacher attrition may be beneficial to students Retention of Early Career Teachers editThe most comprehensive nationally representative study on early career teachers in the United States is a study that examines early career teachers using the Schools and Staffing Survey SASS and its supplement the Teacher Follow Up Survey TFS from 1987 88 to 2011 2012 13 The authors find that novice teachers are more likely to be certified than before and they are more likely to begin their careers in schools with more racially and ethnically diverse students While they do turn over more frequently than more experienced teachers supportive colleagues and administrators as well as induction supports are associated with lowering attrition rates 13 A Canada wide survey revealed that most cases of teacher attrition occur within the first five years of teaching with 50 of cases occurring within the first two years 27 It is therefore important to consider a the factors that lead to early career teacher attrition and b viable interventions that aim to retain beginning teachers One study found factors that contribute to early career teacher attrition to include a difficulty with balancing work and home life and the time constraints involved issues in classroom management and students challenging behaviours strained relationships with parents staff and or administration and feeling incompetent in one s role as a teacher 27 Another study considered teacher perceptions of the workplace environment and how these perceptions play a role in motivating teachers to stay or leave their current positions 28 School climates that were perceived to be nurturing were characterized as open to both collaboration and differences in instructional preferences uplifting and supportive 28 When aspects of this environment were perceived to be missing teachers more often noted their negative experiences in the workplace environment 28 An Australian study suggested that decisions to leave the profession are influenced by the quality of mentoring and induction programs in a school as well as relationships with other teachers and school leadership 29 Organizational level interventions aimed to retain early career teachers can involve the monitoring of workload amounts mentorship programs that help early career teachers create a better work life balance guidance from administration and or mentors in navigating the specific socio cultural environment of the school mentor modeling of effective teaching practices and providing feedback on teaching practices 30 It is also important to consider interventions at the individual level One might investigate how early career teachers in remote schools manage negative aspects of their workplace environment One study noted that in the absence of professional or organizational supports teachers may still develop resilience by relying on personal supports such as relationships with family and friends and the construction of a teaching identity 31 Future research in the area of the retention of early career teachers may therefore look at how the construction of a teaching identity affects one s likelihood to stay or leave his or her teaching post Conceptual Frameworks of Teacher Attrition and Retention editThere are few comprehensive conceptual frameworks of teacher attrition and retention since individual studies present their specific framework to focus on a narrow range of factors within their own study However a systematic review of the empirical international literature has established a comprehensive conceptual framework of teacher attrition and retention Synthesizing nearly 160 studies from forty years of research on teacher turnover the authors organize the determinants of teacher attrition and retention into nine categories grouped into personal correlates school correlates and external correlates 32 References edit a b Nguyen Tuan D Pham Lam D Crouch Michael Springer Matthew G November 2020 The correlates of teacher turnover An updated and expanded Meta analysis of the literature Educational Research Review 31 100355 doi 10 1016 j edurev 2020 100355 S2CID 224967353 Nguyen Tuan D January 2021 Linking school organizational characteristics and teacher retention Evidence from repeated cross sectional national data Teaching and Teacher Education 97 103220 doi 10 1016 j tate 2020 103220 S2CID 226316946 a b c Ingersoll Richard M January 2001 Teacher Turnover and Teacher Shortages An Organizational Analysis American Educational Research Journal 38 3 499 534 doi 10 3102 00028312038003499 S2CID 8630217 a b c d e f Raue Kimberley Gray Lucinda September 2015 Career Paths of Beginning Public School Teachers Results from the First through Fifth Waves of the 2007 08 Beginning Teacher Longitudinal Study Stats in Brief NCES 2015 196 S2CID 147732128 ERIC ED560730 Crouch Michael Nguyen Tuan D 3 April 2021 Examining Teacher Characteristics School Conditions and Attrition Rates at the Intersection of School Choice and Rural Education Journal of School Choice 15 2 268 294 doi 10 1080 15582159 2020 1736478 S2CID 216441377 Nguyen Tuan D July 2020 Examining the Teacher Labor Market in Different Rural Contexts Variations by Urbanicity and Rural States AERA Open 6 4 doi 10 1177 2332858420966336 S2CID 226338013 a b Achinstein Betty Ogawa Rodney 1 April 2006 In Fidelity What the Resistance of New Teachers Reveals about Professional Principles and Prescriptive Educational Policies Harvard Educational Review 76 1 30 63 doi 10 17763 haer 76 1 e14543458r811864 OCLC 425073080 INIST 17647331 ProQuest 212261339 a b c d DeAngelis Karen J Presley Jennifer B September 2011 Toward a More Nuanced Understanding of New Teacher Attrition Education and Urban Society 43 5 598 626 doi 10 1177 0013124510380724 S2CID 145466479 Egalite Anna J Jensen Laura I Stewart Thomas Wolf Patrick J 2 January 2014 Finding the Right Fit Recruiting and Retaining Teachers in Milwaukee Choice Schools Journal of School Choice 8 1 113 140 doi 10 1080 15582159 2014 875418 S2CID 144042584 Ingersoll Richard Smith Thomas May 2003 The Wrong Solution to the Teacher Shortage Educational Leadership 60 8 30 33 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 182 106 Cochran Smith Marilyn November 2004 Stayers Leavers Lovers and Dreamers Insights about Teacher Retention Journal of Teacher Education 55 5 387 392 doi 10 1177 0022487104270188 S2CID 145058509 Goldhaber Dan Grout Cyrus Holden Kristian L Brown Nate 1 November 2015 Crossing the Border Exploring the Cross State Mobility of the Teacher Workforce Educational Researcher 44 8 421 431 doi 10 3102 0013189X15613981 S2CID 147626898 a b c Redding Christopher Nguyen Tuan D July 2020 Recent Trends in the Characteristics of New Teachers the Schools in Which They Teach and Their Turnover Rates Teachers College Record The Voice of Scholarship in Education 122 7 1 36 doi 10 1177 016146812012200711 S2CID 238748068 a b Imazeki Jennifer August 2005 Teacher salaries and teacher attrition Economics of Education Review 24 4 431 449 doi 10 1016 j econedurev 2004 07 014 Boe Erling E Bobbitt Sharon A Cook Lynne H Whitener Summer D Weber Anita L January 1997 Why Didst Thou Go Predictors of Retention Transfer and Attrition of Special and General Education Teachers from a National Perspective PDF The Journal of Special Education 30 4 390 411 doi 10 1177 002246699703000403 S2CID 145498710 The Educator Pipeline Turnover Fewer Applicants Will Impact Student Achievement PDF Learning First Alliance 2016 a b c Boyd Donald Grossman Pamela Lankford Hamilton Loeb Susanna Wyckoff James March 2009 Who Leaves Teacher Attrition and Student Achievement ERIC ED508275 Boe Erling E Bobbitt Sharon A Cook Lynne H January 1997 Whither Didst Thou Go Retention Reassignment Migration and Attrition of Special and General Education Teachers from a National Perspective The Journal of Special Education 30 4 371 389 doi 10 1177 002246699703000402 S2CID 143107656 Hughes Gail D June 2012 Teacher Retention Teacher Characteristics School Characteristics Organizational Characteristics and Teacher Efficacy The Journal of Educational Research 105 4 245 255 doi 10 1080 00220671 2011 584922 S2CID 145201429 Tran Henry Babaei Balderlou Saharnaz Smith Douglas A 2022 10 27 The promises and pitfalls of government funded teacher staffing initiatives on teacher employment in hard to staff schools Evidence from South Carolina Policy Futures in Education 22 43 65 doi 10 1177 14782103221135891 ISSN 1478 2103 S2CID 253189668 a b c Dee Thomas S Wyckoff James March 2015 Incentives Selection and Teacher Performance Evidence from IMPACT Incentives Selection and Teacher Performance PDF Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 34 2 267 297 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 593 8357 doi 10 1002 pam 21818 JSTOR 43866371 SSRN 2342009 Table 203 50 Enrollment and percentage distribution of enrollment in public elementary and secondary schools by race ethnicity and region Selected years fall 1995 through fall 2023 nces ed gov Retrieved 2015 11 09 Grissom Jason A Keiser Lael R 2011 A supervisor like me Race representation and the satisfaction and turnover decisions of public sector employees Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 30 3 557 580 doi 10 1002 pam 20579 JSTOR 23018964 OCLC 5152406559 a b Green Elizabeth 2015 Building a Better Teacher W W Norton amp Company Winters Marcus A Cowen Joshua M August 2013 Who Would Stay Who Would Be Dismissed An Empirical Consideration of Value Added Teacher Retention Policies Educational Researcher 42 6 330 337 doi 10 3102 0013189X13496145 S2CID 144827731 AERA Issues Statement on the Use of Value Added Models in Evaluation of Educators and Educator Preparation Programs Press release American Educational Research Association 11 November 2015 a b Karsenti Thierry Collin Simon 2013 Why are New Teachers Leaving the Profession Results of a Canada Wide Survey Education 3 3 141 149 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 668 252 a b c Schuck Sandy Aubusson Peter Buchanan John Varadharajan Meera Burke Paul F 15 March 2018 The experiences of early career teachers new initiatives and old problems Professional Development in Education 44 2 209 221 doi 10 1080 19415257 2016 1274268 hdl 10453 77021 S2CID 151642600 Kelly Nick Cespedes Marcela Clara Marc Hanaher Patrick March 2019 Early career teachers intentions to leave the profession The complex relationships among preservice education early career support and job satisfaction Australian Journal of Teacher Education 44 3 93 113 doi 10 14221 ajte 2018v44n3 6 Hudson Peter 1 July 2012 How Can Schools Support Beginning Teachers A Call for Timely Induction and Mentoring for Effective Teaching Australian Journal of Teacher Education 37 7 doi 10 14221 ajte 2012v37n7 1 ERIC EJ995200 Sullivan Anna Johnson Bruce 2012 Questionable practices Relying on individual teacher resilience in remote schools Australian and International Journal of Rural Education 22 3 101 116 doi 10 47381 aijre v22i3 624 S2CID 142157368 Gale A327989291 Nguyen Tuan D Springer Matthew G 13 July 2021 A conceptual framework of teacher turnover a systematic review of the empirical international literature and insights from the employee turnover literature Educational Review 75 5 993 1028 doi 10 1080 00131911 2021 1940103 S2CID 237790964 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Teacher retention amp oldid 1212475108, wikipedia, wiki, 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