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Posts Tagged ‘retention’

In response to my last post, a friend asked me how I can possibly say that the National Education Association (NEA) facilitated the impending teacher shortage.   First, to address the teacher shortage, there are plenty of statistics to support it and it will get continually worse as the babyboomers retire.  In 2007, 49% of all teachers were over the age of 50.

To clarify, I never labeled the NEA as the ’cause’ of the teacher shortage, but a group that ‘facilitated’ some of the causes of the shortage.  As to how they facilitated it, I have a simple response.

Over the past few decades the NEA has taken an aggressive stance on how poorly educators are paid.  This stance has never relented and has always been a centerpiece of their message; even at this hour.  Now, I’m not disagreeing with why the NEA began with this message decades ago and championed it for years.  However, I am disagreeing with the NEA being less than honest with the great gains that compensation plans for educators have made.

I believe the NEA’s powerful and ever-present message that emphasizes the weakness of compensation plans and professional opportunities for teachers  has deterred the best and brightest young Americans from joining the teaching ranks over the past two decades.

As a personal example, in 1994, when I graduated from Johns Hopkins University, I enrolled in the school’s Masters of Art in Teaching program.  My goal was to be a teacher.  There was not a person in my life, including past teachers, that encouraged me.  In fact, many of them outright told me I’d never make it financially on a teacher’s compensation plan.

I have several friends who encountered the very same onslaught of discouragement and deterrence.  Those people who influenced me at such a young age really knew nothing about teaching and their compensation except to know about what the NEA lobbyist messages portrayed through so many different mouthpieces; the media, politicians, union representatives, etc.

If I knew then what I know today, it is likely I’d have become a teacher/public educator.  What I know today is that I’d be making over 6 figures ($100,000+) because I would have aspired to be an administrator.  I would also have 17 years toward a fantastic retirement plan nobody enlightened me to when I was thinking about teaching.  If I didn’t become an administrator, I would have had a good teacher’s salary and the ability to significantly augment my income through coaching and athletic summer camps.  I could have easily made a good life.

I don’t regret not becoming a teacher because I found another pathway in education through private endeavors (though being so close to retirement  isn’t in that equation.)  But, I do know friends who left the idea of an education career behind and headed to Wall Street, medical school, law school, etc.  What a shame and waste of teaching and education talent.

In one clean statement, I believe the NEA has convinced America that teachers are starving and there is absolutely no pathway to prosperity through a teaching career; therefore, young Americans over the past two decades have kept away from the profession.  This has contributed to a very real teacher shortage.

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The debacle in Wisconsin this past week provides a perfect platform to study how education has become a ‘hot mess’ in the United States.  Over the last 15 years I’ve developed many theories on ways to improve education in the United States.  My head has been spinning this past week with an overload of thoughts like, “See, this is what happens when….”  I can fill in the blank with a dozen different thoughts.  So, over the next couple weeks, I’m not going to focus on the exact issues in Wisconsin, like collective bargaining rights.  But, on the solutions that should be brought to the table.

These are the top issues I’ll focus on:

  • How to undo the National Education Association (NEA)’s  facilitation of a teacher shortage and the belief that teachers are grossly under-compensated.
  • How the Wisconsin situation offers the perfect storm for the emergence of e-learning solutions and online education in K-12.
  • How school districts can counter the Federal government’s gain of control over local school district behavior and action by attacking contradicting policies and behaviors.
  • How to recruit and maintain top level talent, such as those that would otherwise be doctors or attorneys, to the education field.

Please subscribe and offer as many comments as you wish.   What else would you want me to address in this series?

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