Every president since Eisenhower has talked about the need for more teachers, especially in certain rural and urban schools, and in subjects such as math and science. For decades, policies have been made and laws changed in order to recruit and train more and more teachers. But research shows we’ve been looking at the problem wrong, and that these efforts haven’t solved teacher shortages at all, but have created an oversize labor force with less training, less experience and high rates of turnover.
Learn more: Who wants to be a teacher?
Offering sanctuary to vulnerable students
Keeping black teachers
Fear, uncertainty for undocumented students under Trump administration
College-educated and out-of-touch
Election leaves undocumented students in limbo
Clinton and Trump don't talk much about education
The stress of racism may impact learning
Talking about race in schools
Schools give low-income students a chance to travel abroad
What a flipped classroom looks like
A new study finds school readiness gaps have declined over the past decade
How thousands of kids were denied special education in Texas
Rewriting the Sentence: College Behind Bars
What It Takes: Chasing Graduation at High-Poverty High Schools
Spare the Rod: Reforming School Discipline
Stuck at Square One: The Remedial Education Trap
Hungry hungry students
What is restorative justice?
A homeless student struggles towards graduation
The facts and fictions of student debt
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