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“Several
big states have seen alarming drops in enrollment at teacher training programs.
The numbers are grim among some of the nation’s largest producers of new
teachers: In California, enrollment is down 53 percent over the past five
years. It’s down sharply in New York and Texas as well.
“In
North Carolina, enrollment is down nearly 20 percent in three years.”
Why?
Bill
McDiarmid, dean of the University of North Carolina School of Education,
“points to the strengthening U.S. economy and the erosion of teaching’s image
as a stable career. There’s a growing sense, he says, that K-12 teachers simply
have less control over their professional lives in an increasingly bitter,
politicized environment.
“The list of potential headaches for new teachers is long, starting with the ongoing, ideological fisticuffs over the Common Core State Standards, high-stakes testing and efforts to link test results to teacher evaluations. Throw in the erosion of tenure protections and a variety of recession-induced budget cuts, and you’ve got the makings of a crisis.
“The
job also has a PR problem, McDiarmid says, with teachers too often turned into
scapegoats by politicians, policymakers, foundations and the media.”
All
of this is true, although I don’t see much evidence that the economy is
creating sizable numbers of high-paying middle-class jobs for new college
graduates.
But
the story goes on to quote Benjamin Riley, who previously worked at the
NewSchools Venture Fund, a key ally of Secretary Duncan and a core actor in the
corporate reform movement, promoting test-based teacher evaluation, non-union
charter schools, and other policies that discourage teachers.
While at NewSchools Venture Fund, Riley wrote frequently about how terrible teacher education programs are and how wonderful Common Core is.
While at NewSchools Venture Fund, Riley wrote frequently about how terrible teacher education programs are and how wonderful Common Core is.
Riley
created a new group called “Deans for Impact,” consisting of 18 education
school deans (including McDiarmid) committed to change. Exactly what those
changes are is not yet clear.