From higher pay to forgiving college loans, lawmakers unveil plan to address Pa.s teacher shortage
What's happening: Lawmakers and others in the education arena are growing increasingly concerned about the reduction in the number of teachers and support staff in Pennsylvania's classrooms.
At a Capitol news conference on Monday, a band of Democratic lawmakers led by Rep. Patty Kim, D-cumberland/dauphin counties, and joined by Rep. Jim Rigby, R-cambria County, highlighted the teacher shortage schools are facing. They proposed a package of bills called Elevating Educators to address it.
What's the problem: Research shows the number of new teachers certified annually has declined from 20,000 in 2010 to less than 7,000 in 2021. Meanwhile, the number of educators who are teaching with emergency credentials – meaning they are not fully qualified to teach the grades or subjects for which they are hired – has risen by 300% to 5,958 since 2010.
What's more, nearly one in five teachers work a second job to make ends meet. Ten or 15 years ago, an elementary school teacher opening easily would draw 100 applications now that number is greatly decreased, said Travis Waters, chief recovery officer for Harrisburg School District.
Pennsylvania isn't alone in its struggle to attract and retain teachers and school paraprofessionals. According to a Chalkbeat analysis of eight states (that did not include Pennsylvania), more teachers than usual exited the classroom after the last school year.
Why it matters: This has resulted in larger class sizes and less individualized student support, lawmakers and education groups say. It also has increased teachers' workloads as well as burnout rates due to the lost prep periods and increased responsibilities teacher must take on.
Principals and other administrators are having to cover classes reducing time spent on other responsibilities, the lawmakers said. Also troubling, they said, is the inability to comply with individualized education plans for students with disabilities and other legal requirements.
All of this is contributing to high teacher turnover and will lead to lower student achievement.
What they propose: The package of bills includes a proposal from Kim that would raise the state's $18,500 minimum teacher salary to $50,000 initially and add $2,500 a year over the next four years until it reaches $60,000.
Kim said this would lead to pay raises for about 15,400 educators statewide. She also is calling for a $20 minimum hourly wage for paraprofessionals, such as bus drivers, custodians and cafeteria workers.
Other bills in the package would create grant programs to support high-need schools in heavily urban and rural areas to recruit students, paraprofessionals and parents to pursue teaching positions in their local schools and one that would assist paraprofessionals to become certified teachers.
Another proposal would offer up to $40,000 over four years in teacher loan forgiveness for teaching in Pennsylvania. Another would offer an $8,000 a year scholarship for up to four years to students who enroll in a teacher prep program at a stateowned university that would require they stay and teach in Pennsylvania for each year they received a scholarship.
A fifth proposal in the package would create a mentor program to assist new teachers in districts that have a high turnover rate.