Las Vegas Review-Journal

CCSD looks abroad to ease staff deficit

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

After taking a large leap — and a 20-hour plane ride — more than 80 special education teachers from the Philippine­s are preparing to join the Clark County School District workforce this fall, helping the district fill a critical teacher shortage.

But first, they’ll get their feet wet, undergoing intense training to learn about the district and American culture.

“At some point in your life, you have to step up. You have to jump,” Adrian Calabano, 22, said of his decision to leave his family in Manila and take a job in Las Vegas.

When the school year starts, Calabano and 80 others recruited from the Philippine­s by the district and issued J-1 visas will have new challenges as they work with the district’s highest-needs students.

Excitement and some trepidatio­n were common sentiments among the group that gathered in the

‘Stealing teachers’

Finding special education teachers is a challenge nationwide, Gentry said. Forty-two states reported a special education teacher shortage for the 2016-17 year. That led Clark County officials to consider creative

TEACHERS

solutions.

In April, administra­tors flew to the Philippine­s and interviewe­d 250 candidates, selecting 81. In 2005, the district took a similar trip, hiring 49 teachers.

“They have a mass number of teachers in the Philippine­s,” Gentry said. “We are stealing teachers.”

English is one of the national languages in the Philippine­s, so the teachers already speak English. The J-1 visas allow foreigners to come to the U.S. to teach, study or receive on the job training.

Officials can’t say why, but more teachers in the Philippine­s choose to specialize in special education than in the United States. Teachers in that country make between $5,000 and $7,000, while Clark County’s starting salary is $40,000.

At that point, leaving your homeland can become a no-brainer.

“They’re very frugal,” Gentry said, adding that many of the teachers send more home to support their families than they spend.

Calabano and fellow recruit John Matthew Melgar, 22, got their first glimpses of Clark County last week. It’s hotter anddrierth­antheywere­expecting, but they’re adjusting to their new lives.

The new transplant­s are all living in the same apartment complex in the southern Las Vegas Valley.

“You have each other. This is your family now,” Joseph

Uy, the principal at Ferron Elementary School, told them Tuesday. Uy, a native of the Philippine­s, recalled that he cried and questioned why he had come when he arrived in 1987.

The district now has about 400 teacher vacancies for the 2017-18 year, including about 150 special education openings. By the time the year starts, Gentry expects the vacancy count to be to closer to 200, a low percentage in a district with more than 16,000 teacher slots.

Creating a community

Clark County has become something of a hot spot for Filipinos, Gentry said.

Census data estimate that Filipinos make up about 5 percent of the county’s population, or more than 96,000 residents, compared with 1 percent nationally. Most Filipinos in the Las Vegas area work in hospitalit­y or nursing, but teachers represent a growing sector.

“You are our soul; you are representi­ng all of us,” Loni Andal of the National Federation of Filipino American Associatio­ns told the new arrivals.

The associatio­n is hosting an event Saturday to connect the teachers with local leaders and community members.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

 ?? Michael Quine ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Filipino recruits Amy Irene Salayog, left, and Gina Mejia attend orientatio­n given by the Clark County School District on Tuesday for more than 70 teachers from the Philippine­s.
Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-journal Filipino recruits Amy Irene Salayog, left, and Gina Mejia attend orientatio­n given by the Clark County School District on Tuesday for more than 70 teachers from the Philippine­s.

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