San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Schools desperate for subs

Teacher shortage, high absences during pandemic add up to crisis

- By Joe Hong Joe Hong writes for CalMatters a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics.

Kelly Rhoden, the principal at Nevada Union High School, spent her morning Monday scrambling to find substitute­s for her absent teachers.

The school, about 60 miles northeast of Sacramento, has 86 teachers. Thirteen were out on Monday.

“We have quite a few teachers out either because they’ve tested positive, they’re symptomati­c or they have their own children who are in quarantine,” she said. “At the end of the day, we just don’t have enough substitute­s.”

Across California, the substitute teacher shortage is another burden in an already challengin­g school year. Administra­tors are taking desperate steps to make sure there’s an adult in the classroom when teachers are absent, resorting to using nonteachin­g staff who have their own critical responsibi­lities during the typical school day, especially during the first fully in-person school year of the pandemic.

Nevada Union High and the rest of the Nevada Joint Union High School District share a pool of substitute teachers with eight other districts in Nevada County. Last year, the pool was stretched so thin that Nevada Joint Union shut down schools due to a sub shortage. District officials are worried it’ll happen again.

“Last October, we had to go back to distance learning because I ran out of substitute­s,” said Brett McFadden, superinten­dent of Nevada Joint Union High. “Not because we didn’t have enough protective equipment. I ran out of adults.” McFadden said even he has had to sub for a class.

According to county Superinten­dent Scott Lay, the county went from having about 200 substitute teachers before the pandemic to fewer than 70 today. As a result, principals like Rhoden are forced to place counselors and administra­tors in classrooms. Even then, Rhoden fell short three substitute­s on Monday.

The substitute shortage is worsened by an underlying teacher shortage. Several district officials interviewe­d by CalMatters said they started the school year with some classrooms being assigned a long-term substitute.

In hopes of attracting more subs, districts have increased their pay rates, triggering similar raises at neighborin­g districts. But administra­tors say money won’t create more educators.

“You get to a point where you’re just begging and borrowing people from all over the district,” McFadden said.

California schools are grappling with a critical shortage of substitute teachers during a year already reeling from the pandemic.

“I love my students dearly, but I’m not gonna leave 30 of them alone in a room.”

How bad is the sub shortage? California has seen declining numbers of new substitute teachers every year, according to the California Commission on Teacher Credential­ing, the agency that licenses full-time and substitute teachers.

In the 2018-19 school year, the agency issued about 64,000 substitute teaching permits. In 2020-21, it issued close to 47,000.

Prospectiv­e substitute teachers need to hold a bachelor’s degree and meet the “basic skills requiremen­t” either by providing a standardiz­ed test score or by having B’s or better in college-level reading, writing and mathematic­s courses.

“It’s not terrifical­ly challengin­g to get a sub permit in California,” said Mary Sandy, the executive director of the Commission on Teacher Credential­ing. “But the need is utterly critical.”

At San Bernardino City Unified in Southern California, the number of substitute­s at the district’s disposal shrank from 1,000 before the pandemic to 700. Marcus Funchess, who oversees human resources for the district, said only about 92% of teacher absences are covered each day.

“Right now our substitute teacher shortage is a concern due to the number of teachers who might need to quarantine,” he said. “On one day we could have up to 45 jobs uncovered.”

Why is the substitute teacher force shrinking? Aaron Estrada, a substitute in the

Chula Vista Elementary School District, said many substitute­s left the profession last year because the pay wasn’t worth the risk of being surrounded by unvaccinat­ed students and staff.

“It’s difficult to try to make a living off substitute teaching,” he said. “For a lot of people, it didn’t seem worth it.”

Some school districts, especially those in rural communitie­s, rely heavily on retired teachers to work as substitute­s. But for those older educators, the risk of returning to the classroom is even greater.

“Retirees have their own fears,” said Rhoden, the principal at Nevada Union High. “They want to keep their own health at the forefront.” Mike Teng, CEO of Swing Education, a company that helps over 200 school districts find substitute teachers, said the sub shortage is consistent with staff shortages in the service sector.

“It’s tough. Substitute teachers have left and haven’t come back,” he said. “And we’re potentiall­y trying to compete with all the other industries for workers.”

Rosi Martinez, the president of the local teachers union at Chula Vista Elementary in San Diego County, said former substitute teachers are reluctant to return because they’re making more money from unemployme­nt benefits.

“At one point we were only filling about half of teacher absences,” she said. “That’s pretty much unheard of.”

In an effort to entice substitute teachers back into the classroom, the administra­tion at the Chula Vista Elementary School District held an emergency

meeting in early August to increase pay for subs.

The district increased pay for short-term subs from $122 to $200 a day. For long-term substitute­s, the pay went from $180 to $283 a day. In response, the neighborin­g Sweetwater Union High School District increased its rate from $160 to $240 a day.

“You can say it’s a bidding war, but that’s just the market,” Teng said. “But substitute teachers still aren’t paid enough.”

Elk Grove Unified in Sacramento County has proposed raising its substitute pay rates, especially for current and retired teachers and counselors. These substitute­s could make $350 a day, once the district’s school board approves the raises.

At San Bernardino City Unified, the district gave substitute­s a 2% raise and paid $12,000 for digital billboards to advertise its substitute positions on the freeways. Funchess said the district would increase pay if this aggressive advertisin­g campaign doesn’t attract enough substitute­s.

Apart from raising pay, district leaders said the Commission for Teacher Credential­ing could take steps to remove other barriers like the $100 fee and the requiremen­t for a bachelor’s degree.

“We could use any temporary reprieve,” Funchess said. “Some other states don’t require a bachelor’s degree to be a substitute teacher. It’s worth a discussion here.”

The substitute shortage is just a symptom of an ongoing teacher shortage, according to district administra­tors. Because some districts across the state started the school year

with unfilled teaching positions, some students have only had a substitute teacher in the weeks since school started.

In the 2020-21 school year, 13,558 of California’s teachers retired, 1,000 more than the previous year, according to data from the California State Teachers’ Retirement System. Mary Sandy at the Commission on Teacher Credential­ing said the agency must credential about 20,000 teachers a year to keep up with the staffing needs of districts across the state. Last year, only about 14,000 teachers received their credential­s.

And while this year’s state budget includes a historic amount of funding for California’s schools, no amount of money can overcome the bottom line of a personnel shortage.

At Nevada Joint Union High School District, McFadden, the superinten­dent, said that despite daily rate going up from $100 to $150 per day, finding substitute­s continues to be a challenge, especially in more rural and remote parts of the county.

“I don’t have a money problem,” he said. “I have a resource problem.”

Until district and state officials find more effective ways to recruit qualified teachers, principals like Rhoden will start their days rushing to put an adult in every classroom.

“I don’t know if another pay raise would work, to be honest,” Rhoden said. “I just don’t think there’s enough teachers out there.”

 ?? Constanza Hevia H. / Special to The Chronicle ??
Constanza Hevia H. / Special to The Chronicle

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