The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Going back to school soon? Ask what you can do for your teacher

- Maureen Downey

A veteran teacher who took a job with Gwinnett attended orientatio­n last week and was thrilled when associate superinten­dent Linda Anderson announced: “In Gwinnett, there are two types of employees – teachers and those that support teachers.”

“It’s been super inspiratio­nal,” said the teacher. “That mentality is what places Gwinnett above so many other districts.”

Many back-to-school news stories concentrat­e on what districts can do to welcome back parents and kids but give little attention to the returning teaching force. And that’s a mistake because the life-changing work in a school occurs in the classroom.

When I began writing about education, school leaders didn’t fret much about a revolving door of teacher talent. They believed a long line of new teachers waited. Not any longer, as districts struggle to fill math, science, world language and special education jobs.

The teacher walkouts this year in Oklahoma, Kentucky, Colo- rado, West Virginia and Arizona revealed the fault lines in the profession, which confronts a slowing pipeline of new recruits.

A 2017 Learning Policy Institute study found 90 percent of open teaching posts are the result of people leaving the profession. While retirement­s play a role, the report noted two-thirds of teachers depart for other reasons, most citing dissatisfa­ction with the job.

How can districts support teachers and entice new ones to enter the field?

“School systems that want to retain their top talent better have good strategies and processes

in place to support those new teachers — starting with a smooth and friendly hiring process, through those first few days of induction and then followed with supportive mentoring during that first year. Otherwise, chances are high that those good teachers will leave,” said Steve Dolinger, former Fulton Schools superinten­dent and now president of the Georgia Partnershi­p for Excellence in Education.

University of Georgia education professor Peter Smagorinsk­y said, “The best way I know of to support teachers is to listen to them. Teachers know better than anyone how schools work, what kids need, what teachers need to do their best work. But they’re one of two groups of people nobody solicits input from: kids and teachers. They won’t agree, and you will get contradict­ory recommenda­tions. But at least they feel recognized, consulted, listened to and respected when administra­tors build a school culture around the experience­s of the most knowledgea­ble people in the building.”

Leslie Hazle Bussey, executive director of the Georgia Leadership Institute for School Improvemen­t, cited three conditions: “Ensure a high quality principal in place at every school who understand­s their role as school leader is to support teachers and teacher growth as the key lever for student success; promote a districtwi­de culture of learning that balances pursuit of academic success with nurturing healthy school climate, including initiative­s that attend to teacher and student well-being, as opposed to a singular focus on test score improvemen­t; and cultivate teacher leadership by pushing principals to create meaningful opportunit­ies for teachers to be embedded in decision-making and leadership of mission-critical work at every school.”

At Atlanta’s top-rated Grady High School, principal Betsy Bockman said, “What I try to impart: 1. Everyone’s job (every employee at Grady ) is to do all we can every day to support students. 2. The employees who are not teachers at Grady ... our job is to remove every single barrier that keeps teachers from teaching. Make the job of teaching easier.”

Georgia Department of Education deputy superinten­dent Garry McGiboney said, “Teachers thrive in a school with a positive school climate. All of the elements that define a positive school climate such as engagement, motivation, kind words, connectedn­ess — so they don’t feel alone — are what teachers desperatel­y want and need.”

Monroe educator Monica Henson, who led an online Georgia charter high school, said, “One of the best ways that districts can support teachers is to ensure that less-experience­d teachers have several opportunit­ies to observe capable, high-performing veteran colleagues. This is best achieved in small groups with a knowledgea­ble administra­tor participat­ing and leading a debrief afterward. Similar to the hospital instructio­n model used for new resident physicians who go on rounds with an experience­d chief doctor.”

My own view, after years of talking to teachers about job concerns, is that most want to do their best for their students but often feel attacked when told they need to improve. To grow, develop and retain effective teachers, Georgia schools must first create a culture in which teachers trust that administra­tors want them to succeed.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY KENT D. JOHNSON ?? At a DeKalb Schools job fair last year, a candidate talks with a representa­tive of Rainbow Elementary. Metro Atlanta districts use a variety of outreach to attract teachers.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY KENT D. JOHNSON At a DeKalb Schools job fair last year, a candidate talks with a representa­tive of Rainbow Elementary. Metro Atlanta districts use a variety of outreach to attract teachers.
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