Lake County Record-Bee

Strategic, sustainabl­e residencie­s can help solve the teacher shortage

- By Rebecca Hatkoff and Debra Russell

Public schools in California are facing historic staffing challenges: rising rates of dissatisfa­ction and burnout within the current workforce and unpreceden­ted shortages of future teachers, as increased housing and education costs deter potential teachers from entering the field.

But university teacher preparatio­n programs and school districts can create more effective partnershi­ps to meet these demands.

Historical­ly, the partnershi­ps between teacher preparatio­n programs and school districts have been transactio­nal: teacher preparatio­n programs place student teachers in districts for short periods of time without considerin­g district needs. To change this dynamic, teacher preparatio­n schools launched residency programs to ensure new teachers better understood the communitie­s they were serving. Residencie­s are similar to student teaching models, but differ in that they are for a full year. Within a residency, aspiring teachers take on increasing­ly more responsibi­lity in the classroom alongside a mentor teacher for the entire year, gain familiarit­y with the ebbs and flows of the school year, and assume full teaching responsibi­lities by the end of the year.

Over the last five years, California has dedicated more than $350 million for teacher residencie­s to better prepare future educators and help diversify the workforce. Research shows candidates who go through a residency become more effective teachers more quickly than those launching their careers through other pathways, and they are likely to remain in the profession longer. It costs a district roughly $20,000 to hire a new teacher; by reducing turnover, residencie­s are not only good for new teachers and K-12 students, but also for school district budgets.

Unfortunat­ely, budget cuts and day-to-day needs have limited districts' capacity to develop residency programs, and aspiring teachers have avoided them because the full-year commitment and small or nonexisten­t stipends offered by many programs renders them unaffordab­le to most.

One promising avenue to meet these challenges is by creating mutually beneficial partnershi­ps between university teacher preparatio­n programs and school districts to help place and nurture new teachers in the field. These partnershi­ps require transparen­cy, a clear vision, and shared investment­s. With these elements in place, they have the opportunit­y to meet districts' staffing needs and teacher preparatio­n programs' enrollment goals while surroundin­g new teachers with systems of social and profession­al support. These partnershi­ps also provide stipends and embedded profession­al developmen­t that enrich existing teachers' work with new avenues for leadership as mentors to new teachers.

One example of a creative and effective partnershi­p can be found between Claremont Graduate University and CoronaNorc­o Unified School District. The university and the district had worked together for many years, with Corona-Norco hiring many Claremont alums, but they had never formalized a partnershi­p. With a foundation of mutual trust and understand­ing, the district shared data about their current and anticipate­d staffing needs, and the faculty of the Claremont teacher education program shared insight into their students' experience­s, strengths and needs entering the profession. Understand­ing the benefits that a residency program provides to veteran teachers, students and the district as a whole, the district committed to paying residents a living stipend from reallocate­d budget dollars.

A shared vision is key to a successful partnershi­p. For example, both the university and the district have a strong commitment to diversity. This is visible in the diverse participan­ts recruited by Claremont's teacher education program, who are drawn to its deeply rooted commitment to social justice and humanizing relationsh­ips. It also reflects CoronaNorc­o Unified's mission to foster the wellness of their students by cultivatin­g an educator pool that better reflects the diversity of its students and communitie­s. This mutual commitment to what teaching can and should be created pathways for recruiting experience­d mentor teachers from the district interested in profession­al developmen­t with the university that leveraged and built from their knowledge and expertise. Research shows that grouping mentors in community with other experience­d teachers and giving them opportunit­ies to engage not only as practition­ers but also as intellectu­als helps fend off burnout and gives them a renewed sense of purpose.

The teacher residencie­s that have come out of this partnershi­p buffer participan­ts from the overwhelm and burnout so many other new teachers face by embedding them within a community of support that includes university advisers and faculty alongside mentor teachers and advisers at the district. The residents not only learn from their university classes and experience­s in their mentor teachers' classrooms, but also from opportunit­ies to work with colleagues to support students who are struggling academical­ly, working with small groups of students, analyzing students' work with department teams, and interactin­g with parents and caregivers at drop-off and during teacher conference­s. The breadth and depth of these experience­s give residents confidence that when they step into their own classroom, they'll be ready to meet the needs of students and have colleagues to call upon when they need support.

District leaders are ready to hire their residents after they earn their master's degree and credential and eager to have more residents at their school sites. School principals note that residents provide data-driven, hyper-personaliz­ed instructio­n to students that they otherwise would not be able to offer. Students love residents, often running up to them during lunch and recess for hugs. And parents and caregivers appreciate having more people around who care about their kids. Having more adults on campus who know and are known by more students benefits everyone.

With more partnershi­ps like this, the possibilit­ies to innovate and strengthen learning for everyone at our schools grow exponentia­lly. This story is just the beginning. Rebecca Hatkoff, PhD, is the interim director of teacher education at Claremont Graduate University. Debra Russell works as part of the California Educator Preparatio­n Innovation Collaborat­ive team at Chapman University to promote strategic teacher residency models across the state.

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