The Boyertown Area Times

Area school districts hire more than 100 teachers

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com

There were no shortage of new faces on the first day of school this year.

August is the season for new hires and a review of personnel votes in area districts show more than 100 new teachers have been hired in the eight public school districts covered by The Mercury.

That review also shows that some districts are weathering more staff changes than others.

• In the Boyertown Area School District, three new teachers have been hired and Kelly Mason was promoted from assistant principal at Boyertown Area Senior High School to the principal at Pine Forge Elementary School, replacing Stephan Pron who is resigning. This is in addition to the hiring of a new superinten­dent, Dana Bedden

• In the Pottstown School District, no less than 19 new teachers have been hired over the summer, along with 11 other employees including one new principal, two assistant principals, a new director of career and technical education and a new director of co-curricular activities.

• Next door, the Pottsgrove School Board approved eight teacher resignatio­ns and 11 new teachers, four of them year-long substitute­s, at the meeting on Aug. 14..

• In Phoenixvil­le, four new teachers and five new long-term substitute­s were hired in August and the district is still looking to fill the assistant principal post at the Early Learning Center/Manavon Elementary School.

• At its Aug. 20 meeting, the Spring-Ford Area School Board saw seven resignatio­ns and the hiring of 15 new teachers, three school psychologi­sts and nine classroom assistants.

Spring-Ford Students and parents will also find new principals at Limerick and Brooke elementary schools in the wake of two retirement­s there.

• In July and August, the Perkiomen Valley School Board hired nine new teachers, eight long-term substitute­s, four school counselors, two of which were replacemen­ts, two new special education supervisor­s and gave Superinten­dent Barbara Russell a 2.8 percent raise, making her new salary $190,180.

• Over the course of two school board meetings in July and August, the Owen J. Roberts School Board hired 23 new teachers, 10 of which were long-term substitute­s.

Also, Owen J. Roberts High School will have a new principal, with Sean Early serving as interim principal, replacing Richard Marchini, who was promoted to director of pupil services. Eric Wentzel is the new dean of students at the high school.

And at Owen J. Roberts Middle School, assistant principal Corbin Stoltzfus was promoted to principal and Kevin Kirby appointed to serve as the new assistant principal there.

• At a special Aug. 13 voting meeting, the Daniel Boone School Board approved the hiring of eight new teachers and two guidance counselors, one of whom is a long-term substitute.

Hours before that meeting, Daniel Boone Superinten­dent James Harris made headlines by announcing his resignatio­n. Assistant Superinten­dent Robert Hurley was appointed to serve as interim superinten­dent

• The Upper Perkiomen School Board hired ten new full-time teachers, two parttime teachers and replaced one speech therapist at its Aug. 15 meeting.

All of this hiring may seem like a lot of change, but it’s nothing new in Pennsylvan­ia where a growing teacher shortage is making new teachers harder to find and higher-paying districts more attractive to teachers looking to improve their bottom line.

Fewer teachers in the pipeline

CBS News reported that nationally, fewer college students are studying education. Enrollment­s dropped by 35 percent between 2009 and 2014, according to the Learning Policy Institute, a nonpartisa­n organizati­on that focuses on education policy.

That number is almost doubled in the Keystone State, where data from the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Education shows that from 2013 to 2015, the number of students graduating from teacher-training programs plummeted by 63 percent.

In 2013, 16,631 students graduated from teachertra­ining programs; by 2015, that number had dropped to 6,125, according to the state’s figures.

That may be due to two major economic factors, the fact that teacher salaries were cut during the Great Recession and never recovered, and the fact that college students face increasing student debt when they graduate, Linda Darling Hammond, the president and CEO of the Learning Policy Institute, said during a press call.

CBS reported that nationally, “teachers are earning almost 2 percent less than they did in 1999 and 5 percent less than their 2009 pay, according to the U.S. Department of Education. “

“There are studies about this that show people choose careers based on the salary in relation to the debt they have from college,” Darling Hammond said. “People can’t stay in a profession where they can’t afford to support their own families.”

Darling-Hammond’s observatio­n echoes comments made by former Pottstown Middle School teacher Michael DiDonato when he talked to the school board in 2017 about his resignatio­n.

He said while he loved working in Pottstown, he and his wife had a baby on the way and they simply could not afford to turn down higher pay at other districts.

Last month, the Pottstown School Board accepted the resignatio­n of his wife Dana, who has taught in Pottstown since 2009.

PA teachers paid less than others

According to a February report released by the Economic Policy Institute: “Pennsylvan­ia public school teachers are undercompe­nsated relative to other fulltime workers with similar education and skills. Their weekly wages are 12.1 percent lower than the wages of comparable full-time employees in Pennsylvan­ia, and their weekly compensati­on (including both wages and benefits) is 6.8 percent lower.”

The Economic Policy Institute is a national, nonprofit think tank that focuses on “the economic condition of low- and middle-income Americans and their families.”

Ironically, the national report Darling-Hammond was referencin­g on the press call shows that Pennsylvan­ia’s average starting teacher salary of $44,144 is 12.5 percent higher than the national average of $38,617.

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