North Carolina
Related: About this forumThe coming crisis: Too few teachers for NC
--40 The percentage decrease in education majors at UNC-Asheville over the same period
--39 The percentage decrease at Winston-Salem State
--29 The percentage decrease at UNC-Chapel Hill
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Problematically, N.C. public and private colleges of education produce only about 61 percent of the teachers needed to fill our classrooms. The remaining teachers come primarily from other states, and a small number enter through other routes into the profession. Reliance upon teachers from other states moving to North Carolina was tricky in good times. Now, with N.C. education budgets and salaries squeezed, the allure of teaching in our public schools is certainly diminished.
The shortage of trained teachers means it is harder for public schools to fill teaching positions, with schools having to hire more individuals through lateral entry and without formal teacher education and, in many cases, relying on long-term substitutes. Our students are facing the consequences of this gap in qualified teachers, and it is most pronounced in rural and urban districts.
Additionally, just as North Carolina is seeking to expand schools that have a science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) focus, these are precisely the teaching fields that are in shortest supply.
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Scott Imig, Ph.D., is an associate professor of education at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Robert Smith, Ph.D., is a professor of education at UNCW.
Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/11/08/4302959/the-coming-crisis-too-few-teachers.html#storylink=cpy
earthside
(6,960 posts)We don't need old fashioned 'teachers' ... we just need computer programs set to Common Core curriculum that show students how to pass their yearly standardized tests.
CRK7376
(2,227 posts)in 30 days and have applications in to ten school systems in or around Winston-Salem area. I have 12 years experience teaching Social Studies in Stokes County Schools and want back in the teaching profession. I have had one interview so far and did not make it past the second round of interviews with Teach for America. Several Social Studies positions are posted recently in my area and I have applied for them, with luck, in the next several months I will find a Social Studies position and return to a high school classroom.
WorseBeforeBetter
(11,441 posts)Why do you think you didn't make it past the second round of interviews with TFA?
CRK7376
(2,227 posts)willing to serve in W-S/Greensboro/High point area. Family lives in the W-S area and after serving Uncle Sam for so long we are tired of moving. We choose to stay in W-S area and that my have forced their hand. As a certified teacher with 12 years classroom experience under my belt they still wanted me to spend 5 weeks this summer in Tulsa creating lesson plans, having them proofed by a mentor and teaching summer school for part of each day. A week or two seminar/workshop would be ok....but 5 weeks. Too much for a teacher with lots of experience. So I told them I would bow out of the process. I will be teaching soon somewhere in the W-S area, just not for TFA.
1handclapn
(105 posts)especially when there are no text books in the classes. because rich corporations got big tax cuts