Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
54977883
label
Teacher Shortage
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
Source extras
naId
54977883
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
otherTitles
42-t-7367454-20130371S-022-008-2017
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
1af5f8fb704b19aa
ocrText
JAN-20-00 15:05 FROM: Great City Schools ID: 202 393 2427 PAGE 1/4 COUNCIL OF THE GREAT CITY SCHOOLS Council of the Great City Schools Fax Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Birmingham Boston Broward County Buffalo Date: 1/20/00 Charlotte-Mecklenberg Chicago Clark County Cleveland Columbus To: Dallas Dayton Denver Name: Bethany Little Des Moines Detroit El Paso Organization: White Hance Fort Worth Fresno Houston Fax: (202) 456-5581 Indianapolis 7028 Long Beach Los Angeles Louisville Memphis From: Miami-Dade County Milwaukee Minneapolis Name: Nashville Shirley Latherca New Orleans New York Newark Norfolk Comments: Oakland Oklahoma City Omaha Orange County Philadelphia Pittsburgh PlEase Call sace ben receive This Portland Providence Richmond Rochester report. Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Pages: 30 (including this one) St. Louis St. Paul Toledo Council of the Great City Schools Tucson 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Suite 702 Washington, D.C. 20004 Tulsa (202) 393-2427 (202) 393-2400 (fax) http://www.cgcs.org JAN-20-00 15:05 FROM: Great City Schools ID:202 393 2427 PAGE 2/4 News...News... News...News... Council of the Great City Schools Council of the Great City Schools 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Suite 702 Washington, D.C. 20004 EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE CONTACT: Henry Duvall January 19, 2000 (10 a.m., EST) (202) 393-2427 Urban Schools Face Critical Teacher Shortage Demand Greatest for Math, Science and Special Education Teachers WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 - Demand for classroom teachers in the nation's urban schools has reached critical proportions, primarily in special education, mathematics and science, with shortages projected to continue through the next five years, according to a report released today. A study titled The Urban Teacher C hallenge Teacher Demand and Supply in the Great City Schools reveals that virtually all the nation's big-city school districts reported in a survey that they are in immediate need for math (95 percent), science (98 percent) and special education teachers (98 percent). And not far behind, demand is also high for teachers in the areas of bilingual education (73 percent), English-as-a-Second Language (68 percent) and educational technology (68 percent). The study of 40 large urban school districts was conducted by Recruiting New Teachers (RNT), a non-profit organization working to build the nation's teacher workforce; the Council of the Great City Schools, a coalition of the nation's 57 largest urban public school systems; and the Council of the Great City Colleges of Education, which comprises schools of education serving those cities. The three groups in 1994 joined forces to become the Urban Teacher Collaborative, aiming to improve the quality, diversity and cultural sensitivity of America's urban teacher workforce. This is the collaborative's second Urban Teacher Challenge study since 1996, with the latest report indicating even higher demands for teachers. High demand can also be found for minority teachers. Nearly three-quarters, or 73 percent, of responding urban school districts in the survey indicated that they have an immediate need for teachers of color. Minorities make up approximately 69 percent of student enrollment compared with only 36 percent of the teaching force, the study notes. "More than ever today, we need Americans to step up to the challenge of teaching all of our children," says Council Executive Director Michael Casserly, "Helping our children learn in the inner cities can present immeasurable rewards and satisfaction." (more) JAN-20-00 15:05 FROM:Great City Schools ID: 202 393 2427 PAGE 3/4 Urban Schools Face Critical Teacher Shortage Page 2 Urban school systems have developed and exercised a variety of creative and innovative ways to recruit and retain teachers, including offering on-the-spot contracts to hire teachers and providing induction and support programs to keep talented new teachers in the classroom, the study shows. Nearly all of the urban school districts surveyed recruit at historically African-American and Hispanic colleges. Urban districts also employ stopgap measures, such as hiring non-certified teachers and using long-term substitutes, to relieve classroom shortages, On the supply side of the demand-supply equation, The Urban Teachers Challenge reveals problems at the nation's colleges of education - the chief source for qualified teaching candidates. Teacher education students "are still flocking to over-subscribed programs," the report stresses. These are instructional arcas, such as elementary education, social studies/history and early childhood, that have the most appeal to students pursuing teaching careers -- despite severe shortages in other disciplines. The Council of the Great City Colleges of Education surveyed 45 colleges and found that students at more than half of them responding had low interest in pursuing a teaching career in mathematics (55.6 percent) and foreign languages (53.3 percent), while nearly half, or 44.4 percent, had low interest in becoming science teachers. According to Council Chair Phil Rusche, dean of the School of Education at the University of California, Northridge, urban colleges of education have taken action to realign their programs to attract students to high-demand areas in urban education. "Now the time has come to scale up these programs in a comprehensive way," he says. The 26-page report gives city school district-by-district data on teacher demand and recruitment strategies. The districts are Arlanta, Baltimore, Birmingham, Broward County (Fort Lauderdale), Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland, Columbus, Denver, Des Moines, Detroit, Fort Worth, Fresno, Houston, Indianapolis, Jefferson County (Louisville), Los Angeles, Memphis, Miami-Dade, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Nashville, New Orleans, New York City, Newark, Oakland, Omaha, Philadelphia, Piersburgh, Portland, Richmond, Rochester, Sacramento, Saint Paul, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Toledo and Tucson. ### JAN-20-00 15:06 FROM : Great City Schools ID:202 393 2427 PAGE 4/4 THE URBAN TEACHER CHALLENGE FEACHER DEMAND AND SUPPLYIN THE GREAT CITY SCHOOLS Nancy R. Hoit 1175 Main Street Hingham, MA 02043 To: BETHONY NITLE Date: Subject: No. of Pages Including Cover Receiver's FAX: 202-456-5581 Additional Comments: For further information, or if there are problems in transmission: PLEASE NOTE NEW AREA CODE: Hoit Phone: 781-749-5563 Holt FAX: 781-749-5638 P.01 1 617 749 5638 NANCY HOIT JAN-20-2000 13:55 MEMORANDUM TO: Nancy Hoit FROM: Dr. James P. Comer DATE: January 13, 2000 RE: Likely Supporters for our Yale Child Study Center School Development Program Education Extension Service Model 1. Ms. Hillary Clinton - 1 proposed the idea to her in the White House in August of 1997. She liked the idea and suggested that I speak with Secretary of Education Riley. 2. Secretary Riley and Senior Staff - I spoke to Secretary Riley and Senior Staff in the fall of 1997. We submitted a proposal which was eventually approved. 3. Assistant Secretary of Education (Office of Education and Research) liked the idea and gave final approval. We received initial funds in 1998. The grant is structured so that we will receive 4.5 million dollars over a 5-year period with the expectation that other departments of government, foundations, corporations and private individuals will be involved. 4. Other persons knowledgeable about our work and likely to be supportive: a) Ms. Tipper Gore - - First personal contact in April of 1994 when she visited one of our project schools in New Haven with our Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro. Later we received honors at the same time from the American Psychiatric Association, and in 1997 from the Judge Baker Children's Center at Harvard University. b) Congressman Richard Gephardt - First became familiar with our work because one of his constituents read my book, implemented the approach without training and got good outcomes; and called this to the attention of the Congressman. Congressman Gephardt visited our Program in New Haven and subsequently I spoke at a conference on families that he sponsored in Missouri. At his request 1 made a presentation to a section of the Democratic Caucus at a retreat in Virginia two years ago and to a Democratic Caucus Study Group in Washington, D.C. last year. 1 will make a presentation to the Caucus on February 6, 2000. P.02 5668 749 617 I NANCY HOIT JAN-20-2000 13:56 TOTAL P.03 MEMORANDUM January 13, 2000 Page 2 c) Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro - She represents the New Haven area and has visited schools and people using our Program on several occasions. She has called me to discuss education issues before she made presentations to the d) Congress and the media. Her Education Aide attended our Summer Institute in 1999. e) Congressman Elijah Cummings - Consulted me regarding his interest in improving education in the Baltimore area. His Legislative Aide attended our 1999 Summer Institute. I spoke at a conference on education in Baltimore sponsored by the Congressman in September, 1999. He has expressed an interest in supporting our work in any way possible. f) Senator Joseph Lieberman - He is familiar with and supportive of our work. I was among a group of advisors to him regarding education issues last Spring. g) Senator Christopher Dodd - He is familiar with and supportive of our work. h) Congressman Sheila Jackson-Lee, whom I believe is now Chair of the Children's Caucus in the Congress. She is a Yale graduate and is familiar with and supportive of our work. i) Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald from California - I served on the National Board of Professional Teaching Standards with her. She is a former teacher and very supportive of our work. j) All of the members of the Black Caucus in Congress know of our work, some much better than others. Charlie Rangel is a personal friend. k) Congressman Major Owens is very familiar with our work. 1) Tim Shriver (Eunice Kennedy's son) worked in our Program for a year and is very supportive. He is an in-law of Andrew Cuomo, Secretary of HUD. m) Donna Shalala - She is very familiar with and supportive of our work. n) Janet Reno - She is very familiar with and supportive of our work. I served on a Juvenile Justice Commission with her about 20 years ago. o) Governor James Hunt, North Carolina - He was the Chair of the National Board of Professional Teaching Standards and the Commission on Teaching in America's Future, on which I served. He is familiar with the fact that some of the most successful schools in North Carolina are using our model and has long been supportive of our work. JPC:kb-s 20'd 1 617 749 5638 NANCY HOIT JAN-20-2000 13:56 JAN-20-00 14:21 FROM: Great City Schools ID:202 393 2427 PAGE 1/14 COUNCIL OF THE GREAT CITY SCHOOLS Council of the Great City Schools Fax Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Birmingham Boston Broward County Buffalo Date: 1/20/00 Charlotte-Mecklenberg Chicago Clark County Cleveland Columbus To: Dallas Dayton Denver Name: Bethany Little Des Moines Detroit El Paso Organization: White Home Fort Worth Fresno Houston Fax: (202) 456-5581 Indianapolis 7028 Long Beach Los Angeles Louisville Memphis From: Miami-Dade County Milwaukee Minneapolis Name: Nashville Shriley Latherca New Orleans New York Newark Norfolk Oakland Comments: Oklahoma City Omaha Orange County Philadelphia Pittsburgh PlEase Call Dace ben receive This Portland Providence Richmond Rochester regrest. Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Pages: 30 (including this one) St. Louis St. Paul Toledo Council of the Great City Schools Tucson 1301 Pennsvlvania Avenue. N.W. Suire 702 Washington. D.C. 20004 Tulsa Washington, D.C. (202) 393-2427 (202) 393-2400 (fax) http://www.cgcs.org with only 36 percent of the reaching force, the study notes. "More than ever today, we need Americans to step up to the challenge of teaching all of our children," says Council Executive Director Michael Casserly, "Helping our children learn in the inner cities can present immeasurable rewards and satisfaction." (more) # # # JAN-20-00 14:21 FROM Great City Schools ID:202 393 2427 PAGE Th Counts an the Great Otty Schools is the organization in the of the luarvely representing the needs of in ban public schools. Composed p 56 lange city school districts its missioners to promote the nause 0 urban sonco Stand 30 advocate usnang 44 suppings Apprectitut JOI Hon, research, and media relations Their ganiz fion The organization also provides a enehyork for school sharing districts sharing common problems to exchange infor- mation, and to collectively address news hallenges as they emerge in to deliver the the best public-putreach efforts ts order best possible education for the nation's youth. The Council of the Great City 3 & Colleges of Education is an association of urban higher education institution one dedicated to developing and maintaining B system of of mutually beneficial support for schools colleges and departments of et education, urban school systems nd other in interested organizations to improve teaching and learning in urean settings Currently 67 Great City Colleges of Education belong to the association. 11100 EACHER aborative was ave quality, the insitivity nation entworkforce. Recrutting New Teachers, Inc. non organization founded esteem for the states profession, expand the pool remaind land improve the nation recruitment, develop alrand diversity policie and practices RNTs programs and conducting and awareness to to rai esteem for che teaching protel protession offering counsel and info information prospective teachers; Conve aing national confer conferences ences OCHEINS on teac bed recruitment, developm and undersiversity, providing technical assistance states and school districts conduct conducting research on various vahoulameds of teacher recruit- uit- ment and Date development; publishing guide she monegrashs and reports; and ser serving asian it information clearing- house pouse or 00 accuitment and development issues THE URBAN TEACHER COLLABORATIVE RECRUITING NEW TEACHERS BOARD OF DIRECTORS Recruiting New Teachers, Inc. (RNT) Louis Harris, Interim Chairman Jacqueline Jordan Irvine David Haselkorn, President Public Opinion Analyst Candler Professor of Urban Education, Emory University Council of the Great City Schools (CGCS) J. Richard Munro, Vice Chairman Michael Casserly, Executive Director Former Chairman and CEO, Edward James Olmos Time Warner, Inc. Olmos Productions, Actor Council of the Great City Colleges of Education (CGOCE) A. Richard Belding, Treasurer Richard S. Pechter Philip Rusche, Chair Head of School, Green Fields Country Director, Donaldson, Day School Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc. WRITERS Elizabeth F. Fideler, Executive Vice President, RNT Anthony J. Alvarado Phylicia Rashad Elizabeth D. Foster, Policy and Research Associate, RNT Chanceller of Instruction, Actor JAN-20-00 14:24 FROM:Great City Schools Shirley Schwartz, Director of Special Projects, CGCS San Diego City Schools David Rockefeller, Jr. GRAPHIC DESIGNER Martin A. Berkowitz Chairman, Rockefeller & Company, Inc. Tami Amoroso, Amoroso Design Senior Vice President, Prudential John H. Wherry Insurance Company of America President/Founder, Parent Institute Linda Darling-Hammond William Woodside ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Ducommun Professor of Teaching and Chairman, Sky Chefs, Inc. Teacher Education, Stanford University Special thanks go to the human resource directors and John Esty, Jr. deans who took the time to complete surveys and respond Past President, National Association of to follow-up questions, and to contributing RNT and CGCS staff members. The Urban Teacher Collaborative also Independent Schools acknowledges the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Ford Foundation for their support. ID:202 393 2427 PAGE 3/14 4 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 5 INTRODUCTION Although teacher shortages affect schools and districts across the country to varying The surveys returned by the districts and colleges of education updated information degrees, urban districts are facing unique challenges, owing to rapidly growing originally reported in The Urban Teacher Challenge in 1996. That report, which student enrollments, accelerating rates of teacher retirement, class size reduction provided a snapshot of teacher demand and preparation in Great City School initiatives, and demanding working conditions. Urban schools nationwide educate districts and Great City Colleges of Education, asserted, "Without improved teacher between 40% and 50% of the students who are not proficient in English, about 50% of recruitment and development practices, this nation will fail to build the qualified, minority students, and 40% of the country's low-income students. Schools in urban diverse, and culturally sensitive teacher workforce that today's and tomorrow's areas also contend with the lowest levels of student achievement, the highest dropout classrooms demand." This is still true almost four years later. Not only must large rates, and a disproportionate percentage of students with special needs.: Urban urban districts find and hire some 700,000 new teachers in the coming decade, they schools are also more likely to fill vacancies with teachers who have less-than-full must also ensure that each new recruit is well qualified. credentials and require additional on-the-job training." These realities further Teacher quality is emerging as one of the foremost concerns of school and exacerbate teacher turnover in our urban schools. university educators, parents, professional organizations, foundations, state To get a picture of teacher supply and preparation challenges in the nation's largest education officials, business leaders, and legislators across the country. According JAN-20-00 14:25 FROM:Great City Schools urban centers, the three partner organizations of the Urban Teacher Collaborative- to RNTs 1998 national poll, The Essential Profession, roughly nine out of ten Recruiting New Teachers, Inc. (RNT), the Council of the Great City Schools (CGCS), Americans believe that the best way to raise student achievement is to provide a and the Council of the Great City Colleges of Education (CGCCE)-conducted qualified teacher for every classroom. In fact, the public believes that improving the surveys of the Great City Schools and Colleges of Education in 1998-99. The Great quality of teachers is the most important issue facing public schools today, next to City Schools serve 6.5 million students, of whom 40% are African-American, 30% are school safety. Hispanic, 21% are white, 6.4% are Asian/Pacific Islander, and .6% are Alaskan/Native The 1998-99 surveys were designed to determine whether and in what ways large American. Just over 60% of students (60.5%) in the Great City Schools are eligible for urban districts and colleges of education are addressing teacher recruitment and free/reduced price lunch, 21% are English language learners, and 11.4% are students development challenges. RNT and the CGCS mailed surveys to all the human with individualized education programs.³ resource administrators in member Great City School districts. Of the (then) Great City School districts supplied information about their immediate and anticipat- 54 Great City School districts, 40 (74%) responded to the survey. At the same time, ed demand for teachers, recruitment strategies, and efforts to encourage diversity in surveys were also sent to the deans of the Great City Colleges of Education. Of the teacher workforce. Great City Colleges of Education provided information about the (then) 54 Great City Colleges of Education, 45 responded to the survey, for an their teacher preparation programs, subject areas of greatest interest to students, 83% response rate. Telephone calls were made to boost the return rate for both ID:202 393 2427 supports available to teacher preparation students, programs for nontraditional surveys and to clarify responses. This Urban Teacher Challenge report contains prospective teachers, and incentives and accommodations to attract applicants for the latest findings. high-need teaching areas. 1 Lippman, L., Burns, S., and McArthur, E. (1996). Urban Schools: The Challenge of Location and Poverty Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. PAGE National Commission on Teaching and America's Future. (1997). Doing What Matters Most: Investing in Quality Teaching. New York, NY: National Commission on Teaching and America's Future. Council of the Great City Schools, 1999. 4/14 6 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 7 GREAT CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT SURVEY RESULTS At the elementary level, special educators are in immediate demand in 97.5% of responding districts. Bilingual educators The district survey focused on demand for teachers, recruitment are also in immediate demand (67.5%), as are English as a strategies, and targeted recruitment pools. Please note that for Second Language (ESL) teachers (60%). These are also the certain questions, respondents could check off any combination subject areas in which anticipated demand is greatest. Fewer of answers; therefore, percentages may add up to more than 100. than half of the districts (42.5%) reported an immediate demand for reading teachers. Demand for Teachers The survey asked districts to respond to questions about immedi- Demand for Middle School Teachers ate and anticipated demand for teachers-the latter defined as demand expected over the next five years-in specific teaching No Demand Immediate Demand Anticipated Demand areas and grade levels. [See table specifying district-by-district 100 demand in Appendix 1.) Fewer than half (45%) of responding 97.5 JAN-20-00 FROM:Great City Schools districts have an immediate demand for early childhood teachers, 80 825 BC but nearly two-thirds (62.5%) anticipate demand in that area over 60 65 67.5 65 the next five years. Slightly more than half of the districts (52.5%) 57.5 50 have an immediate demand for elementary teachers and slightly 40 57.5 more (55%) anticipate demand. In addition, just over eighty 50 20 percent (82.5%) reported an immediate demand for male teachers 114 96 ... at the elementary level. 0 Special Mathematics Science ESL Bilingual Education * Multiple responses allowed Demand for K-6 Teachers Districts described a similar demand for special education No Demand Immediate Demand Anticipated Demand teachers at the middle school level-97.5% immediate demand and 65% anticipated demand. In addition, 82.5% of responding ID:202 393 2427 100 districts have an immediate demand for middle school 97.5 80 mathematics teachers and 67.5% have an anticipated demand. Middle school science teachers are also needed: 80% of 60 65 67.5 60 625 responding districts indicated an immediate demand, 65% an 415 525 55 40 45 anticipated demand. More than half (57.5%) of Great City 40 425 35 middle schools need both ESL and bilingual teachers. 20 71 25 PAGE 0 Special Bilingual ESL Elementary Early Childhood Reading Education Education * Multiple responses allowed 5/14 8 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 9 Demand for High School Teachers Teacher Demand Aggregated Across Grade Levels No Demand Immediate Demand Anticipated Demand Immediate Demand 100 100 975 95 95 975 97.5 95 80 80 55 G7.5 65 67.5 60 60 725 67.5 67.5 57.5 57.5 50 40 47.5 40 37.5 20 20 95 NO 75 0 0 Science Mathematics Special Educational ESL Bilingual Science Special Mathematics Bilingual ESL Educational Education Technology Education Technology Multiple responses allowed Multiple responses allowed JAN-20-00 City Schools Shortages in specific subject areas at the high school level in Demand for Teachers of Color Great City School districts are equally pressing. Ninety-seven Nearly three-quarters of responding Great City School districts percent of responding districts reported an immediate demand indicated that they have an immediate need for teachers of color and 65% an anticipated demand for high school science teachers. (72.5%), and 55% of responding districts anticipate demand for Ninety-five percent (95%) of responding districts cited an teachers of color. In fact, just two districts (Birmingham, with 64% immediate demand for both mathematics and special education teachers of color, and New Orleans, with 78%) noted they have teachers at the high school level, 67.5% described an immediate no demand at all for teachers of color. In addition, 70% of districts demand for educational technology specialists, and 57.5% of responded that they have special recruitment efforts under way responding districts noted an immediate demand for both ESL to attract prospective minority teachers, and 95% of responding and bilingual teachers. Only 15% indicated an immediate demand districts currently recruit at historically black and/or Hispanic for high school social studies/history teachers. colleges or universities. When the data about teacher demand are aggregated across grade levels, special education and science prove to be the fields ID:202 393 2427 District Recruitment and Retention Strategies in which teachers are in the most demand (97.5% of responding districts note immediate demand for both), followed closely The survey asked districts whether targeted recruitment efforts by 95% of responding districts with an immediate demand for are under way, and, if SO, what specific teacher recruitment mathematics teachers. In addition, 72.5% of respondents reported strategies and procedures are employed. [See table of district-by- an immediate demand for bilingual teachers, while 67.5% cited district recruitment strategies in Appendix 2] Great City School an immediate demand for both ESL and educational technology districts are using a full range of recruitment strategies to attract teachers. teachers to their schools. Some common strategies are: offering alternative certification routes (65%), sponsoring job fairs (65%), PAGE and offering on-the-spot contracts (62.5%). Many districts also 6/14 10 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge employ technology in their efforts to recruit teachers to their Developing Pathways into Teaching districts. For example, 37.5% of the districts participate in online An increasing number of districts are trying to address teacher counseling and/or job-finding services for teacher candidates in shortages by "expanding the pipeline," i.e., offering nontraditional which districts can post job openings, requirements, and contact routes into the profession to individuals from diverse backgrounds and information, and encourage candidates to post résumés. Twenty- fields. The survey asked districts whether and how they encourage five percent of responding districts offer monetary bonuses for individuals interested in teaching to enter the profession through talented and/or high-need subject area candidates, while 17.5% alternative means. Responses were as follows: offer to waive certain job/licensure requirements and 15% offer Almost a third (32.5%) of responding districts have an immediate school placement guarantees. In addition, 85% of responding dis- demand for paraeducators/teacher aides who are pursuing tricts provide guidance and information about teacher teaching careers and 42.5% anticipate demand in the near future. credentialing. Somewhat less than half of responding districts (42.5%) have Districts are also beginning to use incentives to retain and special recruitment efforts under way and 25% have special develop teachers. Most importantly, more than two-thirds (67.5%) incentives or support for this group. offer induction/support programs for beginning teachers. Over eighty percent (82.5%) of responding districts allow a JAN-20-00 City Schools Twenty-five percent of responding districts offer tuition assis- noncredentialed teacher to teach. For example, 60% of responding tance for graduate course work. Nearly the same percentage districts allow individuals to teach under an emergency permit,5 and (22.5%) offer incentives for National Board certification, and 7.5% the same percentage allow long-term substitutes to teach. Slightly offer bonuses for high student achievement. over a third of responding Great City School districts (35%) have internship programs or permits in place, while 37.5% of districts offer certification waivers.' Fewer than one in five districts (17.5%) District Recruitment and Retention Strategies employ teachers via special programs (such as Teach for America). 0 20 40 60 80 100 More than three-quarters (77.5%) of responding districts noted that they work in collaboration with a college or university to offer Recruit at historically 95 programs for nontraditional teacher candidates to meet state black/Hispenic colleges licensure requirements; 27.5% collaborate with the local teachers' Provide guidence/information on 85 union toward this end. teacher credentialing Substitute teachers are also in demand. Nearly threequarters Offer induction/support programs G7.5 (72.5%) of responding districts have an immediate demand and 50% an anticipated demand. In addition, 47.5% have special recruitment ID:202 393 2427 Offer alternative certification routes 65 efforts under way and 27.5% offer special incentives or support for substitutes. In 60% of responding districts, a bachelor's degree is Sponsor job fairs 65 the minimum requirement for substitutes, and 47.5% require a Dffer on the spot contracts substitute permit or license. Several districts also require 62.5 substitutes to complete specified course work or semester hours, Participate in online job-finding services 37.5 the number of which varies according to the district Multiple responses allowed Of the 24 responding districts that listed emergency permits as an option, more than half specified PAGE 'For more information about urban teacher induction programs and practices, see Fideler, E. and the duration of a permit as one year. Haselkorn, D. (1999). Learning the Ropes: Urban Teacher Induction Programs and Practices in the & Of 15 responding districts that allow certification waivers, six specified the duration of a waiver as United States. Belmont, MA: Recruiting New Teachers, Inc. one year, five specified other amounts of time, and four did not specify duration. 12 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 13 GREAT CITY COLLEGE OF EDUCATION SURVEY RESULTS Scheduling Options: All Course Requirements Immediate Demand More than threequarters of the colleges and universities that responded are public institutions (35 of the 45 respondents) and 100 four are historically black colleges or universities. Most offer a 80 master's degree in education (82.2%) and a bachelor's degree in 60 education (75.6%). Two-thirds of responding institutions noted 51.1 that their postbaccalaureate programs are limited to 40 37.B licensure/certification only. Typically, responding institutions 20 22.2 20 8.9 4A offer elementary education programs at the graduate level D Part-time (77.8%), and 62.2% do so at the undergraduate level. Eighty-seven Evening Off-campus Summer Weekends Telecomm. percent (86.7%) offer teacher preparation programs in Multiple responses allowed special education at the graduate level, but only 51.1% offer it at the undergraduate level. English as a Second Language is a more prevalent option at the graduate level (53.3%) than at the Many programs offer incentives to attract candidates to specific undergraduate level (28.9%). high-need teaching areas: targeted career counseling (64.4%); JAN-20-00 FROM:Great City Schools preparation, support, and academic assistance for state and Attracting a Broader Pool of Students national licensure exams (55.6%); and special financial aid pro- grams (46.7%). Twenty-seven percent of responding Great City A fair number of colleges offer programs specifically for working Colleges of Education (26.7%) offer credit for work or life experi- adults seeking to become classroom teachers. Slightly less than ence in lieu of selected course work. Eighty-four percent (84.4%) half (46.7%) offer alternative licensure programs, while a smaller of responding institutions have special placement programs or number (28.9%) offer apprenticeship/internship programs. other incentives to interest graduates in urban teaching positions. About the same percentage (24.4%) sponsor paraeducator-to- In fact, nearly three-fourths (73.3%) of Council members place teacher programs. specific curricular emphasis on teaching in urban schools. Only In recognition of the many "out of class" demands that students 15.6% of respondents said they offer no incentives to attract can- entering teacher preparation programs now have, many schools, didates to high-need teaching areas. colleges, and departments of education offer flexible course scheduling. The survey asked respondents what percentage of teacher preparation program requirements can be completed Incentives Offered to Attract Candidates to High-Need Teaching Areas ID:202 393 2427 via part-time, evening, weekend, summer, off-campus, and/or Immediate Demand telecommunications classes. A slight majority (51.1%) of respon- 100 dents indicated that "all course requirements" were offered part- time, while a lesser number allow all course work (with the 80 exception of student teaching) to be completed in the evening 60 64.4 (37.8%), at off-campus locations (22.2%), and during the summer 55.6 40 46.7 (20.0%). Very few offer all course requirements on the weekends or via telecommunications." 20 267 0 PAGE Career Counseling Preparation (etc.) Special Financial Aid Credit for for Licensure Exams Programs Life Experience Some programs offer options for students with special needs that are not available to the student Multiple responses allowed. body as a whole 8/14 14 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 15 Recruiting Minority Students SUMMARY OF KEY FINDINGS The survey asked the Great City Colleges whether and how they recruit minority students into teacher preparation programs. Results from the 1998-99 Urban Teacher Challenge surveys pro- Eighty-seven percent (86.7%) of respondents indicated that they vide a snapshot of teacher demand and supply in the actively recruit ethnic and racial minorities, and 55.6% also offer responding Great City School districts and Great City Colleges special support services or incentives for prospective minority of Education. While the data represent only a microcosm of teachers. In addition, a full 80% seek out students from teacher demand across the country, these findings provide bilingual/bicultural backgrounds, and 42.2% offer special services or incentives for these students. a close look at the pressing recruitment challenges facing America's largest urban schools. Subject Areas of Greatest Interest to Students The Great City School districts have a striking need for Certain teacher preparation subject areas attract more students teachers-almost 100% of districts expressed an immediate than others. Interest is strongest in elementary education/multi- demand for teachers in certain subject fields. Specifically, 97.5% subject (86.7%), social studies/history (68.9%), early childhood of responding Great City Schools indicated an immediate (62.2%), and special education (62.2%). Meanwhile, more than half demand for special educators and for science teachers, and 95% of responding colleges selected the category "low interest" for JAN-20-00 14:27 City Schools mathematics (55.6%) and foreign languages (53.3%), and 44.4% indicated immediate demand for mathematics teachers. These selected "low interest" for science programs. are the same fields that were in high demand in 1996, when the first Urban Teacher Challenge report was published. Bilingual teachers, ESL teachers, and educational technology specialists are also in immediate demand, while just half of the responding districts have an immediate need for elementary teachers. In Teacher Preparation Subject Areas of Greatest Interest 10 Students general, districts anticipate shortages to continue during the next Immediate Demand five years. 100 Districts address current shortages through a variety of means. 80 86.7 Most are employing a range of recruitment strategies, including 68.9 alternative licensure routes, job fairs, on-the-spot contracts, 60 622 022 online job-finding services, and monetary incentives. Eighty- 40 three percent (82.5%) of responding districts allow a noncreden- 20 ID:202 393 2427 tialed teacher to teach. Sixty percent of responding districts allow 0 Elementary Education/ Social Studies/ Early Special individuals to teach under emergency permits, 60% use long-term Multi-subject History Childhood Education substitutes, 37.5% hire teachers with certification waivers, and . Multiple responses allowed. 35% of districts recognize internship programs or permits. The demand for substitute teachers is acute. Great City School districts are also quite aggressive in trying to boost teacher retention rates; more than two-thirds (67.5%) offer induction/support programs. PAGE 9/14 16 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 17 Nearly three-quarters of Great City School districts have an CONCLUSIONS immediate need for teachers of color and over half anticipate demand over the next five years. In responding Great City School In sum, there is no doubt that the nation's Great City School districts are experienc- districts, minority individuals represent 36% of teachers, whereas ing real teacher shortages in specific subject fields, across grade levels, and in the students of color comprise 69% of enrollment. Special recruit- ranks of minority teachers. Shortages are most severe in special education, science, ment efforts are under way to attract prospective minority teach- and mathematics. Given the data on immediate and anticipated demand, Great City ers in 70% of the districts. A vast majority (95%) of responding dis- School districts are unlikely to see an end to teacher shortages any time soon. tricts in 1998-99 indicated that they recruit at historically black Districts are employing a variety of strategies, including a host of new incentives, to and/or Hispanic colleges or universities. attract teacher candidates, particularly from groups underrepresented in the On the supply side, nearly three-quarters of responding Great profession. At the same time, however, the percentage of districts using long-term City Colleges of Education emphasize teaching in urban substitutes as well as teachers on certification waivers has also risen dramatically, schools as part of the curriculum, and 84% offer special place- because even with more aggressive recruitment measures in place, districts have ment programs or other incentives to interest graduates in urban had to adopt emergency measures in order to staff their classrooms. teaching positions. The subject areas of greatest interest to JAN-20-00 14:27 FROM:Great City Schools One positive development that has emerged is the growing percentage of Great City teacher education students are elementary education and social School districts that have introduced induction programs to support, assist, and studies/history. Early childhood and special education attract retain new teachers (67.5% currently, an increase since the 1995-96 Urban Teacher students at 62.2% of Great City Colleges of Education; interest is Challenge survey). Evidently, districts recognize that one way to reduce the teacher far weaker for mathematics, foreign languages, and science shortage is to take steps to reduce the number of teachers vacating classrooms in education. Responding institutions offer more education the first place. programs at the graduate level than at the undergraduate level Thirty responding colleges and universities (66.7%) noted that Great City Colleges of Education also are expanding efforts to address the urban their postbaccalaureate offerings are limited to licensure/ teacher shortage. Nearly threequarters emphasize urban teaching within the certification only. Almost half (46.7%) of responding Great City curriculum. Even more have special placement programs or other incentives to Colleges of Education offer alternative licensure programs and interest graduates in urban teaching positions. Eighty-seven percent actively recruit 28.9% sponsor apprenticeship/internship programs; 24.4% of ethnic and racial minorities and a comparable number seek out students from responding colleges offer paraeducator-to-teacher programs. bilingual/bicultural backgrounds. Colleges continue to offer alternative teacher licensure programs, flexible scheduling options, plus financial aid and other kinds of Flexible scheduling options are available to accommodate the support and assistance to attract career changers and other nontraditional students personal and professional needs of teacher education students as well as candidates for high-need teaching areas. 393 2427 in just over half of the responding institutions. Colleges and universities also offer incentives to attract candidates to high- Nevertheless, at the same time, teacher education students are still flocking to need teaching areas: more than half offer targeted career oversubscribed programs, making it anyone's guess where well-prepared teachers counseling and preparation, and support and academic assistance for all the high-demand areas will be found. for state and national licensure exams. Almost half (46.7%) offer special financial aid programs. PAGE 10/14 18 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 19 APPENDIX 1: TEACHERS IN IMMEDIATE DEMAND (BY DISTRICT) E = Immediate demand at the elementary (K-6) level M = Immediate demand at the middle school level H= Immediate demand at the high school level X= Immediate demand, grade level not specified in question District Special Education Mathematics Science English as a Second Language Bilingual Elementary Education Early Childhood Education Teachers of Color Substitute Teachers District Special Education Mathematics Science English as a Second Language Bilingual Elementary Education Early Childhood Education Teachers of Color Substitute Teachers Atlanta E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X Nashville E,M,H M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X X Baltimore EMB MH MH E X X New Orleens EMH MH EMH E,M,H E.M.H X X Birmingham E,M,H M.H M,H X New York City E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X X JAN-20-00 14:28 FROM:Great City Schools Broward County Newark E,M,H H H EMH E.M.H X X X (Fort Lauderdale) E,M,H MH MH E X X X Oakland E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X Charlotte E,M,H M.H M,H M,H M,H X X X X Omaha EMH MH MH EMH X X X Chicago EMH H H EM EM X X X X Philadelphia E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X X X Cleveland E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H X X X X Pittsburgh EMH H EMH X X Columbus E,M,H M,H M.H EMH EMH X X Portland E,M,H H H E,M,H E,M,R X X Denver X X Richmond EMH M,H MH X X x X Des Moines E,M,H M.H MH EMH EMH X Rochester E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H E,M,H X Detroit E,M,H M,H M,H EMH X X X Secramento EMH MH MH E X Fort Worth E,M,H M,H MH EM E X X Saint Paul E,M,H MH M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X Fresno E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H E,M,H X Salt Lake City EMH M.H H EMH X X Houston EMH M.H MH E X X San Antonio E,M M,H M.H H E X X 393 2427 Indianapolis E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H X X San Diego EMH H H E X Jefferson County (Louisville) EMH M.H MH X X San Frencisco E,M,H M,H M,H E,M,H E X X X Los Angeles E,M,H EMH E,M,H E,M,H E,M,H X X X X Toledo E,M,H H MH X X Memphis EMH MH MH EMH EMH X X X X Tucson E,M,H M,H H H E,M,H X X Miami-Dade E,M,H M.H M.H E,M,H X X Milwaukee E,M,H M,H MH M,H X X X Minneapolis E,M,H EMH E,M,H E,M,H 11/14 PAGE 20 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 21 APPENDIX 2: RECRUITMENT STRATEGIES (BY DISTRICT) Strategy Special recruitment efforts at colleges and universities Recruit at historically black/Hispanic colleges International recruitment efforts Incentives (e.g., housing assis- tance, relocation benefits, etc.) Waive certain job/licensure requirements School placement guarantees Offer on-the-spot contracts Offer induction/support programs Offer alternative certification routes Offer monetary bonus for talented/high-need subject area candidates Offer bonus for high student achievement Offer loan forgiveness program Tuition assistance for graduate course work Incentives for NBPTS certification City or county residency requirement Provide guidance and informa- tion about teacher credentialing Sponsor job fairs to attract new teachers to school district Provide teacher employment information via telephone Participate in online counseling and/or job-finding hotline services or Web site District Atlanta X X X X X X X X JAN-20-00 14:28 FROM FROM:Great City Schools Baltimore X X X X X X - X X X X X Birmingham X X X X X X X Broward County (Pt. Lauderdate) X X X X - X X X X X Charlotte X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Chicago X X X X X X X X X X X Cleveland X X X Columbus X X X X X X Denver X X X X X X X X X X X Des Moines X X X X X X Detroit X X X Fort Worth X X X X X X X X X X X X Fresno X X X X X X X X X X ID:202 ID 202 393 2427 Houston X X X X X X X X X X X X Indianapolis X X X X X X X X Jefferson County (Louisville) X X X X X X X Los Angeles X X X X X X X X X X X X X Memphis X X X X X Miami-Dade X X X X X X X PAGE Milwaukee X X X X X X X X Minneapolis X X X X X X X X X 12/14 22 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 23 APPENDIX 2: RECRUITMENT STRATEGIES (BY DISTRICT) continued Strategy Special recruitment efforts at colleges and universities Recruit at historically black/Hispanic colleges International recruitment efforts Incentives (e.g., housing assis- tance, relocation benefits, etc.) Waive certain job/licensure requirements School placement guarantees Offer on-the-spot contracts Offer induction/support programs Offer alternative certification routes Offer monetary bonus for talented/high-need subject area candidates Offer bonus for high student achievement Offer loan forgiveness program Tuition assistance for graduate course work Incentives for NBPTS certification City or county residency requirement Provide guidance and informa- tion about teacher credentialing Sponsor job fairs to attract new teachers to school district Provide teacher employment information via telephone Participate in online counseling and/or job-finding hotline - Wab nith District Nashville X X X X X JAN-20-00 14:29 FROM FROM:Great City Schools New Orleans X X X X X X X X X New York City X X X X X X X X X X X X Newark X X X X X Oakland X X X X X X X X X Omaha X X X X X X X X Philadelphia X X X X X X X X X X Pittsburgh X X X Portland X X X X X Richmond X X X X X X X Rochester X X X X X X X X Sacramento X X X X X X X X X X X Saint Paul X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X Salt Lake City X X X X ID:202 393 2427 San Antonio X X X X X X X X X San Diego X X X X X X X X X San Francisco X X X X X X X X X Toledo X X X X X X X X Tucson X X X PAGE 13/14 24 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 25 APPENDIX 3: FACTS ABOUT THE GREAT CITY RESPONDING GREAT CITY SCHOOL DISTRICTS SCHOOL DISTRICTS AND COLLEGES OF EDUCATION AND COLLEGES OF EDUCATION Responding Great City Colleges of Education provided demographic information about their teacher education students, and responding Great City School districts provided Responding Great City School Districts: demographic information about their students and teachers. (Note: The figures below are estimates.) Atlanta, Baltimore, Birmingham, Broward County Charlotte Maddenburg Chicago, Cleveland, Cplumbus, Denver, Des Moines, Detroit Fort Worth Responding Great City School Districts Freeno, Houston, Indianapolis, Jefferson County, Los Angeles Memphis The total number of students in 39 responding districts was 5,505,484, with individual Metropolitan Nashville, Miami Dade, Milwaukee, Minneapolls, New Orleans, district enrollments ranging from 25,207 in Salt Lake City to 1,100,000 in New York City: New York City, Newark, Qakland Omaha, Philadelphia, Plusburgh, Portland, The total number of teachers employed by 39 responding Great City School districts was Richmond, Rocheated Sacramento City, Saint Paul District 625 Salt Lake City, 325,203, ranging from 1,270 in Salt Lake City to 75,170 in New York City. San Antonio, San Diege, San Francisco, Toledo Tucson: Students of color comprise approximately 69% of the enrollments of the 35 districts that provided this information. Minority individuals represented 36% of teachers in 35 JAN-20-00 14:29 FROM:Great City Schools responding districts. Responding Great City Colleges of Education: The total number of new teachers hired by 39 responding districts for the 1997-98 school Boston College, Bropklyn College CUNY, California Dominguez Hills, year was 33,691. California State-Freeno, California State Hayward California State Ins Thirty-one districts responded to the question about novice teachers, reporting that Angeles, California State-Northridge, California State Sacramento, Cleveland 12,788 of new hires for 1997-98 were novices. State University, DePaul University, Florida International University, Howard In 29 responding districts, 35% of teachers had 20 or more years of experience. University, Kean University, Marquette University, Montclair State University, New York University, Norfolk State University, Old Dominion University, One-quarter of the teachers in 34 responding districts are male. Portland State University, Rhode Island College, San Diego State University. Bilingual teachers comprised 10% of the teaching force in 30 responding districts. San Francisco State University, Temple University, Tennessee State Twenty-eight districts provided information about late hires, reporting a mean of University, Towson University, University of Colorado at Denver, University of approximately 19%, and a range from 55% in Fort Lauderdale to only 2% in Birmingham. Dayton, University of Houston-Central, University of Louisville, University of Responding Great City Colleges of Education Maryland-College Park, University of Miami, University of Minnesota, University of Missouri St. Louis, University of Nebraska at Omaha, University The total number of teacher education students attending 45 responding colleges and of North Texas, University of Oklahoma, University of Pittsburgh, University ID:202 393 2427 universities was approximately 71,280. of Rhode Island, University of Rochester, University of Toledo, University of Half of the students in 40 responding education programs are over the age of 25. Washington, Vanderbilt University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Students of color represented approximately 25% of the student bodies of 44 responding Wayne State University, Wright State University. programs. Bilingual students comprised 15% of enrollees at 33 responding colleges and universities. Approximately 71% of the education students were female (43 colleges and universities responding). PAGE 14/14 26 The Urban Teacher Challenge The Urban Teacher Challenge 27 04/15/99 13:13 0 001 STATE STATES FAX SENATE : 0000000 U.S. SENATOR PATTY MURRAY To: John Achnun 456-7028 DATE: 4/15/99 FROM: STAR findings PAGES SENT (INCLUDING COVER SHEET): 4 PLEASE CONTACT OUR OFFICE IF YOU ARE MISSING PART OF THIS TRANSMISSION. 298S JACKSON FEDERAL BUILDING W. 601 1ST AVENUE 140 FEDERAL BUILDING 402 K YAKIMA AVENUE 111 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BLN. 1930 WETMORE AVENUE 500 W. 12TH STREET SUITE 390 SUITE 903 915 2ND AVENUE Surre 506 WASHINGTON, DC 205 10 SEATTLE, WA 98174 SPOKANE. WA 99201 VANCOUVER, WA 98660 YAKIMA, WA 98901 (202) 224-2621 EVERYTT. WA 98201 (206) 553-5545 (509) 624-9515 (360) 696-7797 (509) 453 7162 FAX (202) 224-0238 (425) 259-6515 [email protected] FILE. No. 699 04/12 '99 15:25 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 2 DRAFT Project STAR THE TENNESSEE STUDENT/TEACHER ACHIEVEMENT RATIO STUDY Background & 1999 Update WHAT IS STAR?: A large-scale. four-year, longitudinal, experimental study of reduced class size. that is considered "one of the most important educational investigations ever carried OUL and illustrates the kind and magnitude of research needed in the field of education to strengthen schools." [Frederick Mosteller, Professor Emeritus of Mathematical Statistics at Harvard University (Summer/Fall 1995). The Future of Children: Critical Issues for Children and Youths, 5(2), P. 113-127.1 Sound research which "leaves no doubt that small classes have an advantage over larger classes in reading and math in the early primary grades." [Finn. J. D.. & Achilles C. M. (1990, Fall). Answers and questions about class size: ^ statewide experiment. American Educational Research Journal, 27(3), 557-577.1 Robert Slavin, John Hopkins University. un ЛЕКА reactor. praised Project STAR's design and integrity and called il it "watershed event" in research. HOW WERE STAR FUNDS OBTAINED AND USED?: Helen Pate-Bain presented Termessee Legislators with the positive results from her class-size study that had been conducted within one Metropolitan Davidson County school. Pate-Bain obtained a $1.2 million dollar legislative appropriation to complete STAR. Out of $12 million, $9,679,879 were used for teacher and teacher aide sularies. HOW WAS THE STAR STUDY DESIGNED?: All Tennessee schools were invited to participate. Each school had to have at least one of each of the three class types: small (13 to 17 students). regular (22-26 students), and regular with il full-limo teacher aide (22-26 students) for the within school design. The study included 79 schools in 42 systems which resulted in over 6,000 students per grade level. Schools from inner-city, rural. urban, and suburban locations were included in the experiment. All students and teachers were randomly assigned 111 their class type. WHAT WERE THE MAIN FINDINGS FROM STAR?: At each grade level (K-3), and across all school locations, the small classes made the highest scores on the norm-referenced Stanford Achievement Test (SAT) and the criterion-referenced Basic Skills First Test (BSF). These results were both statistically and educationally significant. Scoi STAR Reading Percentile Ranks, STAR Math Percentile Ranks, Kindergarten - Grade 3, 1985-1989 Kindergarten - - Grade 3, 1985-1989 80 70 Small 70 65 60 60 Regular 50 55 Regular/Aide 40 50 K 2nd 3rd K 1st 2nd 3m 1st DRAFT 04/15/99 13:14 0 1. 002 TILE* No. 699 04/12 '99 15:26 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 3 WHAT WERE OTHER IMPORTANT FINDINGS FROM STAR? The Greatest Gains on the SAT were maile in Inner-City Small classes. The Highest Scores on the SAT and BSF were made in Rural Small classes. The Classes that scored in the top 10% on the SAT Total Reading are identified as follows: 18 of the top 33 classes were small in Kindergarten. 22 of the top 34 classes were small in First Grade, 23 of the top 34 classes were small in Second Grade. 25 of the lop 32 classes were small in Third Grade. Inner-City (Predominantly Minority) students in small classes always outscored inner-city students in regular and regular/aide classes. This suggests that small classes are very beneficial to minority students. Non-Free Lunch Minorities in suburban small classes performed 38 well AS Non-Free Lunch Whites. The effective teacher research (Bain. Word. Lintz, 19??) revealed certain teaching practices. characteristics, and communication skills that when combined with small classes produce more effective learning: Creative Writing. Hands on Experiences, Learning Centers, Use of Manipulatives Good Listener, Immediate Feedback, Monitoring. Preplanned Instruction, Well Organized Assertive Discipline. High Expectations. Peer Tutoring, Reteaching Liffective Communication with Parents, Love of Children Enthusiasm, Flexibility. Patience, Sense of Humor Ability to establish effective communication with the home. Ability to involve the family in the education of their children. Ability to teach parents how to teach their children. Ability to make home visits. WHAT POLICY IMPLICATIONS RESUL TED FROM STAR?: Tennessee's school finance plan, the Basic Education Plan. includes incentives for school systems to reduce class sizes a 20 or lewer students in the early primary grades (K-3). Approximately 30 states across the U.S. and several foreign countries have used the STAR findings to initiate stops toward smaller classes. WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF PROJECT STAR? : The Tennessee Legislature and private foundations have funded HEROS, Inc. to conduct follow-up studies through the end of the STAR students' high school graduation and beyond. The full-scale study of the effect of small primary classes (K-3) on long-term social outcomes includes research related to higher education, juvenile detention and adult prison rates, and welfare and employment security. This research is still in progress. Preliminary findings show: HH% small-class, ##% regular-class, & ##% regular/aide-class students completed high school honors English courses. ##% small-class, #% regular-class. & ##% regular/aide-class students completed a foreign language course during high school. ##"//n small-class. IHI% regular-class, & ##% regular/aide-class students completed advanced mathematics course during high school. IHI was the overall high school Grade Point Average (GPA) for small-class students: the regular- class students' GPA was ##, and the regular-aide class students had a GPA of ##. ##% small class, ##% regular-class, and #4% regular/aido-class students graduated from high school. ##% of small-class students received an honors diploma; ## of regular-class students and HH% of regular/aide-class students also received an honors diploma. ##% of small-class students received a regular/vocational high school diploma: ##% of regular-class students and #% of regular/aido-class students also received a regular/vocational diploma. DRAFT 04/15/99 13:14 "0 1 003 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:26 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 4 #H% of small-class students received & special education diploma; ##% of regular-class students and ##% of regular/aidc-class students also received special education diplomas. #% of small-class students received ШП attendance diploma; ##% of regular-class students and ##% of regular/aide-class students also received an attendance diploma. ##% of small-cluss students completed either the ACT Assessment or Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) college entrance exams; ##% of regular-class students and ##% of regular/aide-cluss students also completed either the ACT or SAT. IF KRUEGER WANTS OTHER ACT/SAT INFO. I'l' CAN GO HERE HEROS. Inc. announced release of the first public version of the Project STAR small class-size research database. The database is accessible via the World Wide Web at www.telalink.net/-herüs. This web site also features up-to-the-minute information on the official Project STAR longitudinal research results. For more Information on Project STAR, please contact: Jayne Boyd-Zaharias, Director, Health & Education Research Operative Services (HEROS), Inc., PO Box 1271, Lebanon, TN 37088-1271 Phone: (615) 449-7904, FAX: (615) 449-7904, e-mail: [email protected] Helen Pate-Bain, Chairporson: (334) 640-7012 HEROS, Inc. is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization. DRAFT 08:59 20 005 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 5 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:46 No.001 P.02 Draft: Inscutive Summary. 4/2/59 The Effect of Attending . Email Class in the Marly Grades on Collage Attandance wlans Alan B. Krusger and Disne M. Whitmore' Primoston University Background Project STAR was an experiment in which 11,500 students and their teachers in grades k-3 were randomly assigned to a small class (23-17 students), regular-sise class (22-25 students), or regular-sise class with - teacher aide within 80 Tennessee public schools. The experiment began with kindergarten students in the 1985-86 school year. After feur years, all students were returned to regular- size classes. Project STAR students who moved along on pace would have graduated from high school in the Spring of 1998. TO determine the impact of having actended - smaller class in elementary school OR students' long-term educational outcomes, Md asked ACT, Ice. and the College Beard/Sducational Testing Service to link information on high school seniors in the class of 1995 who took the ACT or BAT exam to records that was provided on the 11,600 acudents from project STAR, regardless of where the project STAR students resided in 1998. The resulting database contains information on whether Project STAR students in the class of 1998 wrote either the ACT or SAT exam, their TONE score, and information from the background questionnaire students fill out when they take the ACT or SAT exam. This is the first detabase that permits B long-term examination or the behavior and post-high school aspirations at Project STAR participants. This Executive Summary describes our initial findings for a sample of more chen 0.000 Project STAR students who ware high school seniors in 1998. specific Findings + The main results are illustrated in Figure 1. This figure reports the perdent of students who cook eicher che ACT or the SAT exam by the type of class they were assigned to attend their initial year in Project STAR. The figure# are reported for all students combined, for white and black students separately, and for students who redeived free or reduced-price lunch in at least one year in grades K-3. For the entire sample, Figure 1 indicates the 43.74 of students who ware assigned to a small class took either the ACT or SAT axam, whereas 40.00 of those assigned = . regular-site class took-one of the exams, and 39.98 of those assigned to a regular-sise class with an aids took one of che exams. The 3.6 percentage point higher cest-taking zate for the students assigned to small classes relative to chose assigned to regular-size classes was otatistically significant at the .05 level, that is, this difference is unlikely to have occurred by chance. 'Alan Krueger is the Bundhais Professor of Boonomico and Public Affairs at Princeton University and & Research Associate of the National Bureeu of Economic Research. Diane Whitmore is a graduate student in the Meonomico Department at princaton University. 04/13/99 09:00 '0 006 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 6 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:47 No. 001 P.03 . Figure 1 also indicates that attending a small class was particularly affective in raising the proportion of block acudents who wrote one of the college entrance exams. Only 31.78 of black students in regular-size classes wrote the ACT or SAT exam, whereas 40.2% of black students in small classes wrote the college entrance exam. To gain some perspective - the magnitude of this effect, note that black- white gap in taking a collage entrance exam was 13.3 percentage points for students in regular-wize classes, and 6.1 percentage points for students in small classes. Thus, attending a small class reduced the black-white gap in the college-antrance-taet-caking race by 50 percent. . Earlier research on Project STAR has found that minority students and students on free lunch exhibited the greatest gains in teat acores as a consequence of attending a small class. The findings in Figure 1 complement a result that has been found consistently throughout Project STAR: minority students benefited most from attending a omall class, and small classes ware able to considerably nerrow, although not sliminate, the gap in educational performance between black and white students. . Table 1 provides further evidence on the effect of class size on the percent OE students who took the college entrance exam. The first chroo columns of Table 1 contain the data used = construct Figure 1. To ensure that our results are not due to extransous factors, we estimated & serios of logistic regressions in which was controlled for the students' race, sex, [TEE or reduced-price lunch status, and the specific *Immentary school be or she attended. Our findings ware unchanged when we controlled for these variables, so we emphasize the simpler CBU cabulations. Nonctholess, the fourth column of the table reports a. statistical test of the null hypothesis that initial class-type assignment is unrelated co the likelihood the scudent writes either the ACT or SAT exam. with the exception of whice students, these tests indicate that it is very unlikely that the observed differences in test-taking rates scroad the three types of clappes would have occurred by chance. . Tennessee 18 a state 18 which a majority of collegs-bound students take the ACT exam. Tables 2 and 3 provide segarate tabulacions of che test-taking rates for the ACT and for the SAT; some 60% of STAR atudents wrote the ACT exam while fewer than 51 wrote the SAT exam. The disaggregated results in Tables 2 and 3 indicate chat, compared to students assigned to regular-size classes, students assigned to small classes were more likely to take the ACT exem, and were more likely to take the SAT exam. - class size may not have to shrink to 18 students for smaller clapses to raise the likelihood that students take the ACT or SAT exams. We find that students who were initially assigned to a class with 21-25 students their first yamr in project STAR were more likely to take the ACT or SAT exam than students who were assigned to classes with 26-30 students. And students who ware assigned classes with 16-30 students ware more likely == take che ACT or BAT exam chan students who were assigned to classes with 31-25 students, . We do not know how many students who cook the ACT or SAT exam have actually enrolled in college. or how many years of higher education they will ultimately we found that high school seniors who cook the ACT or SAT exam completed an complete. But baead on an analysis of the Righ school class of 1973 Database, 2 04/13/99 09:01 00 007 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 7 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:47 No.001 P.04 average of 1.63 more years of schooling than students who did not take one of the college encrunce exams, after controlling for the race and gender of the students. . Lastly, we examined the cost scores students achieved on the ACT and SAT exam. Por students who took the SAT but not the ACT exam, we converted their SAT #COTE to an ACT equivalent score using & concordance developed by researchers at the College Board. For any student who wrope the ACT exam we used their ACT acore, even if has or she also took the SAT exam. The average ACT TOBC scores were virtually identical for students who wake assigned to small and regular-sise classes. For the full sample of 3,832 tast takers, the average student in small and regular-size classes bach earned * 19.3 composite ACT acore. Moreover, assignment to a small class aid not sppear to alter the average test acore for any of the subgroups that VII exemined (1.e., black, whico and free or reduced- price lunch students). Fast studies have found that average test scores tend to decline when mare students take the college sntrance exam, because the marginal test takers are weaker students than the average student. In the STAR experiment, however, students assigned to omall classes were more likely to take the ACT or SAT exam, DUE the average score of those in small classed dia not decline. One possibility is that there are two offsecting affects: (1) scored increased for chose who would have otherwise written the exam; (2) the additional students who cook the college ontrance exam because they attended a small class ware weaker students, on average. Conclusion Attendance in a small class in grades k-3 appears to have raised the likalihood chat students take either the ACT or SAT college-entrance exam. since most colleges in the U.S. require students to take either the ACT oz SAT exam to be admitted, these findings suggest that lowering class size in the elementary school grades raises the prospect that students will attend college. The beneficial effect of smaller classes on college aspirations appears to be particularly strong for minority students, and students on free or reduced-price lunch. Indead, attendance in small classes appears to have cut the black-white gap in the probability of taking a collage-entrsnce exam by more than half. Mersover, attending a small class appears to raise the probability that students write the ACT or SAT exam without lowering cho ovarall average score of students who take the uxam. 3 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:28 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 1008 PAGE is TEL: Apr 12'99 8:48 No. 001 P.05 Appendix: Description of the Sample with the assistance of HERO's, Inc., we provided the ACT and HT8 organizations computer filse which contained several variables from the STAR database, including demographic date, class Assignment, and primary school test scores. The ACT and BAT date WHER marged to these records on Project STAR students on the basis of the students' names, dates of birth and social Security numbers. IF a STAR record was missing information on one of chees three identifiers, the remaining identifiers were used to complete the merger. The data were merged together by searching over ACT and SAT records for the ontire U.S., DO any student who had moved away from Tennessee should scill be included in the sample. About 9 percent of the STAR students who were identified by che search algorithm rook the ACT or STATE exam outside of Tennessee. Once the date ware marged together. the students' names, dates of birth, and social Security numbers were concealed to preserve confidentiality. Several checks indicated that the dace were linked properly. For example, the correlation between the students' ACT acore percentile rank and their 8th grade Tennessee Comprehensive Assossment Program (TCAP) TASE parcentile rank was 80, which is oven higher than the correlation between the students 3rd grade Stanford Achievement Test Score perdentile and cheir 7th grade TCAP percencile (.74). Additionally. the sex of the students based on their STAR records matched cheir Bax in the ACT records in 95.78 of cases. These checks suggest that STAR students were correctly linked to their ACT and SAT records. The ACT and BAT databases are organized by graduating high school classes. Only members of the High School Class of 1998 were included in the ACT and SAT records that formed the basis of the search. As a consequence. STAR students who repeated a grade or for some other reason ware not high school soniore in 199H could not be matched to their ACT and SAT records, even if they had taken one of the exame. Because of this Conture of the data, we restrict our sample to the subsec of 9,397 students who WHIS - grade-Invel based on information that we have on students who WIORS the TCAP exam through the eighth grade. AB a Eurther check. however, was re-calculated Figure 1 for the entire sample of 11,600 students in our database (which includes students who fall behind and were not high school seniors in 1998), and find qualisatively mimilar results as in Figure 1- Thus, our results are rebust to the inclusion of students who have fallen bahind grade level. 4 FILE- No. 699 04/12 '99 15:25 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 2 DRAFT Project STAR THE TENNESSEE STUDENT/TEACHER ACHIEVEMENT RATIO STUDY Background & 1999 Update WHAT IS STAR?: A large-scale. four-year, longitudinal, experimental study of reduced class size. that is considered "one of the most important educational investigations ever carried out and illustrates the kind and magnitude of research needed in the field of education to strengthen schools." [Frederick Mosteller, Professor Emeritus of Mathematical Statistics at Harvard University (Summer/Fall 1995). The Future of Children: Critical INSUES for Children and Youths, 5(2), P. 113-127.1 Sound research which "leaves no doubt that small classes have an advantage over larger classes in reading and math in the early primary grades." I Finn, J. D.. & Achilles C. M, (1990, Fall). Answers and questions about class size: A statewide experiment. American Educational Research Journal, 27(3), 557-577.1 Robert Slavin, John Hopkins University. un ЛЕКА reactor. praised Project STAR's design and integrity and called iL it "watershed event" in research. HOW WERE STAR FUNDS OBTAINED AND USED?: Helen Pate-Bain presented Tennessee Legislators with the positive results from her class-size study that had been conducted within one Metropolitan Davidson County school. Pate-Bain obtained a $12 million dollar legislative appropriation to complete STAR. Out of $12 million. $9,679,879 were used for teacher and teacher aide sularies. HOW WAS THE STAR STUDY DESIGNED?: All Tennessee schools were invited to participate. Each school had Lo have at least one of each of the three class types: small (13 to 17 students). regular (22-26 students), and regular with il full-time teacher aide (22-26 students) for the within school design. The study included 79 schools in 42 systems which resulted in over 6,000 students per grade level. Schools from inner-city, rural. urban, and suburban locations were included in the experiment. All students and teachers were randomly assigned 11 their class type. WHAT WERE THE MAIN FINDINGS FROM STAR?: At each grade level (K-3), and across all school locations, the small classes made the highest scores hi on the norm-referenced Stanford Achievement Test (SAT) and the criterion-referenced Basic Skills First Test (BSF). These results were both statistically and educationally significant. Scor STAR Reading Percentile Ranks, STAR Math Percentile Ranks, Kindergarten - Grade 3, 1985-1989 Kindergarten - Grade 3, 1985-1989 80 70 Small 70 85 60 60 Regular 50 55 Regular/Aide 40 50 K 1st 2nd 3rd K 1st 2nd 3ml DRAFT 04/15/99 13:14 1 002 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:26 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 3 WHAT WERE OTHER IMPORTANT FINDINGS FROM STAR? The Greatest Gains on the SAT were made in Inner-City Small classos. The Highest Scores on the SAT and BSF were made in Rural Small classes. The Classes that scored in the top 10% on the SAT Total Reading ATC identified as follows: 18 of the top 33 classes were small in Kindergarten. 22 of the top 34 classes were small in First Grade, 23 of the top 34 classes were small in Second Grade. 25 of the lop 32 classes were small in Third Grade. Inner-City (Predominantly Minority) students in small classes always outscored inner-city students in regular and regular/aide classes. This suggests that small classes are very beneficial to minority students. Non-Free Lunch Minorities in suburban small classes performed 38 well AS Non-Free Lunch Whites. The effective teacher research (Bain. Word. Lintz. 19??) revealed certain teaching practices. characteristics, and communication skills that when combined with small classes produce more effective learning: Creative Writing. Hands on Experiences, Learning Centers, Use of Manipulatives Good Listener. Immediate Feedback, Monitoring. Preplanned Instruction, Well Organized Assertive Discipline. High Expectations. Peer Tutoring, Reteaching Effective Communication with Parents. Love of Children Enthusiasm, Flexibility. Patience, Sense of Humor Ability to establish effective communication with the home. Ability to involve the family in the education of their children. Ability to teach parents how to teach their children. Ability to make home visits. WHAT POLICY IMPLICA RESUL TED FROM STAR?: Tennessee's school finance plan, the Basic Education Plan. includes incentives for school systems to reduce class sizes a 20 or fewer students in the early primary grades (K-3). Approximately 30 states across the U.S. and several foreign countries have used the STAR lindings to initiate steps toward smaller classes. WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF PROJECT STAR?: The Tennessee Legislature and private foundations have funded HEROS, Inc. in conduct follow-up studies through the end of the STAR students' high school graduation and beyond. The full-scale study of the effect of small primary classes (K-3) on long-term social outcomes includes research related to higher education, juvenile detention and adult prison rates, and welfare and employment security. This research is still in progress. Preliminary findings show: HH% small-elass, ##% regular-class, & ##% regular/aide-class students completed high school honors English courses. ##% small-class, ##% regular-class. & ##% regular/aide-class students completed a foreign language course during high school. ##" small-class. HII% regular-class, & ##% regular/aide-class students completed advanced mathematics course during high school. Itll was the overall high school Grade Point Average (GPA) for small-class students: the regular- class students' GPA was ##, and the regular-mide class students had a GPA of ##. ##% small class, ## regular-class, and HH% regular/aide-class students graduated from high school. ##% of small-class students received an honors diploma; ##11/2 of regular-class students and HH% of regular/4ide-class students also received an honors diploma. ##% of small-class students received a regular/vocational high school diploma: ##% of regular-class students and #% of regular/aido-class students also received a regular/vocational diploma. DRAFT 04/15/99 13:14 003 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:26 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 4 ##% of small-class students received a special education diploma; ##% of regular-class students and ##% of regular/aidc-class students also received special education diplomas. #% of small-class students received III attendance diploma; ##% of regular-class students and HH% of regular/aide-class students also received an attendance diploma. ##% of small-class students completed either the ACT Assessment or Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) college entrance exams; ##% of regular-class students and ##% of regular/aide-cluss students also completed either the ACT or SAT. 11 KRUEGER WANTS OTHER ACT/SAT INFO. IT CAN GO HERE. HEROS. Inc. announced release of the first public version of the Project STAR small class-size research dambase. The database is accessible via the World Wide Web at www.tclalink.net/-herus. This web site also features up-to-the-minute information on the official Project STAR longitudinal research results. For more Information on Project STAR, please contact: Jayne Boyd-Zaharias, Director, Health & Education Research Operative Services (HEROS), Inc., PO Box 1271, Lebanon, TN 37088-1271 Phone: (615) 449-7904, FAX: (615) 448-7904, e-mail: [email protected] Helen Pate-Bain, Chairporson: (334) 640-7012 HEROS, Inc. is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization. DRAFT 08:59 00 005 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 5 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:46 No. 001 P.02 Druft: Inscutive Sustary. 6/2/95 The Effect of Attending 8 Small Class in the Barly Grades on Collage Attendance vians Alan B. Krusgwr and Diane M. Whitmore' Prinoscon University Background Project STAR was an experiment in which 11,500 students and their teachers in grades k-3 were randemly assigned to a small class (13-17 students), regular-sise class (22-25 students), or regular-sise class with a teacher side within 80 Tennessee public schools. The experiment began with kindergarten students in the 1985-86 school year. After feur years, all students ware returned to regular- aire classes. Project STAR students who moved along on pace would have graduated from high school in the spring of 1998. TO determine the impact of having actended a smaller class in elementary school OR students' long-term educational outcomes, we asked ACT, Inc. and the College Board/Sducational Testing Service to link information on high school seniors in the class of 1996 who took the ACT or BAT exam to records that we provided on the 11,600 acudents from project STAR, regardless of where the project STAR students resided in 1998. The resulting database contains information on whether Project STAR students in the class of 1998 wrote either the ACT or GAT exam, their CODE score, and information from the background questionnaire students fill out when they take the ACT or SAT exam. This is the first database that permits a long-term examination or the behavior and post-high school aspirations of projuct STAR participants. This Executive Summary describes our initial findings for A sample of more than 9,000 Project STAR students who ware high school seniors in 1998. Sppoific Findings . The main results are illustrated in Figure 1. This figure reports the perdent of students who cook either the ACT or the SAT exam by the type of class they were assigned to accend their initial year in Project STAR. The figures are reported for all students combined, for white and black students separately, and for students who redeived free or raducad-price lunch in at least one year in grades K-3. For the entire sample, Figure 1 indicates thec 43.74 of students who ware assigned to = small class took either the ACT or SAT exam, whereas 40.00 of those assigned to be regular-sits class took one of the exams, and 39.9% of those assigned to a regular-sise class with an side took one of che exams. The 3.6 percentage point higher test-taking rate fax the students assigned to small classes relative to chose assigned to regular-size classes was otatistically significant at the .05 leval, that in, this difference in unlikely = have occurred by chance. 'Alan Krueger is the Bundhein Professor of Boonomico and Public Affairs at Princeton University and & Research Associate or the National Bureau of Sconomic Research. Diane Whicmose is a graduate student in the Economico Department at princeton University. 04/13/99 09:00 60 006 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 6 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:47 No 001 P.03 . Figure : also indicates that attending a small class was particularly affective in raining the proportion or black acudents she wrote one of the college encrance exams. only 31.78 of black students in regular-size classes wrote the ACT or SAT exam, whereas 40.2% of blank students in small classes wrote the college entrance exam. To gain some perspective - the magnitude of this effect, note chat black- white gap in taking a collage entrance exam was 13.3 percentage points for students in regular-wize classes, and 6.1 percentage points for students in emall classes. Thus, attending . small class reduced the black-white gap in the collaga-entrance-tamt-caking race by 54 percent. . Earliar research on Project STAR has found that minority students and students on free lunch exhibited the greatest gains in teat acores as a consequence of attending a small class. The findings in Figure 1 complement a result that has been found consistently throughout Project STAR: minority students benefited most from attending a small class, and small classes ware able to considerably narrow, although not aliminate, the gap in educational performance between black and white students. - Table 1 provides further evidence on the effect of class size on the percent OE students who took the college entrance exam. The Eirac chree columns of Table 1 contain the data used CO conserve Figure 1. To ensure that our results are not due 50 extransous factors, we estimated & serios of logistic regressions in which was controlled for the students' race, sex, from or reduced-price lunch status, and the specific =lementary school be or she attended. Our findings ware unchanged when we controlled for these variables, so we emphasize che simpler I&U cabulations. Nonctholess, the fourth column or the table reports a. statistical test of the null hypothesis THAT initial class-type assignment is unrelated to the likelihood the student writes either the ACT or SAT axam. with the exception of whice students, these tosts indicate that it is very unlikely that the observed differences in test-taking rates scross the three types of clappes would have occurred by chance. Tennessee 18 a state 10 which a majority of collegs-bound students take the ACT exam. Tables 2 and 3 provide segarate tabulacions of che test-taking rates for the ACT and for the SAT: some 60% of STAR acudents wrote the ACT exam while fewer than 51 wrote the SAT exam. The disaggregated results in Tables 2 and 3 indicate chat, compared to students assigned to regular-size classes, students assigned to emall classes wore more likely to take the ACT exam, and were MOIN likely to take the SAT exam. . class size may not have to shrink to 18 students for smaller clapses to raise the likelihood that studence take the ACT or SAT exams. We find that students who were initially assigned to & class with 21-25 students their first yamr in project STAR ware more likely to take the ACT or SAT exam than students who were assigned to classes with 26-30 students. And students who wore assigned classes with 16-30 students ware more likely = take che ACT or BAT exam chan students who were assigned to classes with 31-25 students, We do not know how many students who cook the ACT or SAT exam have actually - enrolled in sollage. or how many years of higher education they will ultimately we found that high school seniors who cook the ACT or SAT exam completed an complete. But baeed on an analysis of the Righ school class of 1972 Database, 2 04/13/99 09:01 TO 0 007 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:27 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 7 TEL: Apr 12'99 8:47 No.001 P.04 average of 1.63 more years of schooling than students who did not take one of the college encrunce exams, after controlling for the race and gender of the students. . Lastly, we examined the tost accres students achieved on the ACT and SAT examp, Por students who took che SAT but not the ACT exam, we converted their SAT soore to an ACT equivalent SCOIN using & concordance developed by researchers at the College Board. For any student who wrope the ACT exam we used their ACT acore, even if hw or she also took the SAT exkm. The average ACT E000 scores were virtually identical for students who wake assigned to small and regular-sise classes. For the full sample of 3,832 test takers, the average student in small and regular-size classes bach earned # 19.3 composite ACT acore. Moreover. assignment CO a small class aid not appear to alter the average test acore for any of the subgroupe that WE exemined (1.e., black, whico and free or reduced- price lunch students). Fast studies have found that average test scores tend to decline when mare students take the college entrance exam, because the marginal test takers are weaker students than the average student. In the STAR experiment, however, students assigned to newsll classes were more likely to take the ACT or SAT exam, but the average acore of chose in small classes dia not decline. One possibility is that there are two offsetting affects: (1) scored increased for chose who would have otherwise written the exam; (2) the additional students who cook the college ontrance exam because they attended a small class ware weeker students, on average. Conclusion Attendance in a small class in grades k-3 appears to have raised the likalihood chac students take either the ACT or SAT college-entrance exam. since most colleges in the U.S. require students to take either the ACT OZ SAT exam to be admitted, these findings suggest that lowering class size in the elementary school grades raises the prospect that atudents will attend college. The beneficial effect of smaller classes on college aspirations appears to be particularly otrong for minority students, and students on free or reduced-price lunch. Indead, attendance in small classes appears to have cut the black-white gap in the probability of taking a collage-entrsnde exam by more than half. Mersover, attending - small class appears to raise the probability that acudents write the ACT or SAT exem without lowering the ovarall average score or studence who take the MXAM. 3 FILE No. 699 04/12 '99 15:28 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 008 PAGE is TEL: Apr 12'99 8:48 No. 001 P.05 Appendix: Description of the Sample With the assistance of HERD's, Inc., we provided the ACT and MT8 organizations computer files which contained several variables from the STAR detabase, including demographic date, class assignment, and primary school test scores. The ACT and BAT data were anyed to these records on project STAR students on the basis of the students names, dates of birth and social Security numbers. IE a STAR record was missing information on one of chees three identifiers, the remaining identifiers were used to complete the merger. The data were merged together by searching over ACT and SAT records for the entire O.B., DO any student who had moved away from Tennessee should scill be included 1p the sample. About 9 percent of the STAR students who were identified by che search algorithm Fook the ACT or SAT exam outside of Tennessee. Once the date ware marged together. the students* names, dates of birth. and social Security numbers were concealed to preserve confidentiality. Several checks indicated that the data ware linked properly. For example, the correlation between the students' ACT score percentile rank and their oth grade Tennessee comprehensive ASSOSTMENT Program (TCAP) Tast parcentile rank was 80, which is even higher than the correlation between the students 3rd grade stanford Achievement Test Score perdentile and cheir 7th grade TCAP percentile (.74). Additionally. the BOX of the students based on their STAR records matched cheir BOX in the ACT records in 28.78 of cases. These checks suggest that STAR students ware correctly linked co their ACT and SAT records. The ACT and SAT databages BEE organized by graduating high school classes. only members of the High School Class of 1998 were included in the ACT and SAT records that formed the basis of the search. As a consequence, STAR scudents who repeated a grade or for some other reason ware not high school soniore in 1998 could not be matched to their ACT and SAT records, even if they had taken one of the exame. Because of this feature of the data, we restrict our sample to the subset of. 9,397 students who ware - grade-lavel based on information that we have on students who wrote the TCAP axam through the eighth grade. AB a further check, however, are re-calculated Figure 1 for the entire sample at 11,600 students in our database (which includes students who fall behind and were not high school seniors in 1999), and find qualisatively mimilar results as in Figure 1. Thus, our results are rebust to the inclusion of students who have fallen buhind grade level. 4 04/29/99 THU 08:17 FAX 002 FILE No. 786 04/26 '99 12:23 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 2 Project STAR NEWS HEROS, P.O. Box 1271, Lebanon, IN 37088 www.telaini.net/ heros (615) 449-7904 EMBARGOED until 9:30 a.m. For More Information: April 29, 1999 Jayne Boyd-Zaharias (615) 449-7904 Benefits of small classes pay off at graduation Project STAR finds small classes in K-3 linked to greater student achievement, better grades, lower dropout rates, and higher college aspirations Washington, D.C. - A ground-breaking Tennessee-based class size study has found that public school students placed in small classes in grades K-3 continue to outperform students in larger classes right through high school graduation. Researchers for Project STAR (Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio) - whose earlier findings helped form the basis for class size reduction in some 20 states - today reported that students placed in small class sizes in grades K-3 have better high school graduation rates, higher grade point averages, and are more inclined to pursue higher education. "This research adds to the evidence we have compiled over the past 14 years," said Dr. Helen Pate-Bain. who convinced the Tennessee state legislature to provide funding for the initial STAR research. "The project's findings indicate that students placed in small classes in grades K-3 continue to benefit from that experience in grades 4-12." The original STAR research tracked the progress of an average of 6,500 students each year in 79 schools between 1985 and 1989 (and 11,600 students overall). It found that children who attended small classes (13-17 pupils per teacher) in kindergarten through grade 3 outperformed students in larger classes (22-25 pupils) in both reading and math on the Stanford Achievement Test for elementary students. The second phase of the STAR research found that even after returning to larger classes in grade 4, STAR's small class students continued to outperform their peers who had been in larger class sizes. At a news conference held today at the National Press Club, STAR researchers released a new wave of findings: 04/29/99 THU 08:18 FAX 1 003 FILE No. 786 04/26 '99 12:23 ID:NEA GOV. RELATIONS 202 822 7309 PAGE 3 7 Students in small classes are more likely to pursue college: STAR students who attended small classes - and black students in that group in particular - were more likely to take the ACT or SAT college entrance exams, according to Princeton University economist Dr. Alan B. Krueger, who researched test data linked to the Project STAR database. "Attendance in small classes appears to have cut the black-white gap in the probability of taking a college-entrance exam by more than half," Krueger said. Small classes lead to higher graduation rates: Preliminary data from participating STAR school districts in Tennessee show that students in small classes were more likely to graduate on schedule; they were less likely to drop out of high school: and they were more likely to graduate In the top 25% of their classes, according to Dr. Jayne Boyd-Zaharias, a STAR researcher since 1986. In addition, Boyd-Zaharias found that small class students graduated with higher grade point averages (GPAs) than regular class size students. Students In small classes achieve at higher levels: Three other researchers - Dr. Jeremy D. Finn, professor of education at SUNY Buffalo, Susan B. Gerber of SUNY Buffalo, and Charles M. Achilles, Ed.D., of Eastern Michigan University, together with Boyd-Zaharias - released new findings showing that STAR students who attended small classes in grades K-3 wore between 6 and 13 months ahead of their regular-class peers in math, reading, and science in each of grades 4, 6, and 8. "Our analyses show that at least three years in a small class are necessary in order for the benefits to be sustained through later grades," wrote the researchers. "Further, the benefits of having been In a email class in the primary years generally increase from grade to grade." Class size is different from pupll/teacher ratio: Achilles, one of the original STAR researchers, explained the difference between class size (the number of students assigned to a teacher) and pupil/teacher ratio (the total number of students divided by the total number of educators In a school). Many "class size" studies, he noted. have relied on pupil/teacher ratios to make their case. The STAR research is able to track students based on specific class size. Achilles noted that some 20 states - including Michigan, California, Nevada, Florida, Texas. Utah, Illinois, Indiana, New York, Oklahoma, lowa, Minnesota, Massachusetts, South Caroline, and Wisconsin - have initiated or considered STAR-like class size reduction efforts. APR-29-1999 THU 08:20 AM OFC OF SEC/PUBLIC AFFAIR FAX NO. 202 260 7753 P. 01 STATE OF UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION , STATES STATES of AMERICA PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR FAX TRANSMITTAL TO: Bethany little PHONE: FAX: 456 5581 FROM: OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS Laura Segal 202-401-0058 PHONE: 202-401-3026 FAX: (202) 260-7753 PAGE(S) TO FOLLOW: 2 MESSAGE: Scheduled for 1130 12 is Capitol "Swamp" - Senete side He's also domg the Ed Flex biller Signing today at 230 CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE This transmission is intended for and restricted to the named addressee only. It may contain confidential and/or privileged information. If you receive this transmission in eΓΓoΓ, you are notified that you are prohibited from reading. copying. or disseminating the transmission. Please call (202) 401-3026 to arrange for return of any transmission sent in error. Thank you. 400 MARYLAND AVE., S.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202-0130 (202) 401-3026 APR-29-1999 THU 08:20 AM OFC OF SEC/PUBLIC AFFAIR FAX NO. 202 260 7753 P. 02 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION NEWS STATE B For Release: April 29, 1999 Contact: Julie Green (202) 401-3026 STATEMENT BY U.S. SECRETARY OF EDUCATION RICHARD W. RILEY On new Project STAR Research Good morning, and thank you all for coming. It has been nine days since the tragic events at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, shook and saddened our nation. Since that day, the American people have been searching for answers to the problem of school violence. We may never have all the answers, but I am convinced that we can take real action to make American schools safer and better. Today, we are here to talk about one of those steps -- reducing class size in the early grades. Last year, I met with school security experts. I expected them to tell me that the solutions to school violence were more metal detectors and more armed policemen in schools. While they said these could help, I will never forget what one security officer said to me: "If you want safer schools, give kids more attention in the early grades." He understood the critical importance of early childhood education. He knew that putting children on the right track in life is easiest when they're very young. We must give every young child as much individual attention as possible. If we want to have safer schools tomorrow, we must invest in our young children today. President Clinton has made a dramatic proposal to help school districts hire and pay 100,000 well prepared teachers to reduce class size to an average of 18 students in the first three grades nationally. This would allow teachers to provide more individualized instruction and attention to each student. It would also allow teachers to identify troubled, disconnected students and get them the help they need. This isn't only about the quantity of teachers -- it's also about the quality of teachers. School districts would be able to use a portion of their allocations to test new teachers for academic content knowledge and to upgrade professional development opportunities for current teachers. Teachers would also learn proven practices that help children learn to read, and they would receive instruction in the best ways to teach small classes. This initiative is just one part of the Clinton-Gore Administration's overall effort to recruit, prepare, and support quality teachers. APR-29-1999 THU 08:20 AM OFC OF SEC/PUBLIC AFFAIR FAX NO. 202 260 7753 P. 03 The current budget includes the first down payment of 1.2-billion dollars to hire the first group of teachers. Last weck, when the Congress passed the excellent Ed-Flex bill, it wisely rejected an attempt to derail the drive to hire 100,000 new teachers and reduce class size. This bipartisan action showed that we can work together to improve education, and the President will sign the Ed-Flex bill this afternoon. Now we are urging Congress to finish the job of hiring 100,000 good new teachers. We are also urging Congress to take the next logical step. Reducing class size will mean that we'll need more classrooms. So we will continue to work for passage of the President's initiative to help build, repair, or modernize 6,000 public schools. The best research on class reduction has been the Tennessee "Project STAR" study. Several of the researchers who took part in that study are with us today. Earlier this morning, they reported on their study's latest findings. They found that public school students placed in smaller classes in grades K-3 continue to outperform students in larger classes right through high school graduation. They also found that students from smaller classes have better high school graduation rates, higher grade-point averages, and are more likely to go to college. I might add that we also know that when students do better in school, they're less likely to be attracted to gangs. drugs, and violence. And now it is my honor to turn these proceedings over to a leader who has championed the cause of children and education in the U.S. Senate and all across this nation - Senator Ted Kennedy. ### AMERICAN Responsibility FEDERATION OF Respect Results TEACHERS AFL.CIO LESS DNS FORT IFF DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, 555 NEW JERSEY AVENUE, N.W., WASHINGTON, DC 20001-2079 TEL: 202-879-4458 FAX: 202-879-4556 EMBARGOED for 12:01 am, June 21, 1999 CONTACT: Janet Bass (202)879-4554 TEACHER SALARY BOOST IS ONE WAY TO STEM TEACHER SHORTAGES AFT Releases 1997-98 Teacher Salary Survey Raising teacher salaries will be necessary to stem a serious teacher shortage caused in large part by a red-hot job market offering lucrative salaries to college graduates, the American Federation of Teachers said today in releasing its 1997-98 teacher salary survey. "To attract college graduates to teaching, salaries must keep pace with other professions that are luring people away from the classroom. Teaching is enormously gratifying, and many more would make it their career choice if they felt they were treated like professionals," said AFT President Sandra Feldman. Along with higher salaries, she said schools must also reduce class sizes, enforce a strict discipline policy, modernize school buildings, and make other improvements to attract and retain teachers. The U.S. Department of Education has estimated that 2 million teachers will need to be hired over the next decade. According to the AFT report, the chief reasons for the teacher shortage include inferior salaries, a rapidly graying teaching force and increasing enrollments due to the so- called "baby boomlet." The national average beginning teacher salary in the 1997-98 school year was $25,735. By contrast, new college graduates in 1998 received an average salary offer in other fields of more than $35,000. For example, in engineering, offers averaged $42,862; computer science, $40,920; math or statistics, $40,523; chemistry, $36,036; business administration, $34,831; accounting, $33,702; and sales/marketing, $33,252. The national average teacher salary in the 1997-98 school year was $39,347. By contrast, the 1998 average annual salary of other white-collar occupations was much higher. For example, attorneys earned $71,530; engineers, $64,489; computer systems analysts, $63,072; buyer/contract specialists, $54,625; and accountants, $45,919. In the early 1990s, corporate downsizing contributed to a poor job market for new college graduates and new teacher salaries increased at two or three times the rate of other salary offers for new college graduates, according to the salary report. But starting in 1995, unemployment fell, the labor market for new college graduates grew, and salary offers in the private sector grew at twice the rate as those for new teachers. -More- AFTSU As part of the salary report, AFT surveyed personnel officers of the nation's 200 largest school districts. Among the findings: A teacher shortage clearly exists, especially in large urban districts. More than two-thirds of respondents indicated an insufficient supply of teacher applicants in 1998-99. School districts were adopting a variety of responses to the shortage, including providing signing bonuses and housing allowances and issuing emergency teaching credentials. Respondents said they had more difficulty attracting qualified teachers compared to four years ago. The shortage is particularly severe for math, special education and bilingual education teachers. Districts also noted shortages of teachers in the following fields: foreign language, science, computers, school psychologists, and occupational and physical therapists. No field of teaching rated in the category of "considerable surplus," although a sufficient number of elementary and social studies teachers was noted. School districts reported that 8.5 percent of teachers taught under temporary or emergency credentials in 1998-99, up from 8 percent in 1997-98. Last year, the AFT called for a moratorium on emergency credentials for teachers. As part of the current reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Clinton administration also has pushed states to end emergency teacher credentials, proposing that within four years, 95 percent of all teachers in a state would have to be fully certified or working toward obtaining certification within three years. Other highlights of the AFT 1997-98 salary survey: The $39,347 average teacher salary is a 2.4 percent increase over the 1996-97 average salary of $38,415. The $25,735 average beginning teacher salary is a 2.9 percent increase over the 1996-97 beginning salary of $25,015. The five states with the highest average salaries: Connecticut ($51,727); New Jersey ($50,284); New York ($48,712); Michigan ($48,361); and Alaska ($48,275). The five states with the lowest average salaries: New Mexico ($30,309); Louisiana ($30,090); Mississippi ($28,691); North Dakota ($28,231); and South Dakota ($27,839). Teachers had an average 16.1 years of experience in 1997-98, just over five more years than in 1978. (Sources for the AFT's salary survey include state departments of education and the Department of Defense survey of teacher salaries.) (To obtain a copy of the complete report, Survey & Analysis of Salary Trends 1998, contact the AFT Research Department at 202-879-4428.) The AFT represents more than one million teachers, school support staff, higher education faculty, nurses and other healthcare professionals, and state and local government employees. ### TABLE I-1 AVERAGE TEACHER SALARY IN 1997-98 STATE RANKINGS Average Percent of Rank State Salary U.S. Average 1 Connecticut $51,727 131.5% 2 New Jersey 50,284 127.8% 3 New York 48,712 C 123.8% 4 Michigan 48,361 b 122.9% 5 Alaska 48,275 122.7% 6 Pennsylvania 47,542 120.8% 7 D.C. 44,746 b 113.7% 8 California 44,585 113.3% 9 Rhode Island 44,506 b 113.1% 10 Massachusetts 44,285 b 112.5% 11 Illinois 43,707 e 111.1% 12 Delaware 42,439 107.9% 13 Oregon 42,301 e 107.5% 14 Maryland 41,404 f 105.2% 15 Nevada 40,572 e 103.1% 16 Indiana 39,752 101.0% 17 Minnesota 39,104 b 99.4% 18 Ohio 39,099 99.4% 19 Washington 38,755 a 98.5% 20 Wisconsin 38,179 f 97.0% 21 Georgia 37,412 95.1% 22 Colorado 37,240 94.6% 23 Virginia 37,024 f 94.1% 24 New Hampshire 36,663 93.2% 25 Hawaii 36,598 b 93.0% 26 Vermont 36,299 92.3% 27 Tennessee 34,584 f 87.9% 28 Florida 34,473 87.6% 29 Kentucky 34,453 f 87.6% 30 Maine 34,349 87.3% 31 lowa 34,084 86.6% 32 Arizona 34,071 b 86.6% 33 Missouri 34,001 a,f 86.4% 34 Kansas 33,800 d 85.9% 35 South Carolina 33,608 85.4% 36 Texas 33,537 85.2% 37 West Virginia 33,396 f 84.9% 38 North Carolina 33,123 84.2% 39 Utah 32,981 a 83.8% 40 Idaho 32,834 83.4% 41 Alabama 32,799 83.4% 42 Nebraska 32,668 83.0% 43 Arkansas 32,119 a,f 81.6% 44 Wyoming 32,022 81.4% 45 Oklahoma 30,940 78.6% 46 Montana 30,617 77.8% 47 New Mexico 30,309 b 77.0% 48 Louisiana 30,090 76.5% 49 Mississippi 28,691 72.9% 50 North Dakota 28,231 71.7% 51 South Dakota 27,839 70.8% U.S. Average $39,347 100.0% Guam $27,827 e.f 70.7% Puerto Rico $24,000 61.0% Virgin Islands $33,311 84.7% a=estimate or preliminary; b=AFTestimate; c=median; d=estimated to exclude fringe benefits at 8%; e=includes employer pick-up of employee pension contribution, where applicable; f=includes extra duty pay. Source: American Federation of Teachers, annual survey of state departments of education. Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/5 TABLE I-2 TRENDS IN THE AVERAGE SALARY, 1995-96 TO 1997-98 Percent Change Average Salary 1995-96 1996-97 1995-96 to to to State 1995-96 Rank 1996-97 Rank 1997-98 Rank 1996-97 1997-98 1997-98 Connecticut $50,938 1 $51,181 1 $51,727 1 0.5% 1.1% 1.5% New Jersey 48,751 3 49,786 2 50,284 2 2.1% 1.0% 3.1% New York 48,115 4 48,000 4 48,712 3 -0.2% 1.5% 1.2% Michigan 46,832 5 47,181 5 48,361 4 0.7% 2.5% 3.3% Alaska 49,148 2 49,140 3 48,275 5 0.0% -1.8% -1.8% Pennsylvania 46,087 6 47,147 6 47,542 6 2.3% 0.8% 3.2% D.C. 42,424 8 43,443 7 44,746 7 2.4% 3.0% 5.5% California 42,259 9 42,992 10 44,585 8 1.7% 3.7% 5.5% Rhode Island 41,829 10 43,084 8 44,506 9 3.0% 3.3% 6.4% Massachusetts 43,025 7 42,995 9 44,285 10 -0.1% 3.0% 2.9% Illinois 40,890 12 42,339 11 43,707 11 3.5% 3.2% 6.9% Delaware 40,533 13 41,436 12 42,439 12 2.2% 2.4% 4.7% Oregon 39,706 14 41,093 14 42,301 13 3.5% 2.9% 6.5% Maryland 41,186 11 41,257 13 41,404 14 0.2% 0.4% 0.5% Nevada 39,535 15 40,841 15 40,572 15 3.3% -0.7% 2.6% Indiana 37,675 18 38,845 16 39,752 16 3.1% 2.3% 5.5% Minnesota 37,161 19 38,113 18 39,104 17 2.6% 2.6% 5.2% Ohio 38,087 16 38,806 17 39,099 18 1.9% 0.8% 2.7% Washington 37,853 17 37,812 20 38,755 19 -0.1% 2.5% 2.4% Wisconsin 36,964 21 37,872 19 38,179 20 2.5% 0.8% 3.3% Georgia 33,869 26 35,679 24 37,412 21 5.3% 4.9% 10.5% Colorado 35,364 24 36,271 21 37,240 22 2.6% 2.7% 5.3% Virginia 34,792 25 35,651 25 37,024 23 2.5% 3.9% 6.4% New Hampshir 35,792 22 36,029 23 36,663 24 0.7% 1.8% 2.4% Hawaii 37,044 20 35,532 26 36,598 25 -4.1% 3.0% -1.2% Vermont 35,526 23 36,052 22 36,299 26 1.5% 0.7% 2.2% Tennessee 33,126 28 34,222 27 34,584 27 3.3% 1.1% 4.4% Florida 33,330 27 33,855 28 34,473 28 1.6% 1.8% 3.4% Kentucky 32,935 29 33,797 29 34,453 29 2.6% 19% 4.6% Maine 32,869 30 33,676 30 34,349 30 2.5% 2.0% 4.5% lowa 32,372 33 33,272 31 34,084 31 2.8% 2.4% 5.3% Arizona 32,843 31 33,208 33 34,071 32 1.1% 2.6% 3.7% Missouri 32,323 34 33,155 34 34,001 33 2.6% 2.6% 5.2% Kansas 32,429 32 33,087 35 33,800 34 2.0% 2.2% 4.2% South Carolina 31,622 36 32,830 36 33,608 35 3.8% 2.4% 6.3% Texas 31,400 39 32,426 38 33,537 36 3.3% 3.4% 6.8% West Virginia 32,155 35 33,258 32 33,396 37 3.4% 0.4% 3.9% North Carolina 30,411 43 31,167 43 33,123 38 2.5% 6.3% 8.9% Utah 30,587 42 31,866 39 32,981 39 4.2% 3.5% 7.8% Idaho 30,891 41 31,280 42 32,834 40 1.3% 5.0% 6.3% Alabama 31,324 40 32,551 37 32,799 41 3.9% 0.8% 4.7% Nebraska 31,496 38 31,768 40 32,668 42 0.9% 2.8% 3.7% Arkansas 29,964 44 31,021 44 32,119 43 3.5% 3.5% 7 2% Wyoming 31,571 37 31,716 41 32,022 44 0.5% 1.0% 1.4% Oklahoma 29,177 47 30,184 45 30,940 45 3.5% 2.5% 6.0% Montana 29,364 45 29,958 46 30,617 46 2.0% 2.2% 4.3% New Mexico 29,285 46 29,715 47 30,309 47 1.5% 2.0% 3.5% Louisiana 26,800 50 29,025 48 30,090 48 8.3% 3.7% 12.3% Mississippi 27,692 48 27,877 49 28,691 49 0.7% 2.9% 3.6% North Dakota 26,966 49 27,709 50 28,231 50 2.8% 1.9% 4.7% South Dakota 26,346 51 27,072 51 27,839 51 2.8% 2.8% 5.7% U.S. Average $37,594 $38,415 $39,347 2.2% 2.4% 4.7% Guam n.a. $27,827 $27,827 n.a. 0.0% n.a. Puerto Rico n.a. $24,000 $24,000 n.a. 0.0% n.a. Virgin Islands $31,372 $33,216 $33,311 5.9% 0.3% 6.2% Source: American Federation of Teachers, annual survey of state departments of education. Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/# TABLE I-4 AVERAGE TEACHER SALARIES FOR 1987-88 AND 1997-98 Percent of Change Average Salary Rank U.S. Average 1987-88 State 1987-88 1997-98 1987-88 1997-98 1987-88 1997-98 1997-98 Rank New Jersey $30,778 $50,284 10 2 110% 128% 63.4% 1 Pennsylvania 29,177 47,542 16 6 104% 121% 62.9% 2 West Virginia 21,736 33,396 45 37 77% 85% 53.6% 3 Connecticut 33,776 51,727 7 1 120% 131% 53.1% 4 New Hampshire 24,019 36,663 42 24 86% 93% 52.6% 5 Arkansas 21,133 32,119 49 43 75% 82% 52.0% 6 Oregon 28,060 42,301 20 13 100% 108% 50.8% 7 Vermont 24,507 36,299 37 26 87% 92% 48.1% 8 Idaho 22,242 32,834 44 40 79% 83% 47.6% 9 Illinois 29,667 43,707 13 11 106% 111% 47.3% 10 Indiana 27,028 39,752 24 16 96% 101% 47.1% 11 Nevada 27,599 40,572 19 15 98% 103% 47.0% 12 Maine 23,425 34,349 47 30 83% 87% 46.6% 13 Utah 22,572 32,981 38 39 80% 84% 46.1% 14 Massachusetts 30,379 44,285 9 10 108% 113% 45.8% 15 Tennessee 23,785 34,584 31 27 85% 88% 45.4% 16 Georgia 25,736 37,412 27 21 92% 95% 45.4% 17 Nebraska 22,683 32,668 43 42 81% 83% 44.0% 18 Delaware 29,573 42,439 15 12 105% 108% 43.5% 19 Kentucky 24,253 34,453 41 29 86% 88% 42.1% 20 Michigan 34,080 48,361 4 4 121% 123% 41.9% 21 Louisiana 21,209 30,090 48 48 76% 76% 41.9% 22 Ohio 27,606 39,099 21 18 98% 99% 41.6% 23 New York 34,500 48,712 3 3 123% 124% 41.2% 24 South Dakota 19,758 27,839 51 51 70% 71% 40 9% 25 Alabama 23,320 32,799 32 41 83% 83% 40.6% 26 Mississippi 20,562 28,691 50 49 73% 73% 39.5% 27 South Carolina 24,403 33,608 36 35 87% 85% 37.7% 28 Missouri 24,709 34,001 34 33 88% 86% 37.6% 29 Washington 28,217 38,755 18 19 101% 98% 37.3% 30 Kansas 24,647 33,800 33 34 88% 86% 37.1% 31 lowa 24,858 34,084 39 31 89% 87% 37.1% 32 Florida 25,198 34,473 29 28 90% 88% 36.8% 33 Virginia 27,193 37,024 25 23 97% 94% 36.2% 34 Oklahoma 22,773 30,940 40 45 81% 79% 35.9% 35 Rhode Island 32,858 44,506 6 9 117% 113% 35.4% 36 California 33,159 44,585 5 8 118% 113% 34.5% 37 Maryland 30,933 41,404 8 14 110% 105% 33.9% 38 North Carolina 24,900 33,123 30 38 89% 84% 33.0% 39 Texas 25,558 33,537 26 36 91% 85% 31.2% 40 Minnesota 29,900 39,104 11 17 107% 99% 30.8% 41 Wisconsin 29,206 38,179 14 20 104% 97% 30.7% 42 North Dakota 21,660 28,231 46 50 77% 72% 30.3% 43 Colorado 28,651 37,240 17 22 102% 95% 30.0% 44 D.C. 34,705 44,746 2 7 124% 114% 28.9% 45 Montana 23,774 30,617 35 46 85% 78% 28.8% 46 Hawaii 28,445 36,598 22 25 101% 93% 28.7% 47 New Mexico 23,958 30,309 28 47 85% 77% 26.5% 48 Arizona 27,388 34,071 23 32 98% 87% 24.4% 49 Wyoming 27,141 32,022 12 44 97% 81% 18.0% 50 Alaska 41,190 48,275 1 5 147% 123% 17.2% 51 U.S. Average $28,071 $39,347 100% 100% 40.2% Guam $27,713 $27,827 99% 71% 0.4% Puerto Rico $11,700 $24,000 42% 61% 105.1% Virgin Islands $18,682 $33,311 67% 85% 78.3% Source: American Federation of Teachers, annual survey of state departments of education. Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/# TABLE III-1 ACTUAL AVERAGE BEGINNING BA TEACHER SALARIES, 1996-97 AND 1997-98 Beginning Beginning Average To Average Beginning Increase In: Salary Salary Salary Salary Beginning Average State 1997-98 1997-98 Ratio 1996-97 Salary Salary 1 Alaska 33,162 48,275 68.7% 32,502 2.0% 0.0% 2 New York 30,204 C 48,712 C 62.0% 28,749 5.1% -0.2% 3 Pennsylvania 29,581 47,542 62.2% 29,426 0.5% 2.3% 4 Connecticut 29,506 51,727 57.0% 29,154 1.2% 0.5% 5 Nevada 28,641 40,572 e 70.6% 28,538 0.4% 3.2% 6 New Jersey 28,319 50,284 56.3% 28,039 1.0% 2.1% 7 Illinois 28,183 e 43,707 e 64.5% 27,210 6 3.6% 3.5% 9 California 27,852 44,585 62.5% 26,684 4.4% 1.7% 8 Alabama $27,388 $32,799 83.5% $27,107 1.0% 3.7% 10 Massachusetts 27,238 b 44,285 b 61.5% 26,445 b 3.0% 2.5% 11 D.C. 27,234 b 44,746 b 60.9% 25,937 b 5.0% 0.0% 12 Michigan 27,064 b 48,361 b 56.0% 26,404 b 2.5% 2.0% 13 Maryland 27,010 f 41,404 f 65.2% 26,548 f 1.7% 0.2% 14 Hawail 26,744 36,598 b 73.1% 25,965 3.0% 2.9% 15 Georgia 26,706 b 37,412 71.4% 25,434 b 5.0% 5.3% 16 Rhode Island 26,300 b 44,506 b 59.1% 25,450 b 3.3% 3.0% 17 Minnesota 26,266 b 39,104 b 67.2% 25,600 b 2.6% 3.0% 18 Oregon 26,098 e 42,301 e 61.7% 25,373 e 2.9% 3.5% 19 Delaware 25,493 42,439 60.1% 24,349 4.7% 2.2% 20 Virginia 25,272 f 37,024 f 68.3% 24,774 1 2.0% 3.8% 21 Florida 25,266 34,473 73.3% 24,736 2.1% 1.7% 22 Vermont 25,183 b 36,299 69.4% 24,934 b 1.0% 1.5% 23 Arizona 24,917 b 34,071 b 73.1% 24,286 2.6% 1.1% 24 Colorado 24,867 37,240 66.8% 24,199 2.8% 2.6% 25 Texas 24,736 33,537 73.8% 24,079 2.7% 3.3% 26 Indiana 24,716 39,752 62.2% 24,268 1.9% 2.8% 27 Missouri 24,125 a,f 34,001 a.f 71.0% 23,400 a.f 3.1% 2.5% 28 Wisconsin 24,077 f 38,179 f 63.1% 23,619 f 1.9% 2.5% 29 New Hampshir 23,927 b 36,663 65.3% 23,690 b 1.0% 0.7% 30 Washington 23,860 38,755 a 61.6% 23,933 -0.3% 0.0% 31 Oklahoma 23,676 30,940 76.5% 23,842 -0.7% 3.5% 32 Kentucky 23,536 f 34,453 f 68.3% 23,015 f 2.3% 2.6% 33 South Carolina 23,427 33,608 69.7% 22,794 2.8% 3.3% 34 New Mexico 23,297 b 30,309 b 76.9% 22,840 2.0% 1.5% 35 Louisiana 22,843 30,090 75.9% 20,615 10.8% 5.8% 36 Ohio 22,535 39,099 57.6% 22,146 1.8% 2.3% 37 West Virginia 22,529 f 33,396 f 67.5% 22,278 f 1.1% 3.4% 38 lowa 22,475 34,084 65.9% 21,884 2.7% 2.8% 39 Kansas 22,445 d 33,800 d 66.4% 21,909 d 2.4% 2.2% 40 Utah 22,241 32,981 a 67.4% 21,475 3.6% 2.4% 41 Wyoming 22,230 b 32,022 69.4% 22,010 b 1.0% 0.5% 42 North Carolina 22,150 33,123 66.9% 21,330 3.8% 2.5% 43 Tennessee 22,140 f 34,584 f 64.0% 21,705 f 2.0% 3.4% 44 Nebraska 21,949 32,668 67.2% 21,189 3.6% 0.9% 45 Maine 21,554 34,349 62.8% 20,972 2.8% 2.5% 46 Montana 21,045 b 30,617 68.7% 20,592 b 2.2% 2.0% 47 Arkansas 21,000 32,119 a,f 65.4% 21,000 0.0% 3.4% 48 Mississippi 20,630 28,691 71.9% 20,150 2.4% -0.1% 49 South Dakota 20,340 27,839 73.1% 19,412 4.8% 2.8% 50 Idaho 20,248 b 32,834 61.7% 20,006 1.2% 3.0% 51 North Dakota 19,146 28,231 67.8% 18,889 1.4% 2.8% U.S. Average $25,735 $39,347 65.4% $25,015 2.9% 2.4% Guam $26,197 $33,854 77.4% $26,197 0.0% 0.0% Puerto Rico $18,000 $24,000 75.0% $18,000 0.0% 0.0% Virgin Islands $21,913 $33,216 66.0% $20,226 8.3% 0.0% a=estimate or preliminary; b=AFTestimate; c=median; d=estimated to exclude fringe benefits (at 8%); e=includes employer pick-up of employee pension contribution, where applicable; f=includes extra duty pay. Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/# Figure II-8 Average Teacher Salary in 1998 Falls Short of Earnings in Other Professions Full Professor $75,154 Attorney $71,530 Engineer $64,489 Programmer/Analyst $63,072 Buyer $54,625 Accountant $45,919 Assistant Professor $40,762 Teacher $39,347 Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/# Figure III-6 New Teacher Salaries Lag Behind Beginning Salaries in Other Occupations Engineering $42,682 Computer Science $40,920 Math/Statistics $40,523 Economics/Finance $36,658 Chemistry $36,036 Business Admin. $34,831 Liberal Arts $33,600 Sales/Marketing $33,252 Teaching $25,735 Survey and Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends 1998 American Federation of Teachers/#