The COVID-induced teacher shortage? - a podcast by American Enterprise Institute

from 2021-12-16T15:45

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Every year, it seems, national and local press talk a lot about the "teacher shortage," and the reports are often accompanied with words like "emergency" and "crisis." The frequency of these reports might garner skepticism by some but, this year, talks around the teacher shortage are different.
After nearly two years of COVID-19, and with the labor markets currently in flux, could it be that reports around the teacher shortage this year are different than before? Here to discuss is Dan Goldhaber and Gema Zamarro.
Gema is a Professor in Education Reform and Economics at the University of Arkansas and the author of a recent report, titled: https://www.slu.edu/research/sinquefield-center-for-applied-economic-research/teacher-turnover-intentions-during-covid-fuchsman.pdf (Understanding how COVID-19 has Changed Teachers’ Chances of Remaining in the Classroom.)
Dan is the Director of the Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data (CALDER) in Education Research at the American Institutes for Research and the author of a new report on school district staffing, titled: https://www.cedr.us/_files/ugd/1394b9_7709c1ab926247469c2aa9c076b977bc.pdf (School District Staffing Challenges in a Rapidly Recovering Economy).

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