Center for American Progress
RELEASE: U.S. Teacher Workforce Lacks Diversity, Puts Student Achievement at Risk
May 5, 2014
Contact: Katie Peters Phone: 202.741.6285 Email: kpeters@americanprogress.org
Washington,
D.C. — While America’s public schools are becoming increasingly more
diverse, a new report released by the Center for American Progress finds
that nearly every state is experiencing a large and growing teacher
diversity gap, or a significant difference between the number of
students of color and teachers of color.
The report released
today revisits a similar Center for American Progress study from 2011.
When the original report was released, students of color made up more
than 40 percent of the school age-population, while teachers of color
were only 17 percent of the teaching force. The report released today
shows that since 2011, the gap between teachers and students of color
has continued to grow. Over the past three years, the demographic divide
between teachers and students of color has increased by 3 percentage
points, and today, students of color make up almost half of the public
school population.
“The student population of America’s schools
may look like a melting pot, but our teacher workforce looks like it
wandered out of the 1950s. It’s overwhelmingly white,” said
Ulrich
Boser, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and author of
the report ”We know from research that students of color do better
academically if they are taught by teachers of color. We also know that
all students need role models in their schools that represent our
diverse society. Parents, teachers, and policymakers should be alarmed
by the findings and demand that states and districts take action to
address this growing problem.
The report, “Teacher Diversity
Revisited,” includes state-by-state data documenting the teacher
diversity gap across the nation. An analysis of the data reveals the
following key findings:
Almost every state has a significant
diversity gap. In California, 73 percent of students are kids of color,
but only about 29 percent are teachers of color. Maryland has the same
problem, although the numbers are a bit better: In the Old Line State,
more than 55 percent of students are kids of color, while just around 17
percent are teachers of color.
The Hispanic teacher population has
larger demographic gaps relative to students. In Nevada, for instance,
just 9 percent of teachers were Hispanic. In contrast, the state’s
student body was 39 percent Hispanic.
Diversity gaps are large within
districts. For the first time, we examined district-level data in
California, Florida, and Massachusetts. These three states account for
20 percent of all students in the United States, and it turns out that
the gaps within districts are often larger than those within states.
A
companion report also released today by CAP and Progress 2050 describes
how the shortcomings of today’s education system and the
underachievement of many of today’s students of color shrink the future
supply of the teachers of color. The report, “America’s Leaky Pipeline
for Teachers of Color,” finds that fundamental constraints limit the
potential supply of highly effective teachers of color. Students of
color have significantly lower college enrollment rates than do white
students. In addition, a relatively small number of students of color
enroll in teacher education programs each year. Finally, teacher
trainees who are members of communities of color often score lower on
licensure exams that serve as passports to teaching careers.
Furthermore,
the report reveals that teachers of color leave the profession at a
much higher rate than their non-Hispanic white peers. Those who leave
mention a perceived lack of respect for teaching as a profession,
lagging salary levels, and difficult working conditions.
Despite
the barriers in the educator pipeline, there is great opportunity ahead
to make improvements. The report includes a set of policy
recommendations for the federal government and for states and local
school districts. Enlarging the pool of talented, well-educated teachers
of color who are effective in improving student achievement in our
schools will require aggressive and targeted recruitment and appropriate
support. It will demand a steadfast determination to remove the
barriers in the educator pipeline that limit and discourage strong
candidates for the teaching profession. At the same time, policies must
be in place to offer clear and meaningful monetary incentives, support,
and professional development to ensure that the best and brightest
students of color enter into teaching and succeed once in the
profession.
Read the reports:
Teacher Diversity Revisited: A New State-by-State Analysis, by Ulrich Boser
America’s Leaky Pipeline for Teachers of Color, by Farah Z. Ahmad and Ulrich Boser
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Sent: Mon, Jun 30, 2014 10:59 am
Retaining Teachers of Color in Our Public Schools
Center for American Progress
Read more and download the full report here.
This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
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