BY SUSAN TEBBEN
Education advocates, and even those teaching the next generation of educators, are concerned that a teacher shortage may become a chronic problem, even as pandemic-related interruptions fade away.
When the General Assembly came back into session after the November election, the biggest effort brought into the lame duck session was a bill that would overhaul the Department of Education and create seismic shifts in the role of the state Board of Education.
This after the election created its own shift with two incumbents on the board voted out and one not seeking reelection. The three new board members have promised more progressive aims, including attempting to fend off “culture wars” like measures to condemn so-called “critical race theory” in schools and an resolution expressing disapproval at proposed Title IX language to include gender identity in anti-discrimination rules.
Education advocates are pushing the legislature to look past controversial issues and use the rest of session to create security for teachers and address shortages of educators in the state.
“I would hope that our legislatures would have more respect for educators in this state than to pass education policy during the lame duck session,” said Melissa Cropper, head of the Ohio Federation of Teachers.
While public school advocates want to see more work done on the Fair School Funding plan, which saw two years worth of funding for the six-year phase-in approved in the last budget cycle, more immediate concerns exist when it comes to bringing in qualified teachers, and substitutes as well.
“Undermining the teaching profession isn’t going to help us attract and retain professionals,” said Scott DiMauro, president of the Ohio Education Association.
Some colleges and universities are trying to find ways to bring more educators into the field, like Baldwin Wallace, who is offering scholarships and grants for an accelerated math/science teaching master’s degree.
Funding coming from the Ohio Department of Higher Education’s “Choose Ohio First STEM” grant program and and other ODE scholarships to address teacher shortages are part of the program, which will start enrolling students beginning in May 2023.
“(Baldwin Wallace) believes there are many college graduates and working professionals with STEM educational background who may have a calling to become a teacher,” Dr. Stephen Dittmore, dean of the school’s College of Education and Health Sciences, in a statement announcing the program. “This Ohio-focused program provides a pathway for those individuals to meet both the needs of our students and the future of our workforce.”
Advocates are encouraged by moves to recruit quality teachers, but not moves like Senate Bill 361, a GOP-led bill that would allow veterans to teach without first obtaining licenses to do so.
“Instead of how we get warm bodies in seats in schools, look at proper training and keeping the teachers we do have,” Cropper said.
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