Friday, March 6, 2020
The teacher shortage is the end of education as we know it. Or is it
The teacher shortage is the end of education as we know it. Or is it If youâre trying to recruit qualified teachers for schools in America, youâre probably aware of the domestic teacher shortage. Many schools are hemorrhaging teaching talent. In fact, if youâve read a paper lately, youâve probably seen one of the big scary headlines about the âTeacher Shortage.â The phrase is a bit of a fear-mongering tactic these days. You canât click into any news source around education without facing some hard facts. The problem isnât just domestic, most educators are aware that it wonât be long before finding great teachers is going to be a global crisis. Letâs look at it this way, by 2030 69 million new teachers will be required to teach primary and secondary level education across the world. Thatâs one of those impossible numbers. If you try to picture 69 million people all you imagine is an immense crowd. There are only 20 countries with a larger population than 69 million. Which means that the need for teachers will be bigger than the population of most countries. Itâs almost double the population of Canada! If youâre curious about what the global teacher shortage is, here are the main issues: Fewer young people want to be teachers Working educators are abandoning the profession at a high rate There is a geographic maldistribution of qualified educators The world population is exploding, particularly in underdeveloped regions It may seem like the profession is in crisis and thereâs no way out. There isnât a week that goes by without some new article touting some alarming fact. Recently a USA Today poll came up with this gem: âfor the first time since pollsters started asking a half-century ago, a majority of Americans said they would not want their child to become a teacher.â Great, thanks for that! But what are we going to do about it? Are we just going to write articles that slam an entire profession? Why not try to give some helpful suggestions? Y'know, some general hints and tips. Why not educate people about some of the innovations that education advocates are coming up with to tackle these problems? There are plenty of education advocates working hard, so letâs pay more attention to groups like the Gates Foundation, Global Teacher and MISK who are looking at innovative ways to solve these problems. Iâm as bad as anyone for getting sucked into the negative conversations surrounding teacher shortages and almost believing that doomsday approach to the world. All revolutions are terrifying, they usually come about when an industry is in crisis. I donât use that word revolution lightly but for anyone paying attention to education: a revolution is exactly what weâre facing (letâs do this ?). All those types of articles do is demotivate potential teachers. When as a global society, we should be focusing on nurturing and growing the best teaching talent⦠not scaring them away by flooding them with stories of a profession in crisis. And no, I'm not saying stop talking about the problems . I'm saying balance the conversation. Weâve got a lot of problems to fix by 2030 and we wonât do that by sitting around talking about them ad nauseam. We need to balance these conversations with actions. We need to ask ourselves what weâre doing to change education? There are more technology students than ever before - but thatâs not really any surprise. The media is full of articles extolling the success of people in the field. Itâs all investors and fastest-growing start-ups. Nobody is devoting media space to all the tech failures. It's possible to dedicate entire newspapers to all the tech companies that flop, but thatâs not the mediaâs focus and Iâm not saying it should be. But by excluding some of that less than motivating content, they reinforce a generation of people to see programming as a viable career. Why arenât we building teachers up in the same way? There should be more awards like the Global Teacher Prize. Why aren't we sayinghey, the world needs teachers? Look at these successful ones, wouldn't you like to grow up and be one. I donât think it needs to be all sunshine and daisies, but give us your success stories, let children be inspired by what teachers can do. And I know itâs not that simple, but we have to start somewhere. Governments need to put an emphasis on teachers, and build up our society so that we expect more for the teachers who are nurturing the next generation. Surely there is a balance? There may be a teacher shortage, some teachers might be drowning in debt, it might bepossible to get a 21k raise by moving abroad to teach. But thereâs one thing all these things have in common - theyâre headlines, clickbait and designed to create a sense of panic. I know there are real solutions to these problems. If we rise up as an industry and think about how we can do things smarter, faster and leaner - thereâs no reason we canât qualify more teachers than is currently thought possible. Thereâs no reason we canât tap into the educated masses and pull out the teachers amongst them, train them and connect them with the schools who need their talents, regardless of where they are in the world. Itâs about sending out an army of teachers to inspire and build the next generation of talent. Educators know that the world is changing and that it goes much further than tech in the classroom. Itâs time we balanced the teacher shortage conversation with some strategic talk. We canât change the figure. We need 69 million new teachers by 2030. What we can do, is change how we talk about it. It doesnât have to be âscary,â it could be âexciting.â Itâs not so much a âproblemâ as a challenge, and as far as the big bad âshortageâ... letâs think of it as an opportunity. Yes, the teacher shortage is the end of education as we know it. But thatâs not necessarily a bad thing! When was the last time we saw global educational reform? Isnât it time we took some of the stuff we pedal in the classroom: creativity, critical thinking, technology, innovation...etc. And use it to make the future of our schools brighter. Rather than joining the slew of âscare-mongeringâ articles about the teacher shortage - Iâm going to do things a bit differently. I want to use this space to talk about real solutions and ideas to drive education forward, and Iâd like you to be part of that conversation with me. The way I see it, we can use technology to extend the reach of the teachers we have, we can video conference teachers into rooms halfway across the planet, weâve got planes, AI, and the world is more educated than ever before. And thatâs just getting started. Collectively, weâve solved bigger problems than this, I like to think of it this way, we live in a world where we have the opportunity to train 69 million awesome new teachers. Letâs get to work. This article originally appeared on LinkedIn.
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