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NEA Report

5 Ways School Districts Can Better Retain Educators

Solving educator shortages requires evidence-based, long-term strategies that address both recruitment and retention.
Nicki Belnap Moses Mitchell
Published: September 30, 2022
This resource originally appeared on NEA.org

Recruiting educators into the profession will only be effective if we are able to retain them.

We do not yet fully know the effects of the pandemic on career plans, but within a single year, from March 2020 to March 2021, the percent of teachers who said they would remain in the classroom until retirement dropped from 74 percent to 69 percent.

If a teacher, ESP, or SISP is underpaid, undervalued, and not respected or supported, what would stop them from looking elsewhere, especially when non-education employers are providing higher pay, better benefits, more manageable hours, better working conditions, and a higher level of professional respect?

There are several retention solutions that can help address the educator shortage crisis, including the following:

For citations and more details, read NEA's full report on educator shortage solutions

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