Catholic schools are facing a critical challenge: a growing teacher shortage that threatens the quality of education. To overcome this, schools must adopt innovative strategies to attract, support, and retain talented educators. This article highlights practical solutions that strengthen Catholic education and ensure students continue to thrive in faith-centered learning environments.
Last summer a friend who leads a successful college preparatory Catholic high school called in a quandary – for the past five months he had been actively searching for a Chemistry teacher. During that time, he had one applicant. Yes, just one applicant in five months, and the applicant was not qualified. This is not a unique example. The “Great Resignation” has affected all corners of our economy, including the education sector.
In January, 55 percent of teachers said they’re considering leaving their jobs sooner than they’d planned because of the Covid-19 pandemic (source: National Education Association poll, the nation’s largest teachers’ union). In the same poll 90% of teachers said that feeling burned out is a serious problem.
According to the Wall Street Journal, burned-out teachers are leaving the classroom for jobs in the private sector, where talent-hungry companies are hiring them—and often boosting their pay—to work in sales, software, healthcare, and training, among other fields. The rate of people quitting jobs in private educational services rose more than in any other industry in 2021, according to federal data.
As Rick Hess notes in his essay Education after the Pandemic, “even before the pandemic, staffing American schools had been no easy task. Public schools must hire 300,000 teachers per year just to replace those lost to attrition. That's more than the total number of graduates produced by all of America's selective colleges annually—with the term "selective" used to mean any institution that accepts fewer than half of its applicants. Even if every single graduate from the nation's flagship universities, the Ivy League, and prestigious liberal-arts colleges opted to teach, it wouldn't plug the gap left by departures each year.”
What is a Catholic school leader to do during these challenging times as they plan for next fall? Here are three solutions to our current teacher shortage crisis.
These young Corps members often teach two courses a semester (if qualified), coach sports, proctor study halls and dances and generally bring relief to full-time teachers. Some Corps members who are not qualified to teach can work in development or as a Teacher’s Assistant. Corps members live in community and serve the school. At De Smet Jesuit High School, just over 25% of their faculty and administrative leaders have come from the ranks of their Alumni Service corps. This program is a great way for a school to bring in young talent and retain them as full-time teachers and leaders.
A Catholic school could start a similar program to access career changers looking to make a difference later in their career. An engineer is qualified to teach math, a lawyer could teach rhetoric and expository writing, or a finance executive could teach economics and math.