TOPIC

Educator workforce & effectiveness

Educator workforce & effectiveness

Educator quality is the most influential school-based factor that contributes to student outcomes.  In California, the teacher pipeline is comprised of institutions that provide teacher candidates with opportunities to learn the knowledge, skills, and capabilities in the California Standards for the Teaching Profession. K-12 schools play a large role in this system, teaching novices the K-12 curriculum, providing the learning context for all field placements, as well as providing mentor teachers for student teaching placements and induction mentors. 

Efforts to find qualified teachers has become more challenging in California, as the number of emergency teaching credentials has more than doubled since 2012-13. School leadership is similarly important and challenging. Policy and practices to build teacher and principal quality in California will need to take into account growing demand, fewer qualified people for positions, and high turnover. 

PACE's work in this area is designed to highlight the problems and help the state work toward evidence-based solutions. 

Recent Topic Publications
Teaching and California’s Future: California’s Teaching Force, 2004: Key Issues and Trends
California’s Teaching Force, 2004—Key Issues and Trends
This report, which compiles secondary data from various state agencies and analyzes these data, consists of chapters on Teacher Supply and Demand, Teacher Preparation and Recruitment, and Teacher Induction and Professional Development. Key findings…
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Bay Area Childcare Retention Incentive Programs Evaluation—Year One Progress Report, 2001–02
Nationally, more than half of children under the age of five are in nonparental care while their parents work. Research indicates that children benefit from being with well-trained, consistent early care and education (ECE) staff. Sensitive and…
The Status of the Teaching Profession, 2003: Summary Report
Summary Report
This report was produced by the Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning in consultation with our cosponsors—California State University, Office of the Chancellor; Policy Analysis for California Education; University of California, Office of…
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Which Families Use Subsidies and Home-Based or Center Care?
Public spending on childcare and preschool has grown dramatically in recent years, rising nationwide from $6.8 to $14.3 billion between 1995 and 2000. In California, the childcare and early education budget has almost quadrupled, from $800 million…