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Recession Upended Teachers' Dreams, Created A 'Triple Tragedy' In Schools And Education

Recession Education

By JEFFREY COLLINS   09/24/11 11:41 AM ET   AP

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Stay-at-home-mom Cindy DePace was just hitting 30 when she decided to return to the work force by going back to school and becoming a teacher.

She loved working with kids, could be home in the summer with her own children and had always heard that someone with an education degree would never have trouble finding a job.

Five years later, she has a degree in early childhood education and tens of thousands of dollars in student loans to repay, but no teaching job. Instead, she files records at a law firm in South Carolina's capital.

For decades, the growing number of children in the U.S. and efforts in many states to lower class sizes created a high demand for teachers. Private-sector workers who lost their jobs or were looking for a mid-career change often were encouraged to return to school and earn a teaching credential, while states set up shortcuts to get them licenses.

But the Great Recession and its ripple effects on the state and local tax dollars that fund public schools have upended the conventional wisdom that a teaching job is a golden ticket to career stability.

DePace earned her education degree from private Columbia College and got divorced along the way. Now 35, she has given up her dream of working in a classroom.

She had five interviews, attended several job fairs and filed countless applications without getting a response.

"I've got $60,000 worth of student loans that I have to pay back. I'm paying them back as a single mom, and I'm not even working in what I went to school for," she said. "So I feel like I just wasted my money."

A national survey of school districts in June by the Center on Education Policy estimated that 48 percent of them cut teaching jobs last school year. The survey found 84 percent of districts are bracing for additional funding cuts this year.

A survey in May of more than 1,000 school superintendents across the country by the American Association of School Administrators found that 74 percent anticipate having to cut jobs this year, with the majority of those being teachers or teacher aides. An association survey of 692 school administrators found that 48 percent laid off employees last year.

In California alone, budget cuts have led to about 30,000 teachers and more than 10,000 support staff being laid off in the past three years, according to estimates by the unions that represent them. The number of public school teachers in Michigan has shrunk by nearly 9 percent since peaking at nearly 118,000 during the 2004-05 school year, a loss of about 10,000 jobs. That parallels an 8 percent drop in the number of Michigan public school students but also reflects shrinking state aid.

Those just entering the profession also are vulnerable because of school district rules that require administrators to lay off the most recently hired teachers first, meaning some graduates lucky enough to find a job are out of work within a year. The layoffs have made competition fierce for the few job openings that do become available.

Andrea Ross-Woody, a principal at a private school near Sacramento, Calif., said she received about 50 applications for a teaching job that pays $1,700 a month with no benefits. Some applicants have been looking for full-time work for several years. Others recently completed expensive credential programs at for-profit colleges and are carrying large loads of debt.

"It just amazes me that they keep putting more teachers out there and there are no jobs," said Ross-Woody. "We just have a lot of teachers who are out of work. It's just a very sad situation."

In Austin, Texas, a district with 86,000 students is hiring just 72 teachers. Six years ago, it hired 800.

Most of its open positions are for specialties such as bilingual elementary school teachers or science and math teachers in middle and high schools. Graduates with degrees in early childhood education face stiff competition for very few positions, said Michael Houser, a recruiter for the Austin Independent School District.

"It's a triple tragedy in a way," said Wellford "Buzz" Wilms, an education professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has been training new teachers for three decades. "The kids invest all this time and they face such a bleak job market. These are some of the best kids in the world, and we miss putting them where they are needed the most."

College students are getting the message. At UCLA, the number of applicants for its teaching program has fallen by more than a third since 2003, Wilms said.

The enrollment numbers for California State University, which graduates the majority of the state's teachers, are even starker. Enrollment peaked in fall 2002 with 31,000 students but has fallen over the past nine years to 13,500 students last year, said Mike Uhlenkamp, a spokesman for California State University.

Nationally, the number of bachelor's degrees given in education started to decline after 2006, while the number of degrees in fields such as business and nursing continues to increase, according to U.S. Department of Education data.

Some students saw it coming.

Tasha Brannan graduated from Winthrop University in South Carolina in May with a degree in early childhood education, but already had decided to change course as the economy tanked and friends told her about their difficulties trying to land teaching jobs.

"I had heard from so many people who graduated a semester before me or a year before me that had a lot of trouble finding something in the education field. I was really fortunate to find something as quick as I did because I have student loans I have to pay back," she said.

Brannan, 22, is applying some of the skills she learned in her teaching program – patience, flexibility – to a different career: working with a firm that hires temporary workers.

How soon the picture for aspiring teachers will brighten is as clear as predicting when the economy will turn around.

In his recent national address on job creation, President Barack Obama talked about investing $35 billion to prevent the layoffs of up to 280,000 teachers while hiring tens of thousands more, but his plan faces uncertain prospects in a divided Congress.

In the meantime, education professors and school district recruiters offer the same advice: Before graduating, find a job such as a teacher's aide or a substitute that could be a bridge to a full-time teaching position.

That's the route 27-year-old Kim Estey, of Sutter Creek, Calif., has tried to take.

Since earning her teaching credential at California State University, Sacramento in 2008, Estey has worked part-time as a substitute teacher for three districts, earning about $100 a day and hoping to get leads on potential job openings. She recently started tutoring at nights and on weekends to earn extra money.

"I still live with my parents at 27 because they don't want me to give up on my career," Estey said. "There's no way I can move out. I'm engaged and can't plan on getting married until I get a job."

About half the students in her credential program have left education and found work in other fields. But Estey still hopes she can land a full-time teaching job even as she faces more competition from new graduates and seasoned teachers who were recently laid off.

"It's a bad climate right now, but this is really what I'm supposed to be doing," she said. "I'm hoping by next year I'll get something. There is a job out there for me. I've just got to be patient."

___

Associated Press writer Terence Chea in San Francisco contributed to this report.

___

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COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Stay-at-home-mom Cindy DePace was just hitting 30 when she decided to return to the work force by going back to school and becoming a teacher. She loved working with kids, could be ...
COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Stay-at-home-mom Cindy DePace was just hitting 30 when she decided to return to the work force by going back to school and becoming a teacher. She loved working with kids, could be ...
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10:51 AM on 09/29/2011
this is one of the steps in 'starving the beast', which includes a goal to deprofessionalize teaching (ie make them cheaper). and while everyone keeps buying into the media stereotypes about education's problems, this is only going to get worse.
10:25 AM on 09/26/2011
This is the story: 20 years ago, one became a teacher by getting a bachelor's degree and then entering the field. Career changes had to spend a significant amount of time and money to change - they had to go to school for 2 or 3 years, full time, to an approved university, most of which were selective admissions (because they're graduate schools), the time, financial commitment, and selectivity, kept the numbers relatively low. In the 1990's, private (for profit) schools saw an opportunity to cash in; they began to offer night cohort programs that were non-selective, expensive and fast - these low quality programs flooded the market with teachers - more so in recent years as people whose other careers didn't work out. At the same time Teach for America, emergency certification programs (usually tuition free for "high need" areas such as ELL, math and science) also put mass quantities of teachers on the market. This was about the time when the mass layoffs, budget cuts and other conditions began to hit, creating fewer jobs for more people. The same thing is happening in nursing as I write this. The problem: too many schools with low standards, to little accountability in teacher education programs, and huge budget deficits.
This woman's story is very familiar - and I'm sorry for her. As I am for the lawyers, nurses and other people who went to school thinking they would be employable, but are not.
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Evan Allison
08:05 PM on 09/25/2011
There is much talk about the relationship between tenure and teacher quality. I have had very bad teachers who I was told were protected by tenure. When I say I had bad teachers, I had one who did nothing but stand on her desk and scream. She literally acted as if we were a bunch of rats that had somehow crept into her house. Another had active dimensia and would sit in front if the class swatting at invisible flies.

However, I have seen the same thing when I went to community college, a place where they not only did not have tenure but hire on a class by class basis. I had one teacher show up twenty minutes let and leave twenty minutes early for a ninety minute class. She never made a single comment on our essays and didn't return them until a month after class ended. I had another teacher actually say "I was going to grade your tests but I got too bored". Another refused to lecture and assigned every chapter to a student because she "wasn't paid enough to stand up all day".

All of these teachers had a list of complaints against them a mile long but none were fired and all were retained. This should suggest at least that there are other forces besides tenure at work.
09:17 PM on 09/25/2011
You're right. Many schools have inept administration. That inept administration sits on their hands because they don't want to deal with a fight. There is a teacher at my school who shows a video for class everyday. Then, she goes over last night's homework and lets the kids work on tonight's homework. No teaching involved. Here's the kicker. If there are cuts in our department, she gets to have my job and I'm out. I'm the teacher who can get her students excited about physics. She's the one who can put them to sleep. Kids sign up for my class. If I lose my job and they end up with her instead, they will drop the class. Then, there goes another class of future engineers.

We have a good reason for tenure at my school-a parent with a lot of power who is certifiably insane. So, I can't be completely against tenure. But, it won't do me any favors until I have it. Up until that point, I will have to worry about losing my jobs due to cuts or due to this nutty parent. Either way, I'm terrified about the next 2 years.

However, I do know that I do a good job and I will continue to do a good job until the day I retire or voluntarily leave the field. And, for what's it's worth, I'm very sorry that you had such horrible experiences.
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Evan Allison
11:14 PM on 09/25/2011
Wow, the teacher you describe sounds just like one I knew in high school. What I don't understand is how anyone could just sit there all day and play videos. I am not even talking about her level of professionalism here. I have had to do what she does as a substitute. It sounds counter intuitive, but sitting through animal farm six times in one day was one of the hardest days of subbing I have ever done. The days when I am active and thinking on my feet are the best ones. If it's any consolation, her days must feel like weeks.

I am curious as to how you personally make physics interesting. I have subbed in a physics classroom where the students told me everything was lecture and bookwork. They told me they were bored to tears. If I were teaching physics, which would never happen in a million years because the math is beyond me, I would find some way to make use of some kind of physics simulation program like angry birds. Hands on experimenting is great, but the very thought of an entire class of students throwing and breaking things sounds like a nightmare to me.
09:44 AM on 09/26/2011
My daughter has an 11th grade physics teacher who refuses to answer questions to explain formulas to be tested on and tells the class to watch the online videos explaining them, and then says "I'm finished" and goes back to her desk and computer. And this is a charter HS, presumably without tenure, although the way it's set up in FL the teachers may be part of the public school system. Charter schools here are under the control of the county school board, but then private schools are also.
My wife is a teacher in a public middle school and just dodged a layoff bullet this year when school budgets were cut back. Tenure worked for her, but I hear from good teachers at other schools that some of their best teachers were the newer ones who were laid off.
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
10:03 PM on 09/26/2011
I am not sure I can agree with you all. What probably protected these teachers was that the good ones got sick of being degraded and abused. What I mean is science and Math are not areas that you can easily qualify to teach. So, the shortage and the attitude of the administration is what causes this. You cannot fire a teacher without a plan on how to replace them. That means you need to prove to the Superintendent that you will have a warm body in September. Also, the dance of the Lemons is a reality in Education. That has not changed just this year 2 very bad principals with failing schools got rewarded and promoted to make well into the 6 figures while pushing paper and complaining. I believe that the dance of the lemons is the big issue. However, the solution is not to open every decent teacher up to political will.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:01 PM on 09/25/2011
A survey in May of more than 1,000 school superintendents across the country by the American Association of School Administrators found that 74 percent anticipate having to cut jobs this year, with the majority of those being teachers or teacher aides. An association survey of 692 school administrators found that 48 percent laid off employees last year.----------------------------and how much pay did these administrators cut of their own salaries = none
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Grouchland
No day, But today! ~ RENT
10:05 PM on 09/26/2011
I just want to point out that they are not going to remove themselves and save about 4 teaching positions and also... Where are the standards for these Administrators. They no longer have to actually teach in a classroom. That mean that they cannot DO the job that they are evaluating and making people accountable for.
03:26 PM on 09/25/2011
Education in this country is a racket, because the government guarentees loans { Student loans are non recourse } and that has created a bubble in the cost of education. What the publishers of the books that children are taught from is revisionist , confusing, with no continuity and designed to dumb down the population and geared towards an agenda that has been mandated of globalisim. All globalisim is , is the Sovereignty of the countries on this earth and the individual being stripped away to bring the population of the world under control to maximize profits [ taxes and consumption of products produced by and for ] for the elite.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:01 PM on 09/25/2011
thanks to "no child left behind "
03:13 PM on 09/25/2011
So many young adults lived with the lie that wealth and materialism will lead to happiness. That lie has been perpetuated since ancient times. Baby boomer parents continued to perpetuate this lie. Now, young adults are in debt due to student loans, credit cards, upside down mortgage loans. They are angry and have nowhere to turn. I have an idea what to do, but I won't share it since I will be ridiculed.
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blbsmurf
03:21 PM on 09/25/2011
Friends and family bring happiness, not material things. An object can not comfort a person or offer compassion when one grieves.
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Evan Allison
07:41 PM on 09/25/2011
I understand your point and I agree. However, I thought you might be interested to see what might be an exception to your rule.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paro_(robot)

It is a robotic baby harp seal. It is used primarily in hospitals to give aide and comfort to aging patients. Apparently from what I have read, it is more effective than even medication at moderating moods and curing depression.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:03 PM on 09/25/2011
i'd like to hear yur idea
03:10 PM on 09/25/2011
I don't have much sympathy for teachers or anyone on PERS. Who else is guaranteed an 8 to 10 percent wage, provided by the American taxpayer ??? plus, excellent retirement benefits, great medical, dental, and vision and paid sick days and paid time off for who knows what. I know a teacher that collects over 120% of his pay, of when he was working. If I could make 120% of my wages after I retire, why wouldn't I retire---------------------yesterday ???
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:06 PM on 09/25/2011
that would be the unionized teachers - the ones down south are in right to work states - none union controlled
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Evan Allison
07:44 PM on 09/25/2011
If you want to knwow who really has it made after retirement lookat congress. They have incredible benefits and retirement packages. Ironically, you never see any anti government support congressman refuse his benefits.
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Ted Cantu
03:03 PM on 09/25/2011
LOL... Teachers have dreams? Since when do they care about education. Anyone who thinks this is a "fun" job gets a kick to the pants. Its real work. SURPRISE !!! And here is the best part -- the job barely pays the bills.
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blbsmurf
03:00 PM on 09/25/2011
Quitcha cryin' and fightback. That is what our leader would say.
02:25 PM on 09/25/2011
I know ALOT of people who get ALOT of money for student loans...above what they need...and they use it for down payments on cars...go shopping...vacations. So the loan thing is her fault. It doesnt cost that much to get a teachers degree. I know. My daughter is doing it now. If you get extra you SHOULD turn around and make a payment towards your loan with that money instead of keeping it. The interest on these loans are horrible.
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blbsmurf
03:06 PM on 09/25/2011
My ex-wife would take out loans and receive grants and blow what was left. She had been married three times before me and had unpaid loans in her married names plus two unpaid loans in her maiden name. She told me she would never pay them back unless she was forced to. I believe she had found a loophole in the loan system by changing last names.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:07 PM on 09/25/2011
unless it taxes - a bankruptcy attorney should be utilized
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Evan Allison
07:49 PM on 09/25/2011
Interesting. Things must have been different for me, but I took out the maximum I could take in loans and I still did not have enough to fully pay for campus housing. I went to penn state on in state tuition and still ended up with a 40 thousand dollar bill for only one and a half years.

I have heard of people who do stupid things with their loans. One kid I knew blew half his loan money on alcohol. Seriously, there is something wrong somewhere in that picture.
02:19 PM on 09/25/2011
I would like PERSONAL experiences...not things heard in the news please =)
10:25 PM on 09/30/2011
I've got ALLLL the personal experiences you can shake a stick at. Let's talk.
02:18 PM on 09/25/2011
You know I KEEP hearing that jobs for tecahers are being cut...but I know SEVERAL teachers and none of them have lost their jobs NOR do they KNOW ANYONE who has lost their job. Thank goodness. Rick Perry keeps getting blamed for firing teachers in Texas but I havent seen ANY evidence of this yet......what about your states??
04:02 PM on 09/25/2011
The first thing goverments do to raise taxs. Is scare the people with, Cops are gonna be let go, firemen will be fired, Have to lay off teachers. but guess what. It never happens. I dont know anyone in these(union) jobs that have been laid off. Now for the Private sector? i KNOW many. tHE GOVERMENT IS THE ONE HIRING. They dont know what a cut back means.
Bear Left
so the hunters went home
04:52 PM on 09/25/2011
Pay attention, cracker: teachers have been laid off all over the country.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
04:15 PM on 09/25/2011
texas is a huge state - there are many who are complaining that perry has cut education to the brink that teachers administrators and a whole lot of other things have disapeared - in my state of virginia - right now we're reelin on a low unemployment rate @ 6% and thats still kinda high by state standards , but there are portions that are sufferin much higher unemployment rates , i'm not a big fan of gov mcdonnell - in usual republican fashion he dropped the states deficit by robbin the state pension - as we all know , this is only a temporary solution , as there are already signs that a statewide deficit looms and we'll eventually drop into the ranks of many other states around the country - all though i do not believe that we'll suffer as badly , some here are already sufferin enough
02:12 PM on 09/25/2011
And due to Tenure, schools can not get rid of bad teachers and replace them with good ones.
Believe me they are out there. We had teachers on drugs in our school district. When caught, they would suspend them until they were clean and then reinstate them. A few weeks later, they would do it again. We had one teacher who was teaching math who would go next door to ask another how to do the lesson. Sometimes her students would know the answers and she wouldn't. At least she has a job and a potential for getting one when the older teachers retire. Alot of kids are sold a bill of goods and get into debt for courses for which there are no jobs. Also the taxpayer ends up paying for scholarships and school subsidies for fields that the student will never work in. Schools should be there to help students suceed in life, not get in debt for no reason.
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roaddawg31
03:08 PM on 09/25/2011
This is where teachers (i.e. lemmings) will tell you: "Tenure doesn't protect bad teachers. It protects due process!!!"

The reality is that it DOES protect bad teachers. Maybe not the monumentally bad... but it does protect the mildly bad: the mediocre, the ones who are in it for the consistent paycheck (Yes, teachers--there are some of those). They are untouchable, and they know it.

And so, even if an administrator knows someone who is outstanding, and looking for work--they can't do anything about it.
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05:57 PM on 09/25/2011
What a load of hooey! The guidelines of tenure and due process are written into the district contracts, which the district administrators have agreed to and signed off on. If it's a weak contract blame administrators, not teachers.

Principals can do plenty to get rid of a teacher they don't want, including making their life at work miserable. Principals have plenty of power and if they choose not to use it, then don't blame teachers for it. No teacher is "untouchable" in terms of firing unless the administrators are incompetent.
02:04 PM on 09/25/2011
A lot of people lost their career dreams thanks to outspourcing and bad trade deals which have trashed the job market for decades.
02:08 PM on 09/25/2011
Oh and where were the teaching jobs outsourced to?
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06:00 PM on 09/25/2011
Teach for America college students and bringing in teachers from other countries. I recently watched a documentary titled "The Learning Year" about teachers from the Phillippines brought into Baltimore to teach. It was fascinating. There have also been teachers from China brought in to teach American students--and they were shocked at what students can get away with here.
Mytwocentstoo
Micro-bios are like internet bumper stickers.
06:23 PM on 09/25/2011
That's not what he meant. Teaching for the most part was not outsourced, although there has been some insourcing of some districts (check out Louisiana) bringing in teachers from other countries. But the outsourcing of jobs to other countries has helped create un & under employment in the US whereby there are drops in consumer spending & income & with those drops along with the increased housing foreclosures there has been a decrease in tax revenues coming into states through sales tax, income tax, real estate tax... & then add to that the tax breaks for the wealthy & we have under funded states making cuts to everything paid by our tax revenue including education. That's how outsourcing has effected cuts to school funding which has forced districts to cut teaching & counseling & administrative jobs, support staff & programs/services.
02:02 PM on 09/25/2011
Opportunities for teachers must go to the best and most useful as too many seek to live like kings and queens on the taxpayers dime no matter how bad the economy gets with fat pensions and over valued saleries.

You can't support a pricey system with few good private sector middle class jobs. The gov needs to cut back with no revenue coming like it use to have.
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roaddawg31
03:16 PM on 09/25/2011
You're right! We need all hands on deck. And you know what--the precise group who would be most willing and able (the young, single, with no family responsibilities yet) are the precise group we are locking out, for the direct benefit of the most entitled (the tenured, many of who flat-out refuse to do certain things that aren't "part of their contract"). Which is not to say that you HAVE TO do anything not in your contract. The point is, we need sacrifice. Young people are willing to sacrifice, because in part--they have the time, the inclination, and the energy. And we shut them out!
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06:01 PM on 09/25/2011
It sounds like you want missionaries, not teachers.