2018 to See More Emergency Hiring to Cover STEM Teacher Gap
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 01/22/18
 
It's five  years into the launch of 100Kin10, the organization that's focused  on getting 100,000 K-12 teachers prepared to teach on science, technology,  engineering and math topics in the nation's schools. Right now, the non-profit  has hit slightly more than 40 percent of its goal with five years to go. Recently,  the organization offered several predictions for the new  year, which  included an emphasis on school culture, the use of "emergency  credentials" to fill STEM hiring gaps and more political engagement to  make sure the current administration doesn't forsake a national interest in science  altogether.
According  to 100Kin10, the "highest-leverage root causes" for the current STEM  teacher shortage are linked to school culture and, in particular, to the  culture of professional development, collaboration and accountability.  According to a teacher survey, 69 percent of respondents said their principals give  "little to no time for them to collaborate and learn from other STEM  teachers in their school or district." Lately, however, the organization  has seen a shift with a renewed emphasis on "making schools great places  to work." That includes principals supporting STEM and giving teachers the  time they need to work with other STEM educators.
Calling it  an "old strategy," 100Kin10 is also watching as lawmakers  increasingly turn to legislation to streamline emergency credentialing of  teachers to address crisis-level teacher shortages. In Virginia, for example,  the governor turned to executive directive to allow state colleges and universities,  which have previously only offered graduate level teaching degrees, to offer  undergraduate majors in teaching too. And a bill up for consideration in  Illinois would  allow undergrads in education programs and possessing at least 90 college  credit hours to serve as substitute teachers. "We're expecting to see more  action around this in 2018," predicted the organization.
100Kin10  believes that more teachers will come down on the side of science in 2018.  While most teachers tend to avoid political activities, according to the  organization, that's shifting as "educational leaders of all stripes  become more active in policy and politics in support of STEM education."
Finally,  the organization expects to see continued interest in growth mindset as way to  strive for continuous improvement. Typically, the concept is applied to  students; but in the past year, the report noted, educators have immersed  themselves in the world of "improvement science" through 100Kin10's  Networked Improvement Communities, which connects them to corporate patrons and  volunteers.
The full  report, which includes an assessment of the organization 2017 predictions,  appears on the 100Kin10 website.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.