Sentences with phrase «anticipate staying in the classroom»

43 % of New Teachers in New Jersey Plan to Leave Classroom Teaching; Nearly Half are Mid-Career Entrants At a time when U.S. schools will need to hire over two million new teachers to serve a growing number of students and replace a large cohort of retiring teachers, new research findings from the Harvard Graduate School of Education suggest that 43 % of new teachers do not anticipate staying in the classroom as full - time teachers for their entire careers.
Earlier this year, the Project's principal investigator Pforzheimer Professor Susan Moore Johnson, and researchers Sarah Birkeland, Susan M. Kardos, David Kauffman, Edward Liu, and Heather G. Peske released a study showing that 43 percent of new teachers do not anticipate staying in the classroom as full - time teachers for their entire careers.
At a time when U.S. schools will need to hire over two million new teachers to serve a growing number of students and replace a large cohort of retiring teachers, new research findings from the Harvard Graduate School of Education suggest that 43 % of new teachers do not anticipate staying in the classroom as full - time teachers for their entire careers.

Not exact matches

Findings suggest that while almost all of the new teachers anticipate staying in education for the remainder of their working lives, many of them report that they expect to move on to education - related jobs other than classroom teaching (curriculum development, professional development, administration).
But of the mid-career entrants who expect to stay in education long term, almost one - fifth (19 %) reported that they do not anticipate staying as classroom teachers for their entire careers.
The truth is that for the majority of the nation's new teachers, what they can anticipate in retirement benefits will be worth less than what they contributed to the system while they were in the classroom, even if they stay for decades.»
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