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Kindergartners 'critical but stable' after CA school shooting; U.S. hits quarter-century mark focusing on kids 'aging out' of foster care; Record number of women to serve in state legislatures nationwide; Tempe mayor's holiday wish: more AZ clean energy investment.

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The Senate Indian Affairs chair says a long-imprisoned activist deserves clemency, Speaker Mike Johnson says they may end funding for PBS and Planned Parenthood, and Senate Republicans privately say Hegseth's nomination is doomed.

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Limited access to community resources negatively impacts rural Americans' health, a successful solar company is the result of a Georgia woman's determination to stay close to her ailing grandfather, and Connecticut looks for more ways to cut methane emissions.

OK teacher shortage prompts calls for better funding

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Monday, April 1, 2024   

Education advocates calling on lawmakers to increase funding for programs to combat the teacher shortage.

Nationwide, 37% of schools report being short at least one teacher. The problem is worse at schools serving high-poverty neighborhoods where more than half report a vacancy.

Susan Kemper Patrick, senior educator quality researcher at the Learning Policy Institute, said the numbers are troublingly high.

"At least 314,000 teaching positions across the U.S. are either unfilled or filled with teachers who are not fully certified for their assignments," Kemper Patrick reported. "This means at least one in 10 teaching positions nationally are either unfilled or not filled with a certified teacher."

The state of Oklahoma had to issue almost 3,800 emergency teaching certifications in 2022, a record number. And from 2001 to 2018, enrollment in the state's university education programs dropped by 80%.

The University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City Community College recently announced a partnership which will make community college students studying education eligible for more grants. Meanwhile, the state Senate Education Committee just approved a bill to prohibit teachers' unions from distributing union materials and forbidding schools to allow unions to meet on campus.

Kemper Patrick pointed out schools are resorting to desperate measures like combining classes, relying on virtual teachers, or using long-term substitutes.

"The U.S. Department of Education School Pulse Survey found that 36% of public schools across the U.S. reported that they had to increase class size due to teacher and staff vacancies," Kemper Patrick stressed.

Keller blamed the problem on low salaries, noting the average starting salary for a teacher nationwide is less than $43,000 a year. Congress is currently considering two bills, the Diversify Act and the Educators for America Act, which would double the Teach America grant from $4,000 to $8,000 per year.


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