The Long and Winding Road: Mapping the College and Employment Pathways to Teacher Education Program Completion in Washington State

Author:

Goldhaber Dan12ORCID,Krieg John3ORCID,Liddle Stephanie2ORCID,Theobald Roddy1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CALDER, American Institutes for Research, Seattle, WA

2. University of Washington, Seattle, WA

3. Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA

Abstract

Nationally, more than 75% of individuals who are credentialed to teach are prepared in traditional college- or university-based teacher education programs (TEPs). But the college and employment pathways that prospective teachers take to TEP enrollment and completion have not been comprehensively examined. A better understanding of how credentialed individuals find their way into TEPs helps us understand the sources of new teacher supply early in the prospective teacher pipeline. With that in mind, we analyze pathways into and through TEPs using historical postsecondary and unemployment insurance data from Washington State. We find that the pathways are quite varied, with around 40% of bachelor’s-level TEP completers spending at least some time in community colleges and fewer than 40% enrolling and finishing at the same university directly after high school. Pathways to master’s TEP completion are even more varied, with almost half of the completers having prior employment experience. For researchers, this varied landscape raises important questions about the relationship between pathways, candidate persistence, and eventual job performance. For policymakers, the results suggest that efforts to recruit the next generation of teachers need to look beyond the pool of students already enrolled at a 4-year university to include students at 2-year colleges or in the labor force who might be interested in entering a TEP.

Publisher

American Educational Research Association (AERA)

Reference25 articles.

1. From Interest to Entry: The Teacher Pipeline From College Application to Initial Employment

2. Solving the teacher shortage

3. Cardona M. (2023, January 24). Remarks by U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona on Raise the Bar: Lead the World [Press Release]. U.S. Department of Education. https://www.ed.gov/news/speeches/remarks–us–secretary–education–miguel–cardona–raise–bar–lead–world

4. Missing Elements in the Discussion of Teacher Shortages

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