Leveraging Administrative Data to Study the Special Education Teacher Workforce

Author:

Gilmour Allison F.1ORCID,Feng Li2,Theobald Roddy3

Affiliation:

1. American Institutes for Research, Arlington, VA, USA

2. Texas State University, San Marcos, USA

3. Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), American Institutes for Research, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Special educator shortages have threatened the provision of services to students with disabilities since the passage of the Education for All Handicapped Children Act in 1975, since reauthorized as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. We conducted a systematic review of studies that used administrative data to study the special educator workforce. We identified 12 studies addressing policies or practices related to the composition, distribution, or effectiveness of the special educator workforce. Together, these studies provide emerging evidence regarding policies and practices that could support the special educator workforce. We recommend that future special educator-focused research with administrative data address the composition, distribution, and effectiveness of the workforce in tandem, better attend to heterogeneity, and move from descriptive studies to studies evaluating the outcomes of specific policies.

Funder

National Center for Special Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference56 articles.

1. Backes B., Goldhaber D. (2023). The relationship between pandemic-era teacher licensure waivers and teacher demographics, retention and effectiveness in New Jersey. CALDER Working Paper No. 286-0623. https://caldercenter.org/sites/default/files/CALDER%20WP%20286-0623.pdf

2. Predicting Special and General Educators’ Intent to Continue Teaching Using Conservation of Resources Theory

3. Situating Special Educators’ Instructional Quality and Their Students’ Outcomes within the Conditions Shaping Their Work

4. Teacher Turnover: Examining Exit Attrition, Teaching Area Transfer, and School Migration

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