Title: A Profile of Georgias Teacher Workforce
1A Profile of Georgias Teacher Workforce
Comfort Afolabi, Endya B. Stewart, Winifred C.
Nweke Cynthia E. Stephens Division for Educator
Workforce Research and Development Georgia
Professional Standards Commission
2Introduction
- The 2002 Status Report of Georgias Educator
workforce is the third report of its kind.The
report focuses on - The certified Pre-K 12 educator workforce in
Georgia schools during the FY02 school year. - Providing an evaluation and projections of the
demand and supply of Georgia teachers,
administrators and students services personnel. - This presentation highlights Georgias teacher
- workforce.
3Methodology Data Sources
- Data were obtained from a variety of sources
- Certified Personnel Information Report (CPI),
generated by the Georgia Department of Education
(GDOE). - The Georgia Professional Standards Commission
(PSC) certification records. - Student teacher information (Capstone).
- The GDOE student enrollment and Full-time
Equivalency (FTE) reports. - The Georgia Retirement System (TRS).
- The Georgia Department of Human Resources (DHR).
4Methodology-Data Format
- Data on Georgias educators are reported in two
count formats - FTE count shows full and part-day teaching
assignments, with portions of the workday
signified by decimal fractions. - Personnel count shows each individual with a
Georgia teaching certificate that holds a
teaching position. - The statistics presented in this report are
pointers for the planning, development, and
assessment of Georgias certified personnel
workforce.
5Georgias Teacher Workforce, FY98-FY02
- In FY02, the teaching workforce grew by 5 to
99,470 from 94,689 in FY01. - If the current growth rate continues, Georgia
will employ more than 115,000 teachers in FY07
and more than 136,000 teachers in FY12.
6Georgias Teacher Workforce,FY02
- In FY02, Georgia hired 13,084 new teachers, 8,303
of whom replaced teachers who exited the
classroom and 4,781 towards meeting teacher
demand engendered by student enrollment growth,
reductions in class size, and new programs.
7FY02 New Teacher Hires
- Demographic characteristics of FY02 new teachers
- 73.9 White
- 79.2 female
- 50.8 with zero years teaching experience
- 72.3 certified at the Bachelors degree level
- 32.5 came from out-of-state
- 42.6 taught in the Elementary subject area
- 44.7 were Pre-K 5 teachers
- 42.5 located in Metro RESA
8Demography of Georgias Teacher Workforce
- Georgia expanded its Early Intervention Program
(EIP) into all the elementary grades (K-5) to
help ensure that no child is left behind. In
FY02, Georgia employed 4,518 EIP teachers,
compared to 2,912 in FY01.
9Demographic Profile By Gender, FY98-FY02
- The teaching workforce remains 82.1 female in
FY02. The number of males in FY02 represents an
increase of 1,149 male teachers from FY01 to
FY02, and 2,243 male teachers over the five-year
period.
10Demographic Profile By Ethnicity, FY98-FY02
- The teaching workforce remains predominately
White accounting for 78.0 in FY02.
11Demographic Profile By Age, FY98-FY02
- The average age of the teaching workforce remains
41.5 years. There is, however, an increase in
the number of teachers over the age of 55
(n9,386). In fact, 188 retired teachers came
back to teach in FY02.
12Distribution of Public School Teachers By RESA,
FY02
North Georgia 4.2
Pioneer 5.4
- Metro RESA remains the largest employer of
teachers in FY02 with 36.2 of all teachers and
42.6 of newly hired teachers.
Northwest Georgia 6.8
Northeast Georgia 4.4
Metro 36.2
Griffin 5.4
Central Savannah River 5.1
West Georgia 3.8
Oconee 1.3
Middle Georgia 4.1
Heart Of Georgia 1.7
First District 8.4
Chattahoochee 3.7
Coastal Plains 2.9
Southwest Georgia 4.5
Okefenokee 1.9
13Certification Level of Public School Teachers,
FY02
- Half (50.3) of the teaching workforce have a
graduate level certificate (Masters, Education
Specialist or Doctorate). - Forty-nine percent of Georgias teachers possess
Bachelors degrees. This has remained consistent
over five years.
14National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards Certification Applicants
- The number of National Board applicants in
Georgia has continued to rise since FY99 (49) to
1,162 in FY02. - In FY02, Georgia employed 423 National Board
certified teachers, ranking Georgia 7th in the
U.S. with regard to the number of nationally
certified teachers.
15Out-Of-Field Teaching in Georgias High Schools
- Out-of-field teaching at the High School level
has slightly worsened in four core subject areas,
especially in Social Science (6.1), English
(5.6), and Mathematics (5.5). - RESAs that are most plagued by the out-of-field
problem include First District (10.1 in Social
Science), Heart of Georgia (15.4 in English),
and Oconee (12.5 in Math and 13.3 in Social
Science).
16Teacher Demand
- Teacher demand is primarily influenced by three
factors.They are - Student Enrollment Growth in the student
population and changing demographics of the
population due to live birth rates and/or
migration into the state. - Education Policy Growth or decline in the
teaching force due to new and/or revised
legislation, notably class size reduction. - Attrition Decline in the teaching force due to
retirement or other forms of exit from the
teaching force.
17Teacher Demand
- In FY02,1,470,634 Pre-K 12 students were
enrolled in Georgia public schools, 4,318 more
than was projected for FY02. High live-birth
rates, migration into Georgia, class size
reduction mandates, and attrition have continued
to affect teacher demand. - Live birth increases and population migration
into Georgia from 1997 through 2001 are beginning
to be felt in the public school system as the
children enroll in Pre-K and, especially, in
Kindergarten classrooms.
18Teacher Demand
- Eight northern RESAs experienced student
enrollment growth while the southern RESAs
experienced enrollment decline.
North Georgia
Pioneer
Northwest Georgia
Northeast Georgia
Metro
Griffin
Central Savannah River
West Georgia
Oconee
Middle Georgia
Heart Of Georgia
First District
Chattahoochee
Southwest Georgia
Okefenokee
Coastal Plains
19Teacher Demand
- Hispanic student enrollment grew by nearly 11,000
students (17), from FY01 to FY02 and more than
doubled between FY98 to FY02. The Asian and
American Indian student populations grew
considerably from FY01 to FY02, at 8.3 and 4.6,
respectively. - The White student enrollment has been declining
since FY99 and is currently at 52.57.
20Teacher Demand
- The attrition rate of teachers declined from 9.4
in FY00 to 8.8 (8,303 teachers) in FY01,
possibly due to the slowing economy.
21Attrition By RESA
Numbers indicated ranking.
22FY01 Teacher Attrition
- Demographic characteristics of FY01 teachers who
left the educator workforce - 81.15 female
- 77.45 White
- 27.10 in the 21-30 age group
- 36.60 with 0-5 years experience
- 48.45 certified at the Bachelors degree level
- 69.28 held Teaching (T) certificates
- 41.96 taught in the Elementary subject area
- 40.31 were Pre-K 5 teachers
- 40.54 located in Metro RESA
23Teacher Supply
- Teachers in Georgia come from five main sources
- Out-of state teachers seeking employment in
Georgia. - New teachers graduating the previous year from
educator preparation programs in Georgias
institution of higher educations. - Teachers returning to the educator workforce
after a brief absence (returning teachers). - Alternative preparation/Provisional certificate
holders. - Teachers who did not enter the workforce
immediately after initial preparation and/or
certification.
24FY02 New Teacher Hires
- Of the total new teacher hires, 32.5 came from
outside Georgia surpassing the PSC target of 30
for FY03.
2.5
2.0
21.1
2.3
21.9
17.7
25Teacher Supply
- Retention remains the major supply source of
teachers, accounting for more than 90 of each
years teaching workforce. Projections show an
expected increase in the number of teachers
retained.
Includes teachers assigned across levels.
Numbers reflect FTE Counts.
26FY02 Teacher Production
- New teacher production from teacher preparation
programs in Georgia public and private colleges
declined from 3,784 in FY01 to 3,388 in FY02, a
10 decline. - In FY02, Georgia teacher preparation programs
supplied 21.9 of the new teacher hires.
Returning teachers accounted for 21.1. - Alternative preparation programs contributed
17.7 to the total, an increase of 7 from FY01.
This reflects the boost from the GATAPP program
and existing alternative preparation programs.
27Conclusion
- Teacher demand based on student enrollment and
education policy initiatives (e.g., reduced class
size and No Child Left Behind) is projected to
increase substantially through the FY12 academic
year. - There was an increase in the number of teachers
retained from FY01 to FY02. In fact, projections
for FY03, FY07, and FY12 suggest increased
numbers of teacher will be retained in Georgias
classrooms.
28Conclusion
- Traditional teacher preparation programs have
produced fewer teachers year after year. To
recruit, hire, and retain enough new teachers to
staff Georgia classrooms, school systems must and
will continue to depend on out-of state teachers,
alternatively prepared teachers, and returning
teachers.
29Conclusion
- With regards to diversity, there was an increase
in the number of Hispanic teachers (15.21
increase from FY01 to FY02). However, these
teachers represent 0.8 of the overall teaching
force. Hispanic students, on the other hand,
represent 5.5 of Georgias Pre-K-12 student
enrollment.
30Conclusion
- TeachGeorgia educator marketing and recruitment
efforts embarked upon by the PSC are anticipated
to increase the supply of teachers in Georgia.
Also, the PSC has begun a multi-faceted marketing
and advertising strategy to encourage
out-of-state teachers to seek teaching positions
in Georgia.
31Conclusion
- The present state of the economy will serve to
encourage job seekers to pursue teaching
positions, as well as serve as a means to
increase both teacher supply and retention.
Economic factors may also discourage
retirement-ready teachers from leaving.