By Aziah Siid | Word In Black

teacher sitting at her desk
Photograph courtesy of Katerina Holmes/Pexels

(WIB) – From the ongoing crisis of racial segregation and unequal funding to the lack of adequate resources for students with disabilities, thereโ€™s plenty that needs fixing in Americaโ€™s public schools. Same as it ever was, right?

And weโ€™ve all seen how the rise of the pandemic created new challenges: implementing reasonable safety precautions against COVID-19, the need for more social, emotional learning, and protecting studentโ€™s rights to holistic learning. 

But what were the biggest concerns of educators and students in 2022?  In the course of reporting, Word In Blackโ€™s education team talks to so many students, teachers, administrators, parents, and activists, and this year, we noticed some issues came up more than others. 

1. Diversifying and Retaining Teachers 

Itโ€™s no secret โ€” teachers are burnt out and leaving the teaching profession in unprecedented numbers. The remnants of COVID-19, an increase in workload, and the continued threat to remove key curricula from studentsโ€™ learning experience have pressed some educators to do what theyโ€™d never imagine โ€” leave the classroom. 

Records show between January and November of 2020, more than 800,000 people working in state and local education quit โ€” more than the 550,000 private sector employees who left their jobs, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.

How do we keep teachers, particularly Black teachers, in the classroom during a time of this โ€œGreat Resignationโ€? Well, that depends.

So the question becomes: How do we keep teachers, particularly Black teachers, in the classroom during a time of this โ€œGreat Resignationโ€? Well, that depends. 

In cities like Philadelphia, veteran educators like Sharif El-Mekki are picking up the torch. El-Mekkiโ€™s dedicated his career to recruiting, training, hiring, and retaining quality educators through his non-profit Center for Black Educators Development. 

This school year, other โ€œgrow-your-ownโ€ programs, like Pathways2Teaching, have grown in an attempt to recruit other people of color to pursue a position in education and teach within their own communities. 

2. Reversing Learning Loss 

A national survey of educators facilitated by YouGov found that 90% of teachers can โ€œidentify learning gaps that need to be addressedโ€ and โ€œ84% of teachers believe mastery learningโ€ โ€” a flexible instruction model that allows kids to move at their own pace โ€” can help address the pandemic learning loss. Educators are seeing this method to prove effective through test scores and in-class interactions. 

Studies show the average U.S. public school student in grades 3-8 lost the equivalent of a half year of learning in math and a quarter of a year in reading. Schools with highest shares of students from low-income backgrounds missed two-thirds of a year of math learning in comparison to the quarter of schools with the fewest low-income students only losing two-fifths of a year.

In response, states and districts have leaned on the $190B in federal aid to provide tutoring, extended days, and summer school, which isnโ€™t nearly enough to address all the learning loss that took place during the pandemic, but itโ€™s a start. 

3. Teacher Salaries and Equitable Funding for Students 

As the nation grapples with the Great Resignation, along with the potential 55% of teachers who say they will leave the profession soon, it brings into question one of the main reasons why teachers are leaving: the money. 

Itโ€™s become evident, even more so than years prior, teachers are not sticking around for low wages. With skyrocketing inflation, rising rent, and the student debt crisis, many people simply canโ€™t afford to be teachers. According to a 2021 report from the National Education Association, nearly one in five Black educators owes more than $100,000 in student loans. 

So, how do you convince struggling teachers to stay in a career that doesnโ€™t pay what they deserve?

How do you convince struggling teachers to stay in a career that doesnโ€™t pay what they deserve?

For some states, inequitable funding applies to students, just as much as Black teachers.

A recent report by the Education Trust, titled โ€œEqual Is Not Good Enough,โ€ and its companion interactive data tool reveal how districts with the most students of color, students from low-income backgrounds, and English learners are still getting the short end of the stick.  

The report uses data from the U.S. Census Bureauโ€™s school district finance survey and newly collected data on spending in schools that shows whatโ€™s already known โ€” students living in poverty or whose first language is not English continue to be deprived of equal funding โ€” ultimately impacting their overall student experience.