Opportunity Culture Audio

#3. How Opportunity Culture Redesigns Help Address Teacher Shortages

April 07, 2022 Public Impact Season 1 Episode 3
Opportunity Culture Audio
#3. How Opportunity Culture Redesigns Help Address Teacher Shortages
Show Notes Transcript

What if you could improve student outcomes even in a time of rising teacher shortages? Many schools and districts report feeling stuck on the hamster wheel of trying to fill all their open positions—a struggle that has been worsening for years. Listen to this recording of our post about the solution that could take principals out of chronic emergency hiring mode, and how two principals have used that solution.

What if you could improve student outcomes even in a time of rising teacher shortages?

Many schools and districts report feeling stuck on the hamster wheel of trying to fill all their open positions. This struggle has been worsening for years. According to one report, the share of schools that tried to fill a vacancy but couldn’t tripled from 2011 to 2016, from 3.1 percent to 9.4 percent, and the share of schools that reported that it was “very difficult” to fill a vacancy nearly doubled, from 19.7 percent to 36.2 percent. Those vacancies directly harm students’ learning.

What could take weary principals out of chronic emergency hiring mode? A chance to rethink staffing to give students excellent instruction using the number of adults a school has.

Schools can redesign staffing structures to give every student a great education, even when a school can’t find as many teachers to hire as it wants.  This isn’t an overnight solution, but research shows it boosts student learning far more than merely adding on to existing structures. This requires a school team to refocus on ensuring instructional excellence through what they can control—the instructional roles that adults in the school play. It may also require a shift away from prioritizing smaller student-teacher ratios, which can keep schools scrambling to fill teacher vacancies with substitutes.

The Opportunity Culture initiative is Public Impact’s approach to such redesign, helping schools revisit their staffing structures with vacancies in mind. By thinking differently about instructional roles and available funding, Opportunity Culture models help schools reach more students with great teaching.

The redesign work creates career ladders, collaboration, and support systems for teachers that don’t exist in the standard one-teacher-one-classroom model. It addresses immediate student learning needs while offering a new professional trajectory for teachers. Each school creates a design team that includes teachers to make decisions about what roles, staffing, and scheduling will suit its school’s needs.

From Staffing Design to Results

As Principal Jeremy Baugh has written, after his first year leading a struggling Indianapolis school, the school lost 50 percent of its staff. The school began using Opportunity Culture models, and by the third Opportunity Culture year, they retained 97 percent of staff and had 150 applicants per teacher vacancy. Because he could distribute leadership across the school through multi-classroom leaders, his school went from two instructional leaders when he started to 10 or more leaders in the building, whom teachers viewed as approachable, supportive, and deeply connected to their students’ needs.

Students felt the effects in both a dramatic reduction in suspensions and academically—“kindergarten went from 32 percent on track at the end of the year to 82 percent. We saw huge growth in third grade,” Baugh wrote. “When I arrived in 2015, we were the second-lowest-performing school in the district. In March 2019, we showed the sixth-highest growth in math on our state standardized assessment.”

Getting there required a design effort that helps schools rethink roles and schedules to focus as much time as possible on small-group instruction that meets each student’s needs, and on collaborative time for teaching teams to plan and analyze data to orchestrate small-group learning experiences. When vacancies have become a fact of life, schools repurpose the funding from open teaching slots to create roles that, working together, reach more students with great teaching.

Principal Susan Hendricks, of Ross Elementary in Odessa, Texas, looks closely at her funding for ways to exchange and repurpose positions. She looks within her school budget for ways to afford the pay supplements required for multi-classroom leaders (MCLs), team reach teachers, and reach associates who support MCL teaching teams. That may mean, for example, shifting funding for a grade-level team from two regular teaching positions to one team reach teacher, supported by two reach associates (or, in some schools, teacher residents) who can assist with small-group instruction to keep instructional group sizes smaller.

“We know that in order to help build capacity with all of our teachers [through MCL support], we have to give up a few things,” such as smaller student loads per teacher, Hendricks said.

“However, the reach associates help offset that as well…so that helps with having someone to pull small groups,” she said. Picture, she said, a class where a teacher, reach associate, and MCL are all pulling small groups, so a teacher is not on their own teaching all students 100 percent of the time, five days a week.

The school’s educator survey results have been positive, showing the power of the support everyone gets through this model, even without reducing class sizes, she says. “Every teacher has support, and it’s a daily support, so your culture is going to be strong.”

Teacher retention rates have improved dramatically as well; after very high turnover her first year at Ross as she worked to change the culture, she lost just two teachers last year—one to retirement and another to a move.

And midway through the 2021–22 year, the impact on students is evident, she says, in that nearly all grade levels have already met the national standard for end-of-year student growth; in reading, nearly all students are on track to make more than the standard “one year of learning growth.”

As Hendricks has seen, studies of outcomes in Opportunity Culture schools show that this sort of design thinking benefits students. Researchers from Texas Tech University report that students served by Opportunity Culture multi-classroom leader teaching teams achieved learning growth in the top quartile teamwide, on average, according to their study of the Ector County Independent School District’s first Opportunity Culture year (where Hendricks’ school is located).

The positive impact on students and the study size were similar in magnitude to a 2018 study of Opportunity Culture results in three districts from American Institutes for Research and the Brookings Institution. When a school is designed to ensure that students make these learning gains year after year, those who start out behind could catch up and move on to more advanced work.