Thursday, April 9, 2009

Cross-Generational Learning Teams Could Create Millions of 'Encore' Careers!

Encore educators could be key to a bold plan to stem the tide of teacher retirements, boost student performance and create new jobs for non-teachers of all ages.

In a new report,
“Learning Teams: Creating What’s Next,” the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future (NCTAF) calls for replacing solo teachers in each classroom with cross-generational learning teams consisting of novice and veteran educators, interns, online educators and digital media specialists, community members and industry veterans with specific subject expertise.

Tom Carroll, president of
NCTAF, said he believes the learning team concept could create millions of encore careers for individuals who are eager to pursue encore careers in meaningful positions in education.

Big changes in the field would need to occur first. “We think our effort to go to scale with encore careers in education is stymied by the current stand-alone teaching model that requires every educator in the classroom to be certified,” he said. “We want to deliver education with teams of certified teachers and adjunct members who have knowledge and experience in the areas of learning that the teachers and students are working on.”

Carroll
announced the initiative at the Encore Careers Summit last December. NCTAF will host leadership retreats around the U.S. during the coming year to lay the groundwork for the learning team concept. A new Web site, LearningTeams.org, will track the progress of the initiative.

The report calls the new federal stimulus funding “a once-in-a-century opportunity to re-imagine American education.”

NCTAF believes the concept will appeal to veteran teachers, who are leaving the field at an alarming rate. According to NCTAF, the U.S. will lose a third of its veteran teachers during the next four years and more than half in less than a decade.

At the other end of the spectrum, beginning teachers are being driven away by antiquated preparation practices, outdated staffing policies and inadequate career rewards. Teacher turnover forces schools and districts to invest vast quantities of time and money in hiring and replacing staff, particularly in high-poverty schools where attrition is greatest.

The report says the team approach could motivate teachers of all ages to stay and also create an array of flexible work options, including short-term, part-time and adjunct positions, that allow boomers to pursue other personal and professional interests.

A “21st century teaching team” model has been proposed in Maryland, where NASA scientists would work on teams with ninth-grade earth science teachers. “NASA has a wealth of resources – videos, data, scientists with years of experiences – that can contribute to student and teacher learning,” said Carroll.

There’s plenty of interest in encore careers in education. The
2008 MetLife Foundation/Civic Ventures Encore Career Survey found that half of the nation’s 78 million boomers want jobs now or in the future to help improve the quality of life in their communities. But, Carroll said, “The certified teacher path is more arduous than probably most people in an encore career want to pursue.”

In a recent survey, NCTAF found that 70 percent of teachers nearing retirement would be interested in staying if they were able to work in new education roles in “phased or flexible retirement.” Three-quarters of the teachers surveyed reacted favorably to the idea of cross-generational learning teams. The NCTAF survey discovered that two-thirds of the teachers surveyed view “retirement as a time to begin a new chapter in life that is more flexible” as opposed to “rest from work” or “time to begin new challenges.”

Originally Posted at Encore.org

3 comments:

  1. I've read the report with tremendous interest, and find the notion of completely rethinking how we staff schools visionary and much needed. Have the NEA and AFT responded to the proposed new vision for staffing schools?

    Bob McLaughlin
    NH Department of Education

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  2. This report is exceptionally important, both because of the dire teacher shortage problem you clearly frame but also because of your vision for how to address it. have the NEA and AFT responded to this yet?

    Bob McLaughlin
    NH Department of Education

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  3. As a student in the teaching field, I am in favor of the learning team idea. Many retiring teachers have much to offer and want to do so. Of course, being a retired teacher cannot be the only credential for participation into this new program. I am confident that the "powers that be" that are creating this new approach will further delineate the standards or requirements for members.
    The learning team is a very promising idea. And I think that it can be successful if the goals are clearly defined. Putting the right people together may be key. The retired teachers and adjunct members roles must also be made clear in order for positive communication to take place.
    Perhaps the learning team concept will shrink those high numbers of new teachers that quit within the 1st five years of teaching. No more sinking...just swimming.

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