Amid a U.S. teacher shortage, Florida turns to military veterans
		
		 
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		 [September 13, 2022]  
		By Maria Alejandra Cardona and Daniel Trotta 
		 
		MIAMI (Reuters) - So many Florida teachers 
		have abandoned their profession in recent years that the state is 
		inviting military veterans with no prior teaching experience to lead 
		classrooms while they earn education credentials. 
		 
		Elsewhere across the United States as school resumed this August and 
		September, districts have beamed virtual teachers into classrooms from 
		several states away and offered bonuses to lure back retirees.  
		 
		Education experts say teacher shortages they have been warning about for 
		years grew worse during the coronavirus pandemic, when teachers who did 
		not die or become gravely ill faced new stresses such as remote learning 
		or exposure to potentially sick students. 
		 
		To make up for the shortage, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed the 
		Military Veterans Certification Pathway into law on June 9 after it 
		sailed through both houses of the Florida legislature without any 
		opposing votes. The law gives qualifying veterans a five-year teaching 
		certificate and allows them to work as teachers while they earn their 
		bachelor's degrees. 
		 
		In Florida, which according to the National Education Association has 
		about 195,000 public schools instructional staff and an average daily 
		attendance of 2.5 million students in 2021, 282 veterans applied to the 
		Military Veterans Certification Pathway as of Aug. 24. 
		 
		The measure has generated both enthusiastic support and sharp criticism, 
		typical in a time of deep division in the United States around education 
		and other issues. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		TEACHERS AGAINST THE BILL 
		 
		Instead of launching programs such as the Military Veterans 
		Certification Pathway, the Florida Education Association teachers' union 
		has said states should stop insulting teachers and passing legislation 
		that penalizes those who stray from conservative views on race or LGBTQ 
		issues. 
		 
		"If the governor thinks this (recruiting veterans) is going to solve the 
		teacher shortage problem, he's dead wrong. Because no one wants to come 
		into a profession that's being maligned every day, especially by the 
		governor," union President Andrew Spar said in August. 
		 
		DeSantis' office referred queries to the Florida Department of 
		Education. Department spokesman Alex Lanfranconi said in a statement: 
		"Union clowns are once again doing nothing but complaining, spreading 
		misinformation and offering zero solutions for the teachers they 
		'represent.'"  
		 
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            Marlon Greig, a teacher at Earlington Heights Elementary School in 
			Miami, said he had one sibling in the U.S. Army and another in the 
			Air Force "but I would not entrust them with my children" as 
			teachers. 
            "It's just not fair for someone to come into a classroom 
			unqualified, unprepared to teach and shape young minds," Greig said. 
			 
			U.S. Army Reserve Brigadier General Vincent Buggs said he was 
			confident veterans could immediately become valuable in the 
			classroom. 
			 
			"Absolutely. There are teachers that come right out of college and 
			make an immediate impact in the classroom," Buggs said. 
			  
            
			  
			 
			SATISFACTION PLUMMETS 
			 
			According to a survey of 2,379 American Federation of Teachers union 
			members conducted by Hart Research Associates from June 17 to 21, 
			79% were very dissatisfied or somewhat dissatisfied with their 
			overall conditions, four times the 20% who said they were very 
			satisfied or somewhat satisfied. 
			 
			Two years ago, when the pandemic was still new in June 2020, the 
			satisfied camp outnumbered the unhappy group, 53% to 45%. 
			 
			Disgruntled teachers surveyed cited greater workloads, student 
			apathy, lack of compensation and lack of support from parents and 
			administrators. 
			 
			"We lose too many long before retirement," said Richard Ingersoll, a 
			leading expert on education from the University of Pennsylvania. "We 
			need to improve retention." 
			 
			The exact impact is unclear, according to experts awaiting current 
			national data from the U.S. Education Department.  
			 
			Private data gives an indication. Elevate K-12, a company that 
			provides remote teachers who conduct classes by video link, said 
			from the 2020-21 school year to 2021-22, demand grew 314% to 336 
			school districts, with nearly 2,400 teachers helping nearly 57,000 
			students. 
			 
			Linda Darling-Hammond, president of the Learning Policy Institute, a 
			national independent think tank, said her researchers had flagged 
			the teacher shortage as early as 2016. 
			 
			"The single most important predictor of student achievement is the 
			qualifications of their teachers," Darling-Hammond said. "So when 
			the teaching force is decimated in this way, you really do see a 
			substantial hit on achievement." 
			 
			(Reporting by Maria Alejandra Cardonoa in Miami and Daniel Trotta in 
			Carlsbad, Calif.; Editing by Donna Bryson and Josie Kao) 
            
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