General Teacher Preparation Policy
Teacher Production Data: New Jersey publishes Educator Preparation Provider Annual Reports. The reports contain information on employed completers, including the number employed in shortage areas. However, no deeper connection is made between these data and district-level hiring statistics, and consequently the report provides an incomplete analysis of teacher production in New Jersey.
Program Acceptance Numbers: New Jersey collects basic data on teacher production by programs. The state also certifies educator programs that operate within the state. There is no evidence, however, that it provides these programs with guidelines surrounding the number of teacher candidates that should be accepted per subject area.
Explicitly connect supply and demand data to district hiring standards.
New Jersey is on the right track in reporting teacher production data. However, it should strengthen its data collection practices by explicitly connecting its data indicators to district hiring standards and using these data to inform policy decisions.
Provide clear guidance regarding program acceptance numbers.
Not only should New Jersey collect data on teacher production by programs, it should also provide programs with guidelines surrounding the number of teacher candidates that should be accepted per subject area. By establishing clear parameters for its approved programs that govern how many teachers in each major certification area should be produced, New Jersey will be on track to reduce the chronic surplus of teachers in some certification areas and increase the number of teachers in chronic shortage areas.
New Jersey recognized the factual accuracy of this analysis. The state added that it recently released a survey for all public school districts to capture the number of anticipated vacancies by certification area statewide. The survey is currently a pilot and will be continued each year. The plan is to then begin by sharing this information with preparation programs as the state collects more data prior to establishing benchmarks for production. New Jersey further noted that N.J.A.C. 6A:9A-3 already requires a survey of employers, so regulations are not pending but, after being adopted in November 2015, are being enacted following survey development and field testing.
1B: Teacher Shortages and Surpluses
It is an inefficient use of resources for individual districts to build their own data systems for tracking teachers. States need to take the lead and provide districts with state-level data that can be used not only for the purpose of measuring teacher effectiveness, but also to gauge the supply and demand of teachers in the state.[1] Furthermore, multiple years of data are necessary to identify staffing trends.[2]
Many preparation programs graduate people who are certified to teach but do not get jobs in the classroom. Often times, this is because these teachers pursue certifications in areas that already have a surplus of teachers (e.g., elementary education), while districts struggle to find applicants to hire in other areas (e.g., special education, science).[3] Given this misalignment between the teachers that teacher preparation programs produce and the hiring needs of school districts, the state should step in to establish a cohesive data reporting system. By creating reports that publicly delineate the number of teachers produced by each teacher preparation program (and therefore by certification area), the state will be better able to identify instances where the production of teachers does not match districts' needs.
Furthermore, the state should consider whether teacher preparation programs are supplying districts with the teachers they need when approving or re-approving programs. Teacher preparation programs exist primarily to prepare teachers for public school positions (approximately 88 percent of teachers work in public schools).[4] If teacher preparation programs produce far more teachers than the state needs in some certification areas and far too few in others, the programs are failing to meeting their state's demand. Moreover, student teaching placements (which tend to be near candidates' teacher prep programs) are highly predictive of where candidates will get their first teaching jobs, therefore also allowing states the ability to predict which open positions are likely to be filled.[5] Given that the preparation program's function is to supply the nearby area (and more generally, the state) with public school teachers, it is incumbent upon the state to make sure the program fulfills that responsibility— particularly through the collection and application of data on teacher production numbers and district demand— and to intervene when necessary by capping the number of teachers in certain certification areas that a program can produce.