Many teachers quit within their first few years on the job. But school and district leaders can play an important role in getting them to stay鈥攁nd thrive.
Administrators should rethink the job interview process, provide new teachers with a mentor who鈥檚 a good fit, and view their rookies from a strength-based perspective, said Patrick Harris, a 6th grade English teacher and middle school dean of students at a private school near Detroit, and Susan Moore Johnson, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. They spoke at last month. (Watch the full video of the session here.)
These tips are rooted in experience: Harris, who recently released a book called , bounced from school to school in his early years of teaching until he finally found the right fit at school No. 7.
鈥淚 finally landed at a school that allowed me to show up as my authentic self and allowed me to be the creative magician鈥 that he wanted to be, Harris said.
And Johnson has done extensive research into the school conditions that allow teachers to succeed. Teachers鈥攊ncluding early-career ones鈥攏eed to feel a sense of success, she said.
鈥淚f your school鈥檚 not organized to support new teachers from the beginning, then you鈥檙e going to have a really hard time keeping people,鈥 Johnson said.
Here are three meaningful tips on how to create a school culture of support and empowerment for new teachers.
1. It starts with the job interview
The first step to building a foundation of success for new teachers comes before the offer letter is officially signed. A comprehensive interview process can yield great results, Harris and Johnson said.
鈥淚 appreciate a thorough process,鈥 Harris said, adding that he wants to be able to talk to a diverse panel composed of both current teachers and students. 鈥淗ow a school shows up in the interview process to me is very indicative of how they鈥檙e going to show up for me if I am hired into that particular school.鈥
The interview process should be a two-way, information-rich exchange, Johnson said. Demo lessons鈥攊n which candidates demonstrate for administrators how they鈥檇 teach a class鈥攁re often underutilized in hiring processes, but they鈥檙e so important for both parties, she said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how many of you have hired a teacher not having watched that teacher teach,鈥 Johnson told school and district leaders. 鈥淚t happens all the time, and it happens especially in shortages, but if you take the time to have the demo lesson, and you give feedback, ... it tells the applicant what the school is going to offer [them].鈥
2. Consider what new teachers bring to the table
Too often, Harris said, administrators focus on what new teachers are lacking鈥攁nd not what strengths and assets they already have.
鈥淲hat is it that you鈥檙e bringing to the table when we look at teachers as humans first?鈥 Harris said. 鈥淚 may not have all the teaching experience, but I edited videos in college, and that鈥檚 going to help me create this particular project. I am a gamer, and so I may want to create this club. I鈥檓 really big into horror movies, ... so I may want to create something, like some sort of new innovative curriculum or a test or unit that connects my passion with the passion of students.
鈥淏ut if I鈥檓 not really looked at as someone who can contribute, but someone who just needs to receive information, I think that makes it really hard for me to want to stay.鈥
Johnson said it鈥檚 also important for new teachers to see that teachers in the school have a seat at the decisionmaking table. School leaders don鈥檛 want to overwhelm new teachers by asking them to take on too much at once, she said, but in general, research shows that schools are more successful when teachers have a say.
3. Make sure new teachers have plenty of opportunities for mentorship
Teachers鈥攅specially new ones鈥攐ften feel overwhelmed and pressured to be the best version of themselves at all times, Harris said. Mentors can help relieve some of that stress.
鈥淭he best mentors, to me, have been the ones who have allowed me to unravel, who have allowed me to cry in the middle of the school day, and who have given me some really thoughtful questions to think about so that I could continue to be the best human I could be for my students,鈥 he said.
And those people aren鈥檛 always the mentors assigned by the school, he noted. In fact, Harris said he usually relies on the teacher closest to him in proximity for support and reassurance: 鈥淵ou just heard what happened through the wall, right?鈥 he quipped. 鈥淕et me together!鈥
The challenge for school leaders is creating an environment so new teachers can find a mentor who they trust and click with, Johnson said. Even if a mentorship program looks good on paper, too often it can become superficial, she said. For instance, sometimes new teachers don鈥檛 see their mentors regularly, and sometimes it鈥檚 a bad match.
She recommends that school leaders find natural ways for new teachers to form strong professional connections with multiple colleagues, instead of just one person.
鈥淚f you have a grade-level team or department team, you鈥檙e talking about the same kids. ... How鈥檚 the cohort doing, how鈥檚 our instruction doing?鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淵ou learn how to look at data together. And that is a much quicker route into learning the school.鈥
On May 10-12, 2023, 澳门跑狗论坛 brought educators and experts together for three days of empowering strategies, networking, and inspiration.
Below is a selection of sessions from the symposium that are available on-demand.
Featured Speaker: A Leader鈥檚 Agenda: Cultivating Joy, Resilience, and Learning at School
Featured Speaker: ChatGPT, A.I., and How Schools Should Be Thinking About Digital Learning
Panel Discussion: Successful Responses to the Student Mental Health Crisis
Panel Discussion: Getting New Teachers Off to a Strong Start
Leadership Interview: Best Practices for Supporting Students in Gifted and Special Education
Leadership Interview: How to Build a Bench of Diverse Educator Talent