You are here
Knocking on the Door to the Teaching Profession? Modeling the Entry of Prospective Teachers into the Workforce
We use a unique longitudinal sample of student teachers (“interns”) from six Washington state teacher training institutions to investigate patterns of entry into the teaching workforce. Specifically, we estimate split population models that simultaneously estimate the impact of individual characteristics and student teaching experiences on the timing and probability of initial hiring as a public school teacher. Not surprisingly, we find that interns endorsed to teach in “difficult-to-staff” areas are more likely to be hired as teachers than interns endorsed in other areas. Younger interns, white interns, and interns who did their student teaching in suburban schools are also more likely to find a teaching job. Prospective teachers who do their internships at schools that have more teacher turnover are more likely to find employment, often at those schools. Finally, interns with higher credential exam scores are more likely to be hired by the school where they did their student teaching. Contrary to expectations, few of the measures of the quality or the experience of an intern’s cooperating teacher are predictive of workforce entry in the expected direction.
Keywords: Student Teachers, Difficult to staff, Intern
Citation: Dan Goldhaber, John Krieg, Roddy Theobald (2013). Knocking on the Door to the Teaching Profession? Modeling the Entry of Prospective Teachers into the Workforce. CALDER Working Paper No. 105
You May Also Be Interested In
What Can Different Measures Tell Us About the Quality of the Teacher Workforce?
Benjamin Backes, James Cowan, Michael DeArmond, Dan Goldhaber, Roddy Theobald
Teacher Effectiveness in Remote Instruction
M. Cade Lawson, Tim Sass
See other working papers on:
Research Area: Educator preparation and teacher labor markets