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Shaping the STEM Teacher Workforce: What University Faculty Value about Teacher Applicants
Who ends up in the teacher workforce is greatly influenced by who is admitted into teacher education programs (TEPs). To better understand how the preferences of teacher education faculty might shape admissions of STEM teacher candidates, we surveyed faculty who teach content or methods courses to STEM teacher candidates across five universities. Faculty reported that they most value information collected from individual interviews with applicants and data on the number of STEM courses taken in college and their performance in these courses, and least value data on university admissions tests, high school GPA, and teacher licensure test scores. When we investigate faculty members’ revealed preferences through a conjoint analysis, we find that faculty most value applicants who have worked with students from diverse backgrounds and applicants from a marginalized racial or ethnic community, and least value whether they received high grades in math and/or science courses. Finally, we find significant variation in these perceptions across respondents in different faculty roles, who teach different courses, and from different institutions: for example, Arts and Sciences faculty tend to value TEP applicants’ performance in college STEM courses relatively more than STEM education faculty, while STEM education faculty tend to value applicants’ race and ethnicity relatively more than Arts and Sciences faculty.
Citation: Dan Goldhaber, Roddy Theobald, Amy Roth McDuffie, David Slavit, Jennifer Dechaine-Berkas, John M. Krieg, Emma Dewil (2024). Shaping the STEM Teacher Workforce: What University Faculty Value about Teacher Applicants. CALDER Working Paper No. 295-0324
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Research Area: Educator preparation and teacher labor markets