|
|
Published: January 1, 2006
Watch Over Me
Teacher-induction programs seem to work best
when mentors are given enough time and resources to do their jobs
well.
By Denise Kersten
It's a Tuesday evening in the early-gathering darkness of fall, and
Michael-Jon Rodney sounds weary. The first-year teacher at Matoaca
High School in Chesterfield, Virginia, gave out interim grades
today, and more than half his world history students are failing.
They've quit doing their work, and faced with such apathy, it's
tempting for him to do the same.
Rookie educators such as Michael-Jon Rodney often quit within a few
years. But experts say Suzanne McLean and other mentors increase
retention.
—David Kidd
"It gets you down," says Rodney, who wasn't prepared for the
widespread lack of student effort he's seen during his first months
in the classroom.
According to experts, Rodney's frustration fits a familiar pattern:
Teachers join the profession hoping to inspire students, but their
training doesn't fully prepare them for the realities of the
classroom. What's more, the lifelines administrators provide to new
hires aren't always reliable. Most veteran teachers mandated by
state or local officials to serve as mentors are not given time or
money to provide more than a cursory orientation to their new peers.
Cast adrift to sink or swim, many first-year educators quickly lose
confidence or grow disillusioned, then quit. One-third of new
teachers leave the profession within three years, and nearly half
are gone within five years, according to research by University of
Pennsylvania associate professor Richard Ingersoll.
But Rodney's chances of staying in the profession are significantly
better. His mentor, 20-year teaching veteran Suzanne McLean, spends
several hours each week observing his classes, discussing his
progress and strategies, researching lesson plans, and generally
pitching in as needed. She even volunteered to bake treats to
motivate students.
It wasn't just luck that Rodney got such a devoted mentor—that's
McLean's full-time job. As part of a pilot program funded by a
federal grant and inaugurated this year by Virginia Commonwealth
University's Center for Teacher Leadership, she and 11 other
experienced educators in the Richmond, Virginia, area are spending
two years as "beginning teacher advisers," all earning their regular
teacher salaries and assisting 10 to 15 newcomers.
Although classroom apprenticeships are almost as old as education,
systematic mentoring of new teachers in the United States was first
widely deployed in the late 1980s and early 1990s in hopes of
stemming attrition. But many jurisdictions provided little to no
money or dedicated time for mentors. "In a lot of places," says
Terry Dozier, director of the Center for Teacher Leadership, "the
best they can do is provide the beginning teacher with a buddy."
Such "buddy"-level setups didn't help much, as studies by Ingersoll
and others later showed: By 1999-2000, two-thirds of beginning
teachers nationwide were working with a mentor—at least on paper—but
the percentage of those leaving the profession remained high.
On the other hand, the few schools that did include the
collaborative planning, teaching demonstrations, networking, and
other elements critics found lacking in buddy-type mentorships had
high retention rates. Ingersoll's study of new teachers in 2000-01
found that offering a broad network of induction support, including
mentoring, cut attrition by more than half. Only 18 percent of those
given such help left their schools or the profession in a year, he
reported, while 40 percent of those with no support quit. Over the
longer term, studies of the Santa Cruz/Silicon Valley New Teacher
Project—a full-spectrum induction initiative by the New Teacher
Center at the University of California-Santa Cruz—showed that after
six years, 88 percent of new teachers with broad mentor services
were still in the classroom.
"You get what you pay for," Ingersoll says. "If you offer a fuller,
richer package, then you get better retention."
Districts and states are beginning to wake up to the distinction.
New York City has introduced a program similar to Richmond's, in
which experienced teachers split their time between classroom
teaching and mentoring, that will be expanded citywide next year.
Both pilots were developed through partnerships with the New Teacher
Center, which is working with districts in 31 states.
But there's still plenty of room for improvement: Only 16 states
finance mentoring at all, and they typically provide only small
stipends. In Virginia, for example, mentors working outside the
Richmond pilot are paid just $250 annually.
Money may indeed be the bottom line. Using data from schools in
California and Connecticut, the Washington, D.C., nonprofit Alliance
for Excellent Education estimates that comprehensive induction costs
approximately $4,000 per teacher each year.On the other hand, using
national numbers, the group estimates that replacing a new teacher
costs an average of $12,500. That may be moot for districts too
strapped to come up with the money upfront, but in the long run,
says Bob Wise, the AEE's president and former governor of West
Virginia, "You're going to save more than you're putting in."
|