Rethinking Shortages in Special Education: Making Good on the Promise of an Equal Opportunity for Students With Disabilities
Author(s) -
Mason-Williams Loretta,
Bettini Elizabeth,
Peyton David,
Harvey Alexandria,
Rosenberg Michael,
Sindelar Paul T.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
teacher education and special education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.163
H-Index - 12
eISSN - 1944-4931
pISSN - 0888-4064
DOI - 10.1177/0888406419880352
Subject(s) - staffing , economic shortage , psychological intervention , set (abstract data type) , compensation (psychology) , alternative teacher certification , attrition , poverty , public relations , business , economic growth , political science , psychology , economics , medicine , higher education , nursing , social psychology , government (linguistics) , computer science , law , linguistics , philosophy , dentistry , programming language
In this article, the authors describe the complexity of special education teacher (SET) shortage, how shortage undermines equal educational opportunity, and strategies that school districts and state and federal governments have used to combat them. The authors consider the economic consequences of shortage and describe how school budgets are burdened by turnover and, in some cases, litigation. The authors consider specific aspects of SET shortages, including the problems of staffing high-poverty urban and rural schools, recruiting and retaining teachers of color, and staffing alternative educational placements. The authors then consider more general factors related to shortage, including the valence of teaching as a profession, attrition, working conditions, and compensation. The authors describe how broad policy-based interventions, such as federal spending on personnel preparation and alternative route entrées to teaching, have largely failed to remedy SET shortage. Finally, the authors posit that SET shortage cannot be addressed successfully without improving working conditions and differentiating compensation for shortage area teachers and teachers working with struggling students. Although special education cannot achieve such sweeping change alone, the time seems ripe for moving forward on this important agenda.
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