State Offers Playback On Keeping Teachers

By CLAIRE STREMPLE

Alaska Beacon

The Alaska Department of Education and Early Development has developed an online tool to help schools, districts, communities and elected officials address the state’s high rate of teacher turnover. It released the Teacher Recruitment and Retention Playbook in September.

The state began a working group to address teacher recruitment and retention in April of 2020. The group identified recommendations that have been compiled in the playbook.

Barbara Adams, a consultant for the state, worked on the recommendations. She said that after developing a series of insights on teacher hiring and retention, the group decided that including recommendations for everyone involved in education was crucial.

They came up with the playbook, an online document that is sorted by subject and includes potential actions that can be taken by different groups like school districts, communities, the state’s education department and legislators.

“It is a 50-page, linked Google Doc, which seems really big and maybe hard to get your head around,” Adams said. “But we’ve tried to build in the small links that allow you then to just access a smaller piece at each time.”

The playbook offers different strategies at various stakeholder levels, she said.

Adams explained it through the example of restructuring retirement, which the working group identified as a key category. The document points to ways DEED, the community, and elected officials can help achieve the goal of improving retirement options for teachers.

Sally Stockhausen and other board members expressed their interest in and support for the work at a state Board of Education meeting on Thursday.

“It was a big concern to all of us that this would be a lot of work and it would go into a binder, so to speak, and go on a shelf somewhere, and nothing would ever change,” she said. “And so I just want to urge us as a board to really take the time and make the commitment to dig into the parts that maybe we could do… and take some of these things on and not let this become a thing that goes and never changes.”

Student representative Felix Myers said he was excited to see the playbook tackle pathways to easing recertification standards for teachers and reintroducing defined benefits, both pain points for his parents, who are teachers.

Board of Education Chair James Fields said he saw opportunities to make change even before the body’s next meeting.

“There’s some easy things that the department could implement now,” he said.

“I would suggest that the commissioner look through and find those things that are easy that you can start working on now.”

He identified the costs to becoming an educator and the state’s website as potential targets.

Department of Education and Early Development Commissioner Deena Bishop said the work was not intended to single out any one group as being responsible for keeping teachers in the state.

“Teacher retention and recruitment does not only belong with DEED and it doesn’t only belong with school districts, it belongs with communities,” she said.

She said community-level considerations include whether there is housing available for teachers.

“We’re all working hard,” Bishop said. “So this is just trying to focus on the right work.”

The department plans to take the playbook on the road to different Alaska communities to show people how to use it.

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https://alaskabeacon.com/claire-stremple

 

Thanks to the generosity and expertise of the the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska broadband department, Tidal Network ; Christopher Cropley, director of Tidal Network; and Luke Johnson, Tidal Network technician, SitkaSentinel.com is again being updated. Tidal Network has been working tirelessly to install Starlink satellite equipment for city and other critical institutions, including the Sentinel, following the sudden breakage of GCI's fiberoptic cable on August 29, which left most of Sitka without internet or phone connections. CCTHITA's public-spirited response to the emergency is inspiring.

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20 YEARS AGO

September 2004

Photo caption: Nikko Friedman and Gus Bruhl of the Rain Forest Rascals running team, dressed in skunk cabbage and boots, make their way down Lincoln Street during the  annual Running of the Boots. Scores turned out for the event, a fundraiser for the Dog Point Fish Camp.

50 YEARS AGO

September 1974

The freshmen students initiation will be Friday at the school. Dress will be respectable. ... Suspension of three days will be enforced for any of the following violations: throwing of eggs; spraying of shaving cream; cutting of hair; and any pranks which could be harmful to the welfare of the students.


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