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Insufficient money and inadequate respect: What obstructs the recruitment of college students to teach in hard-to-staff schools

Henry Tran (Department of Educational Leadership and Policies, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, USA)
Doug Smith (University of South Carolina Columbia, Columbia, South Carolina, USA)

Journal of Educational Administration

ISSN: 0957-8234

Article publication date: 21 February 2019

887

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of financial factors on motivating college students to consider teaching in hard-to-staff rural schools. The role of perceived respectability of the profession was also explored.

Design/methodology/approach

This work relies on an explanatory sequential mixed-method design, that surveyed college students across all majors at a regional public university, then interviewed a subset of participants to improve understanding. Quantitative and qualitative results were compared and synthesized.

Findings

Results from an ordinal logistic regression demonstrate the importance of base salary, retirement benefits and respondents’ view of the respectability of the teaching profession as influential for their willingness to teach in the rural target school district. These findings were validated by the qualitative results that found perceptions of respectability had both a joint and separate influence with salaries. Results also demonstrate that most students were amenable to rural teaching and to lower starting salaries than their current chosen occupation, provided their individual minimum salary threshold was met ( x ¯ = 36 percent above the state average beginning teacher salary).

Originality/value

Few empirical studies exist that examine college student recruitment into rural hard-to-staff districts via a multimodal narrative. This study addresses this, focusing on college students across majors to explore both recruitment into the district and into the profession. This work is relevant considering the financial disinvestment in traditional public education and the de-professionalization of the teaching profession that has led to the recent season of teacher strikes in the USA.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding for this study was provided by the University of South Carolina’s Center for Educational Partnerships.

Citation

Tran, H. and Smith, D. (2019), "Insufficient money and inadequate respect: What obstructs the recruitment of college students to teach in hard-to-staff schools", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 57 No. 2, pp. 152-166. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEA-07-2018-0129

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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