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Teaching Profession

Could Reimagining Teaching Help Teachers Love Their Jobs More? Here鈥檚 How

By Madeline Will 鈥 November 28, 2023 6 min read
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Clarification: This story was updated with new information from Public Impact. There are now schools in 12 states using the Opportunity Culture staffing model.

The traditional model of teaching鈥攐ne or two teachers in front of a classroom of students鈥攊s practically ubiquitous in schools. But is there a better way?

the Center on Reinventing Public Education examines efforts to reconceptualize teaching roles to see whether those models can make the profession more sustainable and fulfilling.

鈥淭he teach[ing] profession is not doing particularly well right now,鈥 said Steven Weiner, a research analyst at CRPE and the author of the report. 鈥淭here are huge issues鈥攕ome are long-standing, some have been exacerbated by the pandemic.鈥

Teachers report being stressed at work and experiencing burnout more often than other working adults, according to a RAND Corp. study. Just 20 percent of teachers say they鈥檙e 鈥渧ery satisfied鈥 with their jobs, a nationally representative EdWeek Research Center poll found at the start of this year.

Perhaps as a result, fewer people are considering becoming teachers and enrolling in preparation programs, and many of those currently in classrooms are eyeing the exit.

Policymakers and district leaders are trying a variety of strategies to help repair the teacher pipeline, including raising salaries. But Weiner said these efforts don鈥檛 address the root of the problem鈥攖he teaching job itself.

鈥淭here are feasible, practical ways for systems to help educators love their jobs more,鈥 Weiner said. 鈥淎nd if the North Star on that is, how do we get teachers more freedom and more autonomy, but also more social connection to their students, their peers, their administration, and families in the school [community]鈥攖here are ways to do that.鈥

Here鈥檚 what unconventional teaching roles look like

Weiner found nine school systems that have reconfigured the teaching role and interviewed 32 teachers from those systems about the benefits and drawbacks of their jobs.

Those teachers were still primarily responsible for students鈥 core learning experiences, and they were supported by a larger system, Weiner said.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to find rogue teachers who were going off and doing something on their own,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e were looking for wide-scale or potentially scalable programs.鈥

Weiner identified several kinds of unconventional roles:

  • Lead teacher, who serves as a mentor, curriculum developer, and co-teacher for a small team of teachers in the same content area or grade level;
  • Empowered teacher, who helps determine school-level policies, such as the academic calendar or the dress code, and sets student learning targets;
  • Team teacher, who teaches as part of an integrated team with two to four other educators who are responsible for between 50 and 80 students;
  • Community learning guide, who works alongside two to four other educators and 20 to 40 students to create learning experiences connected to the natural environment, the community, or students鈥 cultural backgrounds;
  • Solo learning guide, who teaches five to 15 students independently, often out of their home; and
  • Technical guide, who leverages expertise in technical subjects, like architecture or robotics, to design curriculum and work with cohorts of 10 to 20 students, often with another guide.

A lead, empowered, or team teacher can be found in charter or regular public schools, while the community learning guide, solo learning guide, and technical guide typically work in small private schools or microschools.

Microschools, and some of these more intimate teaching roles, have grown in popularity since the pandemic. Other reimagined teaching roles have been around for a while.

For example, teacher-powered schools allow teachers more autonomy in areas ranging from curriculum to the school鈥檚 budget to hiring. In those schools, the leaders are often selected by teachers and report to them as well. The run by the Minnesota-based nonprofit Education Evolving, estimates that there are more than 250 public teacher-powered schools operating in at least 20 states.

And , led by the North Carolina-based research group Public Impact, uses a model through which teachers who have demonstrated effectiveness with student learning are named 鈥渕ulti-classroom leaders鈥 and lead a teaching team. Research has found that students in this model perform better in math and, to a lesser extent, reading.

There are about 800 schools in 12 states with an Opportunity Culture staffing model.

What educators in these roles say about their work

Nearly all of teachers who were interviewed for this research said they liked their 鈥渦nconventional鈥 role, often saying it was rewarding, exciting, or satisfying. Teachers said working in a new model reduced feelings of burnout that they had in their traditional role.

鈥淭eachers weren鈥檛 working less, but they were more motivated and connected to the 鈥榳hy鈥 of the work,鈥 Weiner said.

One study participant said that in her first year of teaching, she 鈥渨as putting everything I have in and getting nothing back.鈥 Since moving into a team teaching position, she said, 鈥淣ow I love my job, I love to go to school, and I love the support I get from my team.鈥

Teachers in these unconventional roles generally said they liked having more autonomy in their work, the chance for deeper connections with students and their families, and more opportunities for collaboration with peers.

Team teachers said they enjoyed being able to learn from and with their colleagues. 鈥淚 was really becoming a better teacher because I was seeing other people teach, learning things that worked, and seeing things that I wanted to apply,鈥 one said. 鈥淏ut also, as I was teaching, they were watching me teach, so they got to ... give me support in ways that I needed.鈥

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Meanwhile, empowered teachers who were given shared leadership responsibilities with administration said the model was more responsive to what was happening on the ground.

鈥淚鈥檓 not somebody who is [just] sitting in an office ... so, when we make policies or priorities through the school planning process, I know what it鈥檚 going to be like to do that with a class of 30 students,鈥 one said.

There also were some downsides to these unconventional teaching roles. Some educators鈥攅specially those in microschools鈥攆elt isolated. Team teachers didn鈥檛 always receive explicit training, making their success overly dependent on the specific individuals on the team.

And some educators said they felt like they had more responsibilities, but didn鈥檛 always have enough administrative or organizational support or guidance which made their jobs feel overwhelming or exhausting at times. That might be because these roles are all relatively new, the report said.

Some of the educators also worried that their school systems wouldn鈥檛 support their new roles long-term, especially given budgetary or staffing challenges and leadership changes.

Can these models be brought to scale?

Weiner said the interviews revealed that these new models are promising but are mostly still early on in the implementation phase. Teachers might need new kinds of professional development to effectively take on these roles, he said.

鈥淚 think what we saw is that teachers are given more freedom, which they like, but they鈥檙e also given less guidance,鈥 he said.

Given the study鈥檚 small sample, the results can鈥檛 be generalized. And the study didn鈥檛 look at how these different teaching models affected student achievement.

Even so, Weiner said he hopes district leaders take inspiration from some of these models and rethink opportunities for their own teaching staff. After all, he said, it鈥檚 not theoretical鈥攔eimagined teaching roles are already happening across the country.

鈥淟et鈥檚 give teachers more reasons to love their work,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e think teaching can be more sustainable, more joyful, and work better for more students.鈥

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