ERIE, Pa. — The National Science Foundation has awarded more than $1 million to researchers at Penn State Behrend to develop a pipeline of highly qualified mathematics teachers who are committed to teaching in “high-need” school districts. The five-year project will target teacher shortages by developing partnerships with the Erie, Corry Area, Iroquois and Northwestern school districts.
The NSF funding will support scholarships for Penn State Behrend students, who will be eligible for $22,500 in both their junior and senior years at the college. The students will commit to teaching for at least two years in a “high-need” district for each year of funding they receive.
The U.S. Department of Education considers a district “high-need” if a high percentage of its students live below the poverty line, if a high percentage of its secondary-school teachers are teaching outside the content area for which they were trained, or if the turnover rate for teachers is high.
Turnover is increasingly a concern, according to the Learning Policy Institute: At hard-to-staff schools, more than 40 percent of teachers leave after their first year.
STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are a particular challenge. Forty-two states, including Pennsylvania, do not have enough teachers trained in mathematics, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
“From there, the problem snowballs,” said Courtney Nagle, associate professor of mathematics education at Penn State Behrend and the lead researcher on the NSF grant. “When you have teachers with less experience, and maybe fewer qualifications, that influences their students, who may come out less prepared, or at least less motivated to pursue mathematics themselves.”