Spring 2003 editionNews in brief

Report lays out plan on teacher quality, vacancies

A panel looking into Philadelphia's persistent teacher shortage, high teacher turnover, and growing percentage of uncertified teachers has recommended a broad array of new incentives to recruit and support teachers here.

The report, representing "Phase one" of the District's "Campaign for Human Capital," calls for steps ranging from reduced class size and expanded mentoring to higher salaries and special discount cards for teacher recruits.

"Experts from across the country agree that the major challenge is not recruiting new teachers, but retaining the teachers we have, too many of whom leave within three years," the report states.

High teacher turnover and a limited applicant pool force the District to hire teachers who are less than fully qualified for their posts. For the 2002-03 school year, only one-third of the 598 new teachers recruited by the District were fully certified.

The Campaign sets a higher goal for the 2003-04 school year: "The District must increase the percentage of newly hired certified teachers by 50 percent over last year."

The panel also addressed inequities in the distribution of qualified teachers. "We must stop placing the least qualified teachers in the lowest performing schools. This is a challenge that needs to be addressed collaboratively with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers (PFT)," the report says.

A key element of the Campaign's research was a survey completed by 8,100 teachers.

The report says District CEO Paul Vallas has begun to implement several of the panel's key recommendations:

Phase two of the Campaign, addressing principals and leadership development, will make recommendations to the CEO in June, when a report on the implementation of Phase one will also be issued.

The report is available on the School District website, www.phila.k12.pa.us.

Lancaster schools chief to head Pennsylvania Dept. of Education

Vicki Phillips, the former school superintendent in Lancaster, PA, is new Governor Ed Rendell's choice to head the state's Department of Education, on the heels of a campaign in which Rendell emphasized the need to reform the way public education in the state is funded.

Phillips, 44, has won praise for her work in Lancaster, a high-poverty, urban school district with 11,500 students. Prior to heading the school system in Lancaster, she spent three years in Philadelphia, where she directed the Children Achieving Challenge, a $150 million program designed to assist the School District of Philadelphia in implementing the school reform agenda of then-Superintendent David Hornbeck.

Phillips began her career in education as a middle school teacher in her native Kentucky.