Schools across the country used most of their COVID relief funds to pay for classroom teachers and support staff. The elimination of these funds, coupled with budget restrictions and other factors, has forced school districts to lay off employees. How severe are the job cuts?
A survey published in July by the nonprofit research group RAND found that teacher reductions were “the most common budget cut,” according to the nearly 200 district leaders surveyed. School districts such as the Arlington Independent School District in Texas cut nearly 300 positions earlier this year ahead of the ESSER spending deadline.
Career transition specialist company Challenger, Gray & Christmas also recently released a report tracking mass layoffs across almost every job sector. Education and technology were among the hardest-hit industries in 2024.
K12 schools, universities and education vendors reported 25,396 job cuts this year. That’s 222% higher than the 7,878 cuts announced through August 2023. As for technology, the sector reported 105,426 cuts in 2024.
The report acknowledges that AI and automation are driving job cuts at tech companies nationwide.
“This talent, however, is still in high demand,” said Andrew Challenges, senior vice president of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc. “Many of these professionals will land elsewhere, in and outside of the tech industry.”
Schools are still hiring
Many school districts are overcoming these challenges by finding innovative ways to hire and retain talent. St. Louis Public Schools has hired international educators to fill teaching vacancies this school year, KSDK reports. Jobs Connect USA, a no-cost recruiting firm, matched the district with teachers from around the world.
“We had 188 applicants,” SLPS Chief of Human Resources for Operations Myra Berry told KSDK. “Out of the 188 applicants, we were very selective.”
Berry added that the teachers are also credentialed as they’ve been teaching in their home country for several years.
In Texas, schools are hiring more teachers without traditional training, hoping the state will pay to prepare them, The Texas Tribune reports. A law passed in 2015 allows schools to hire educators without formal classroom training to make the profession more attractive to folks from outside K12.
However, that was before the pandemic when many longtime educators abandoned the profession for good. Now, districts are placing uncertified educators in core subject areas.
Catch up on some of District Administration’s latest coverage of leaders who are addressing teacher shortages head-on with innovative solutions:
Teacher shortage is being solved by this retiring superintendent
Florida’s Hernando Country School District has launched an on-the-job bachelor’s degree program for aspiring educators.
Teacher shortages: How districts are coping in new school year
A couple of districts are facing higher enrollment than they predicted. While that’s a good thing, they’re looking for educators to fill in gaps.