A severe substitute teacher shortage in the Florida school district where Barbara Clyatt works means when the first grade teacher submits for time off, there’s not always someone who can cover. Students can get split up and placed in other classes — which can be disruptive to their education.

“There’s some kids who thrive on a set schedule, it needs to be the same every single day. And when that gets thrown away, the last thing they’re doing is paying attention to what you’re teaching,” said Clyatt.

Substitute teacher shortages, like the broader shortage of teachers, are happening in school districts around the country — and are directly connected.

“The substitute crisis, I believe, has reached crisis proportions, because there’s greater demand than supply,” said Lisa Thomas, a substitute teacher in Connecticut and chair of the Coventry Town Council. “The demand is high because we don’t have the teachers we need.”

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    there was a time when subs had to actually be qualified, and were utilized as such

    It’s state by state…

    My red state was/is just passing an exam, we had loads of subs who were highschool seniors less than a year ago. Which was especially weird once I got to highschool.

    Sometimes it was kids that happened to home from college, but it was often kids who weren’t going to college and just fucking around our small town.

    Sometimes they’d put a movie on, sometimes we’d just sit around and bullshit. But I never had a single sub attempt to teach.

      • MisterD@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        Red can’t risk having voters become smart enough to vote for their own interests. It’s bad for Republicans