American Decades
Shortages of Teachers, Professors
Overcrowding, Underpaying.
The shortage of teachers and classrooms was acute throughout the decade. In President Kennedy's "Special Message on Education" on 6 February 1963, he stressed the seriousness of the problem. One and one-half million students were housed in overcrowded classrooms, and approximately two million were studying amid "grossly substandard health and safety conditions." Salaries were too low to retain the ablest teachers, with some poorer districts offering starting annual wages as low as $3,000. Moreover, of the teachers in the classrooms, 7.2 percent held substandard certificates, affecting the quality of education for one pupil in thirteen, according to the U.S. Office of Education. Although the colleges were equally crowded, there were not enough students in teacher-training programs to ease the shortages in certain locales. In Nebraska, for example, fewer than 50 percent of qualified graduates remained to...
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1960's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Expansion of the Federal Role in Education
- The Changing Curriculum
- College Officials and the Morals Revolution
- How Student Unrest Changed Higher Education
- The Origins of Bilingual Education
- Progressive Education Versus Basic Education
- Shortages of Teachers, Professors
- The Military Goes to School
- Technology and Education
- Public-School Integration
- Montessori Schools
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1960–1969
