American Decades
Teachers Under Fire
Assessing Teacher Training.
By 1984 four studies of the teaching profession all concurred that the profession was troubled. "It's a mess," said Emily Feistritzer, author of "The Condition of Teaching," produced in 1983 for the National Center for Educational Information and the most far-reaching study to that point. Feistritzer, whose research delved into conditions in every state, blamed a significant part of the problem on the chaotic certification procedures at state departments of education. A drastically reduced pool of students going into the field exacerbated the situation; in 1973, 200,000 graduates planned to go into teaching, but by 1981, only 108,000 students studied to become teachers. Of those students, 35 percent were in elementary education; 17 percent were in physical education; 13 percent in special education. Although less than 3 percent planned to go into secondary teaching, this abnormally low figure could...
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1980's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Academic and Athletic Reform
- Aids: Catalyst for Change in the Schools
- Apartheid Spurs Campus Protests
- Bilingual Education
- Black Educational Progress Slows
- Federal Education Intervention: Harmful or Helpful?
- Guns, Drugs, and Suicide
- 1983: "The Hinge of History" for Reform
- Rise in Censorship
- Teachers Under Fire
- Women's Issues in Education
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1980–1989
