Schools hope math is right on teacher hirings
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- Think of it as a giant game of teacher roulette.
Every year on the eve of school openings, district officials and
principals -- who have spent the summer preparing for almost every other
contingency -- wake up in the middle of the night wondering: “Will we
have enough teachers?”
That’s because until the bell chimes Thursday, school officials won’t
know exactly how many children will be coming to school.
And with budgets as tight as they are, they can’t risk hiring extra
teachers unless they are absolutely certain they’ll have enough students
for them to teach.
To get an accurate estimate, principals personally call parents and
ask if their children are coming back. They whip out their calculators
and perform complicated statistical calculations. And they keep their
fingers crossed.
“It makes me frantic,” said Kaiser Elementary School Principal Daryle
Palmer.
In the last few days, Palmer said, the number of students expected to
enroll has shot up, but Palmer cannot hire any more teachers until she
knows for sure how many students will actually come.
This means fourth and sixth grades will likely be a bit crowded for
the first couple weeks of school.
In an attempt to find out exactly how crowded -- and whether the
school could hire an extra teacher -- Kaiser’s Parent Faculty Assn. last
week paid four high school students to call each and every child who came
to the school last year and ask their parents if they planned to return.
“I anticipate we’ll hire at least one more teacher ... but right now
we’re just in a holding pattern,” Palmer said.
Lorri Simpson, the district’s head of personnel, said Kaiser’s problem
has been seen throughout the district. And when school starts Thursday,
some schools will be bursting at the seams, an some will be emptier than
expected.
“We do as much to confirm as possible,” she said. “But we have to make
sure we don’t over-hire. ... We’re waiting to see the whites of [the
students’] eyes.”
During the summer break, Simpson said the district hired 141 new
teachers. Last week, they hired 21 more, and today, five more are
expected to sign final papers.
But Simpson still is expecting to start the school year with
substitute teachers in a few classrooms. If all the children who are
expected to show up do, then those teachers -- all of whom have
credentials -- will be hired permanently. If all the students don’t show
up, classes will be consolidated and the substitutes won’t be hired as
full-time teachers.
Simpson said she hates the thought of moving students around once
school has started, but noted that often it is necessary.
“It’s unfortunate,” she said. “We know parents and students get
attached to a teacher the first week of school, but we have to [move
people] because of our funding.”
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