St. Petersburg Times
Special report
Video report
  • For their own good
    Fifty years ago, they were screwed-up kids sent to the Florida School for Boys to be straightened out. But now they are screwed-up men, scarred by the whippings they endured. Read the story and see a video and portrait gallery.
  • More video reports
Multimedia report
Print Email this storyEmail story Comment Email editor
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Friend's name Friend's email
Your message
 

Teach for America surges in popularity

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published June 18, 2006


It's the strongest job market in years for new college graduates, with salaries and perks rising accordingly. But one of the country's hottest recruiters this spring promised low wages, exhausting labor and only a brief break before the work begins.

Teach for America is surging in popularity. At sites around the country, the 17-year-old nonprofit has begun training about 2,400 recent graduates for two-year teaching stints in disadvantaged schools, nearly triple the figure in 2000. Nearly 19,000 college seniors applied - and more than four in five were turned down. At Notre Dame, Spelman, Dartmouth and Yale, more than 10 percent of seniors applied.

TFA has come a long way since founder Wendy Kopp used fliers to recruit her first corps of 500 teachers a year after outlining the idea in her 1989 Princeton senior thesis. Today she has 90 full-time recruiters. By 2010, TFA plans to expand the number of regions where it places teachers from 22 to 33, and nearly double in size. It hopes to call itself the No. 1 employer of recent college graduates in the country.

Driving the growth is savvy and aggressive recruiting that students say exudes competence and reminds them of Wall Street firms. But there's also straight talk about how hard it can be to teach in low-income schools. The combination seems to appeal to high-achieving students who relish a challenge and want to be in the trenches - as long as they have help.

TFA recruits, trains and helps get the new teachers alternative certification, then schools pay their salaries.

The organization says it has proved the model can work. Now it is trying to build a critical mass of alumni who - even if they move onto other fields like law or politics - share the experience of having taught in low-income areas and may use those experiences to influence education policy.

"I told them right up front that I was going to go to med school," said recent Dartmouth graduate Kristen Wong, who starts this fall on a new site in Hawaii. "They liked that even better. They pick people who become leaders in the community, who make policy, who vote."

Some critics note fewer than a third stay in the classroom after their two-year stints. But TFA says about two thirds have remained directly involved in education - if not as teachers, then in research, policy and in many cases starting charter schools. TFA counts 10 alumni in elected office, including Natasha Kamrani, recently elected to Houston's school board. The goal is 100 alumni in public office by 2010.

The program's rapid growth has made it a bigger target for some critics, who worry TFA is geared more toward the experience of the teachers than that of their students. Linda Darling-Hammond, a Stanford education professor, has argued that the failure of TFA teachers to go through regular certification hurts their effectiveness.

Some principals, meanwhile, have concluded bringing in TFA teachers isn't worth it, because most leave after two years.

Los Angeles elementary school principal Robert Venegas acknowledges TFA provided good teachers. But the school still paid staff-development costs beyond what TFA picked up and "the money we had to invest in training only to see it leave two years later was a hard pill to swallow," Venegas said.

TFA points to research showing most principals think its teachers are more effective than other faculty, and one study showing TFA teachers help students make 10 percent more progress than expected in math (with some, but less, benefit in reading). And as for leaving after two years, some schools face such turnover problems that even that long a commitment is welcome.

[Last modified June 18, 2006, 05:59:07]


Share your thoughts on this story

Comments on this article
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT