Michigan showing little diversity in it teacher workforce

education-safe-3543579548
education-safe-3543579548

As Michigan grapples with an ongoing teacher shortage, a new report says the state is also falling short when it comes to building a diverse educator workforce.

According to EdTrust-Midwest, just over 11% of Michigan teachers are people of color, even though nearly 40% of the state’s students are non-white. The study finds about one in ten Michigan students attends a school with no teachers of color at all.

EdTrust-Midwest senior policy analyst Charlotte Pierce says that gap can affect academic outcomes and long-term workforce readiness.

“Strong and diverse teacher workforces have been linked to quantitative improvements in test scores, fewer absences and suspensions, higher graduation and college enrollment rates, and an increased trust between students and teachers,” Pierce said.

Pierce adds the lack of diversity isn’t tied to a single failure point, but to barriers that build over time.

What we really want to frame this as is a pipeline issue. So it’s not one single point where we’re losing all of our teachers, but rather we’re not getting as much diversity of interest in the teaching profession. And that could be for a number of reasons, including low pay.”

Researchers say barriers like cost, lack of support during student teaching, and poor early career conditions continue to limit who enters and stays in the profession. Pierce emphasizes that representation in the classroom can shape how students see their own futures.

The report offers a roadmap to strengthen Michigan’s teacher pipeline, such as earlier recruitment and retention efforts. Pierce says state leaders are receptive and open to taking action.

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