Ending Teacher Shortages

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A01=Christopher Redding
A01=Tuan D. Nguyen
Author_Christopher Redding
Author_Tuan D. Nguyen
Category=JNF
Category=JNLB
Category=JNLC
education policy reform
education workforce crisis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forthcoming
hiring qualified teachers
school staffing shortages
teacher recruitment strategies
teacher retention policy
teacher shortage solutions
teacher turnover causes

Product details

  • ISBN 9781421455419
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Stable schools depend on retaining teachers, because when educators stay, students succeed.

Teacher shortages dominate headlines, yet the problem is often misunderstood. Unfilled positions, underprepared teachers, and high turnover are treated as symptoms of a single national crisis, when in fact shortages vary widely by region, school, and subject. Ending Teacher Shortages reframes the issue and offers a clearer path forward. Tuan D. Nguyen and Christopher Redding show that shortages persist not only because too few people want to teach, but because too many teachers leave.

Using national and state-level evidence, the book explains how working conditions, compensation, preparation, and support shape teacher retention—and why schools serving historically marginalized students bear the greatest burden of instability. The authors synthesize decades of research alongside new analyses of post-pandemic data to show how shortages emerge at different points in the teacher pipeline. They examine recruitment, preparation, hiring, mentoring and induction, compensation, and workplace conditions, identifying which policy levers matter most in specific contexts. Rather than promoting one-size-fits-all solutions, the book emphasizes local diagnosis and targeted actions.

Ending Teacher Shortages provides an accessible, research-grounded guide to stabilizing the teacher workforce. It argues that lasting change depends on building schools where teachers want to stay—and where students can rely on experienced, supported educators year after year.

Tuan D. Nguyen is an associate professor of educational leadership and policy analysis at the University of Missouri. Christopher Redding is an associate professor of educational leadership and policy at the University of Florida.

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