Coaching Cross Country

Rich Miller (Physical Therapy ’95) is head coach of menʼs cross country and associate head coach of menʼs track and field. He has been part of the Huskiesʼ coaching staff for 16 years, and as a student-athlete was named the 1995 UConn Club Outstanding Scholar-Athlete. He was a co-captain of the track and field teams that won back-to-back New England Indoor Championships. He spoke with UCONN Magazine about coaching menʼs cross country.

What should people know first about cross country?

We race over five miles in the woods and in the fields. Each course varies in the level of difficulty because of the terrain we run on. You have both individuals competing and a team competition. You are scored based on the place that you come in – you get one point for being in first place, 30 points for being in 30th place – as well as the time you have. You add up the points for the top five runners on the team, and thatʼs the score you come in with. Itʼs like golf in that the lowest score wins.

What makes a good championship course?

A challenging course. Runners have different strengths and weakness, and you have some runners who may favor the hillier course, some who favor a flat course, or those that are good in the fields or the woods. The weather also plays a factor. Some courses get muddy when itʼs raining, and others drain pretty well. To me, a good championship course combines a lot of things, giving you some flat running as well as open running.

Is most of the teamʼs training done on or off campus?

One of the great things about being here is there are a lot of varied routes nearby. We have some traditional loops on campus here: near Mirror Lake, Horsebarn Hill, and some trails up near the fields behind Charter Oak in the woods. Weʼll also go down to Mansfield Hollow a number of times during the year. Itʼs great training for these guys.

Is it difficult that you donʼt have the chance to coach your student-athletes as they are competing in cross country as other coaches in other team sports can do?

Thereʼs always final minute adjustments right before the competition starts but, by and large, most of the work has happened already, leading up to that competition. There is a race plan for the kids to be disciplined, aggressive, and to follow the plan set up for them. Success or failure will be based on that. It is unique in that once the race starts, you turn into a cheerleader.

What are the elements of a race plan?

I believe in racing aggressively and in putting yourself in a position to win and not waiting for something to happen. A lot of it starts with mental preparation and race concepts. We work on understanding the benchmark is running five-minute miles over a five- to six-mile race. If youʼre able to run at that level, by and large, youʼre going to be successful. Guys need to be in position as they move into the rest of the race. And you need to do it without exerting the energy you need for the rest of the race.

What do you feel is unique about cross country racing at the intercollegiate level?

One of the great things in the sport is that weʼre all starters. Thereʼs no looking around for someone to take the ball away from you. I have my opportunity to succeed or fail, be a champion – and itʼs up to me, not the guy next to me. If I can be my best on the day that Iʼm preparing to be my best, nobody can take that away.

Neag School’s DPT Program Achieves National Accreditation

Current DPT student Gregory Sago gets hands-on instruction from UConn Health Center physical therapist Gregg Gomlinski as part of his clinical experience. (Shawn Kornegay/UConn Photo)
Current DPT student Gregory Sago gets hands-on instruction from UConn Health Center physical therapist Gregg Gomlinski as part of his clinical experience. (Shawn Kornegay/UConn Photo)

UConnʼs Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) program has achieved national accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education. This is the first review of the DPT program, which has been part of the Neag School of Education since its inception in 2007. The accreditation is good for 10 years.

The accreditation commission said, “The program is meeting its mission, as evidenced by the programʼs high licensure pass rate on the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy licensure exam and the reputation of its graduates as being well-prepared for autonomous, evidence-based practice.”

Accomplishments of students in the DPT program include:

  • A 100 percent first-time licensure exam pass rate, compared to the national average of 89.5 percent.
  • An employment rate for graduated students of 100 percent.

“This accreditation is a testament to the hard work of many faculty and staff members, along with our students and alumni,” said Dean Dr. Thomas C. DeFranco. “The program has a very rich history and, through the efforts of many, has the potential to be a nationally ranked program.”

In 1952, the University of Connecticut became the first public university in the nation to establish a physical therapy degree program. The program evolved from an undergraduate program, then became a masterʼs, and in 2007 progressed to a doctorate program. Now based within the nationally ranked Neag School of Education, the DPT degree program is offered through the Department of Kinesiology.

“The physical therapy program at UConn has always been highly regarded,” said Dr. Craig Denegar, director of the DPT program. He said the program is now “poised to become a leader in the advancement of evidence-based care.”

“We are so proud of our accreditation and the faculty, students, and staff who continue to work hard to make the DPT an excellent program,” he added. “We have excellent students and faculty working together to prepare excellent clinicians, advance practice through research, and serve our communities.” There are currently 60 students in three cohorts. The first DPT class graduated in 2010.

As a professional doctoral program, the curriculum is designed to ensure physical therapists receive the skills and expertise needed to practice and stay abreast of advances in physical therapy and health care which, in turn, ensures patients receive top-quality care. Through strong didactic and clinical education experiences, the DPT program also fosters each studentʼs individual talents through collaborative research with a team of faculty mentors.

The DPT is a three-year, post-bachelorʼs program. Applicants may earn a bachelorʼs degree in a number of different areas, but all complete the same pre-requisite coursework.

Clinical education is at the heart of the DPT program. The students participate in full-time learning experiences at healthcare facilities across the country. The Nayden Rehabilitation Clinic, operated by the Department of Kinesiology, also serves as a local training site for students, while providing care to the University and nearby communities.

Opening a Door Leads to Giving Back for One Alumnus

 

DSC_John GreeneJohn Greene (MA ’67, Ph.D. ’70), a master’s student at UConn in the 1960s, was also teaching high school math at the time. One day he was walking down a hall on campus, where he saw the sign “Project Essay Grade” and he knocked on the door. Entering that door would change his course of study – and his life forever.

The sign on the door, “Project Essay Grade,” was for a US Office of Education doctoral program at UConn, focusing on behavioral science research. In speaking with the professor in charge, Dr. Page, Greene discovered “they were looking for people like me.”

“The program offered a stipend, which matched my teaching salary,” he recalled. “It also paid for all the costs, including tuition, books, and travel to conferences. There was even an extra allowance for your children.”

He switched academic programs from math education to behavioral science research and started in the program with nine other doctoral students, including Dr. Fran Archambault (MA ’69, Ph.D. ’70). The two students built a life-long connection.

“Fran was a year ahead of me,” said Greene. “He was very helpful to many people. I have the highest regard for him, and his expertise and dedication.”

“He would go out of his way to help people. Fran even showed me the secret spots to park on campus, but I had to promise not to tell anyone,” Greene smiled.

The doctoral research fellowship — which was through UConn’s School of Education (later renamed the Neag School of Education) — focused on behavioral science. “At UConn, they had outstanding facilities and computers.” It was Greene’s first experience with computers and educational research.

The project focused on computer simulations and Artificial Intelligence. He was very curious about the research focus and thought it was an unbelievable opportunity. The program and experience helped Greene prepare for the world after college. “It gave me the ability and credentials. I had selected UConn because of its reputation,” he said.

Along the way, he met education psychology professor Dr. Joe Renzulli. “I’m a math guy – I do stats and computer analysis – and Joe really helped me with my writing.”

“Unlike others, he didn’t just accept or reject the writing,” said Greene. “He actually taught me to write. We would go over each chapter, and he’d mark it up in a helpful way. Joe did that for many people, and it really helped me.”

Renzulli served on Greene’s dissertation committee, which Greene fondly reflected on. “I keep up with all that Joe’s doing. I’m so happy for him and all his accomplishments.”

“John was an outstanding student when he was here at UConn,” Renzulli recalled. “He graduated and went on to become a highly respected professor and then an entrepreneur. He went into a different aspect of education, on the business side of education services.”

After graduation, Greene went on to teach at the University of Bridgeport. He worked there for the next 10 years, focusing on educational research. His research expertise also allowed him to explore consulting opportunities outside the classroom, which led to him publishing over 100 articles, manuals and professional papers.

While at the University of Bridgeport, Greene worked with his doctoral friend, Archambault, on National Science Foundation grant projects.  Archambault was at Boston University at the time, and Greene helped him with various projects, including one with math development for children.

Archambault needed help and asked Greene to get involved, along with Renzulli. They travelled together, collected and analyzed data together, and wrote reports together. They also had a chance to talk about life and strengthen their bond. “I have great memories of working on those projects with John,” Archambault said.

“He was committed, insightful, talented and fun to be with. What could better than having fun with your work?”

Greene also reflected about those projects. “We went around the country, interviewing the brightest kids,” Greene recalled. “Some could solve math puzzles faster than the professors. Our research focused on how the kids were taught, and their verbal interactions were measured.”

Greene determined his next path would be consulting full time and helped launch a consulting firm with a colleague, Joe Keilty, a professor at the University of Bridgeport. Named Keilty, Coldsmith and Company, the firm launched in the 1980s. Greene was a founding member.

He spent the next 30 years flying all over the world, with his second home being a hotel room. Greene’s favorite was La Valencia Hotel in La Jolla, California, near where the firm was based.

Members of the firm worked with Fortune 500 organizations like General Electric, American Express, IBM, AT&T, and numerous others, including the FBI. They developed organizational and leadership development modules for their clients, and Greene’s research and expertise with behavioral sciences constituted key components. They were among the first to use 360-degree feedback and other cutting-edge leadership development and measurement tools.

He also met industry leaders along the way. Jack Welch from GE was one of those leaders.

“I met the dynamic Jack Welch when we were consulting for GE,” said Greene. “Often we were doing our training at the Crotonville facility, and Mr. Welch would take a helicopter to the meeting. Everyone gathered at a reception area and waited for him to arrive.”

“He gave a presentation and then opened it up to questions. He was very receptive to questions, but if you asked him a question, sometimes he would turn it around and ask the individual what he or she thought.”

“Hopefully, they all had good responses,” he chuckled.

An avid sports fan and former collegiate athlete himself (four varsity letters including golf), Greene actively followed UConn sports, especially men’s and women’s basketball. He and his graduate school friend, Archambault, attended many UConn basketball games. He also enjoyed attending Super Bowls, Little League World Series, Final Fours and the Olympics with his six children.

“We’ve stayed in touch through important family events and various UConn functions, including events at the Neag School, Alumni Association events and football and basketball events,” recalled Archambault. “John is party of my family, and I am part of his. And we are both members of the UConn family, and proudly so.”

The consulting business was very successful, but after almost 30 years he decided to retire and hand part of the business to his children. Greene now has more time to spend with hobbies, including UConn sports and playing golf, both of which he enjoys with Archambault.

When asked who is the better golfer, Greene wouldn’t divulge who has the better handicap. He did, however, confess to really enjoying relaxing on the fairways and contemplating retirement. In between drives and putts, he started thinking about ways to give back to his alma mater. He thought about a scholarship that would benefit students studying educational psychology focused on measurement– the program he studied.

He connected with the folks at the UConn Foundation about setting up the scholarship and determined it would be wonderful to honor his life-long friend, Archambault, who has done so much for UConn and is always giving back.

“I’ve known Fran all these years,” Greene said, adding that he couldn’t respect or imagine a better professional than Archambault, which is why he named the scholarship in his honor, as opposed to himself.

The scholarship, officially named the “Friends and Colleagues of Francis X. Archambault, Jr. Fellowship,” was launched in 2006 and awards funds on an annual basis. Archambault is the Alumni Trustee of the University of Connecticut’s Board of Trustees, Professor Emeritus in the Neag School of Education and past president of the UConn Alumni Association.

“John thought it would be best to support graduate students in evaluation and measurement, the same discipline in which we earned our degrees,” said Archambault. “The scholarship helps move students along the path to the Ph.D. These students go on to take leadership roles at other universities and governmental agencies.”

Due to the scholarship, the students “have a direct impact on education here in Connecticut and across the nation.”

“I’m not surprised Greene established a scholarship back at his alma mater,” added Renzulli. “I know he’s always considered giving back, and I’m really proud of all that he’s accomplished.”

Last year’s recipient, Glen Davenport, is a current second-year doctoral student in measurement and starting to dive into his own research on cognitive diagnostic assessments. Davenport used the scholarship funds to attend the American Education Research Association (AERA) Conference in New Orleans.

“That was really a big deal, because as a first-year student, I did not have anything to present and was not eligible for most student travel grants,” said Davenport. “Attending the AERA meeting was a huge boost for me, as it gave me opportunities to network and ideas for my own lines of research.”

Davenport acknowledges the importance of the scholarship and who it’s in honor of. “(Dr. Archambault) is deeply connected to education, to UConn and this area. I know that the scholarship I received was in his honor, which is a seriously positive commentary on someone’s character.”

Davenport will carry on the legacy of Greene and Archambault through his studies and research.

Greene gets back to campus for UConn basketball and other sporting events. He’s also been able to meet some of the scholarship recipients at the spring Honors Celebration.

Opening that “Project” door years ago led to a new course of study, a new lifelong friend and a new career. He’s been happy he made that choice ever since.

New Academy Provides Opportunity to Challenge Best and Brightest Students

Renzulli111214b231The brightly lit room was buzzing. Groups of three or four children, all fourth graders, sat or stood around small tables, trying mightily to create an electromagnetic current that would lift more and more paper clips.  Their teacher, Freddie DeJesus, wandered from table to table, sitting and chatting and making suggestions to help move each group in the right direction.

Le’Lah Arthur loves it.

“This is a really fun place,” says Le’Lah, referring to the sparkling new Renzulli Academy on Cornwall Street in Hartford, the first stand-alone, public school academy for gifted and talented children in an urban area in the country. “They let us a do a lot of really fun things.”

Her friend, Aleigha Johnson, agrees.

“I really like it here. It’s much better than my old school,” she says.

The academy is a dream come true for its founder, Neag School of Education Professor Joseph Renzulli, perhaps the most well-known champion of gifted education, along with his wife, Sally Reis, in the nation. The two have spent most of their careers trying to make legislators and school districts recognize the importance of challenging the best and brightest students in the world to reach their full potential.

“The fact that the City of Hartford has recognized what we’re doing – they gave us the building, rehabbed it, gave us the space, the equipment, great computers and smart boards, and allowed us to select and train outstanding teachers – is a testament to their commitment,” says Renzulli. “It makes it much easier for the teachers to do their job.”

Perhaps even more important, the Academy provides the teachers with much more stability than typical in-school gifted programs that often go away when a grant expires or a new superintendent moves in. Here, Hartford’s education budget follows the students, so as long as the students exist, the city will be paying for them one way or another. And, according to Miriam Morales-Taylor, assistant superintendent for learning and support services, this is where the city and board of education want these students to be.

“We’re changing the stereotype of Hartford students,” says Morales-Taylor. “Nearly 25 percent of our students are now in magnet schools, charter schools, or academies and we’re limiting enrollment in those schools to no more than 500 students, so they can receive direct education.”

The Renzulli Academy, which opened its doors two years ago in various corners of the Simpson-Waverly School on nearby Waverly Street, currently houses 104 students in grades 4-8. The plan, adopted unanimously by the board of education, is to add a kindergarten and ninth grade next year, first and 10th grades in 2013, and so on until becoming a K-12 school for gifted and talented Hartford school children by 2016, with a maximum enrollment of about 300 students, hailing from all corners of the city. Reaching that level should not be a problem, says lead teacher and Director Ruth Lyons.

“Unfortunately, we had to cap fifth grade enrollment this year,” says Lyons. “Parents are clamoring for information but, to do what we want to do, class sizes must be limited.”

It’s no wonder parents are anxious to enroll their children at the Academy. The classes are small in the refurbished academy, which sits on a tree-lined street, a black wrought iron fence surrounding the property, which features a grassy entrance area and playscape. The interior of the building is no different. Light streams into the building. The floors sparkle. Everything smells clean.

And the children at the Academy are almost as shiny as the floors, neatly outfitted in their uniforms – blue shirts and khaki pants or skirts. Best of all, they are excited, chattering, working. A social studies class darts into the hall, posting the reports they just wrote on Abraham Lincoln, Illinois, and other historical topics on one of a number of 4X8-foot boards that line the halls. In a history class, hands pop up when the teacher asks questions about how soldiers in the Civil War survived the misery of encampments, and how Confederates and Union fighters handled the conditions differently. In between question periods, the students perform, acting out aspects of their studies.

“The growth I’ve seen in these kids has been remarkable,” says Lyons. “Especially the students who had a rocky start. They’ve really turned a corner. And the students who were solid when they arrived are even better. They have so much curiosity, so much potential.”

Lyons says the Academy, using Renzulli methods, is also like a research laboratory. In fact, she is listed on her business card as a research assistant, watching carefully to see how the students react to an advanced mathematics curriculum called Mentoring Mathematical Minds. They teach advanced reading skills using research led by Renzulli’s partner, Sally Reis, the Schoolwide Enrichment Model – Reading Framework (SEM-R), which allows students to choose what books to read, as long as they are challenging and above grade level. Teachers in SEM-R don’t lecture from the front of the classroom, but mingle with the students and discuss what they’re reading individually. The science curriculum is based on the scientific method and meets daily, unlike many other schools.

“We’re putting research into practice,” Lyons says.

The school day is also longer than in other districts, running from 8:45 a.m. until 4:15 p.m. Classes are held in 70-minute blocks. And the students get homework that matches the rigor of the classroom, not the watered down versions in most public schools, where teachers must focus primarily on the students who are lagging, leaving the bright students to work on their own.

“Homework can be a challenge to a lot of these kids who are used to being able to knock it off on the bus ride home,” says Lyons. “That isn’t the case here. They’re working one to one-and-a-half grades above level. They’re used to being a big fish in a little pond, and now they’re little fish in a big pond.”

Recognizing the workload, one of the requirements for admission to the Academy is for the parents to sign on, to agree to support their child, provide a positive home atmosphere, and devote time to work with them.

“That isn’t always easy,” Lyons says. “A lot of these children are living with a single parent who may be working two jobs, who has child care issues. Sixty-five percent of our students on are on free or reduced lunch.

There are other rules, both for the city and the students’ families, whether in Hartford or any other district interested in adopting the Renzulli model — officials from Waterbury and New Haven have visited, as have representatives from a city in Texas and a faculty member from a school district in Australia.

“The district has to agree to pay all expenses and guarantee they will adhere to gifted pedagogy,” says Renzulli. “Training of teachers – they have to know the pedagogy of gifted education. They all have to sing out of the same prayer book. There must be good leadership. We have that here with Ruth. And third, I want people to serve an internship, at least a week, not just a drive-by. They have to internalize the spirit of what we’re doing.”

The seven teachers at the Academy have that spirit. Three are Neag School of Education alumni. Lyons is currently completing her dissertation and should have a Ph.D. from UConn by May. Another, Melissa Thom, also is a current UConn Three Summers student. A sixth, Mona Teitelbaum, is the wife of the dean of UConn’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Jeremy Teitelbaum. As more teachers are hired, they will first be screened by Lyons and Renzulli, and then recommended for hire by the school district. They will be employed by the Hartford school system.

The students applying must score at the very top of the Connecticut Mastery Test, submit an essay and a teacher’s recommendation, and a letter from their parents that, among other things, entitles Academy officials to scour the student’s records, not just for academics but disciplinary records as well, evidence of creativity, perseverance.

“It’s a talent pool approach. It’s not just test scores. We look for students who have potential,” says Lyons. “Students who will be ready to attend an elite university and obtain a challenging fulfilling job.”

By the looks of things on Cornwell Street, that shouldn’t be a problem.

Enriching a Shared Experience With UConn Reads

A photo of the first book to be selected for the UConn Reads Program
A photo of the first book to be selected for the UConn Reads Program named Half the Sky by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

Reading a good book brings so much joy and comfort to so many people. Many of us fall asleep with a good book, explore new and old interests with a good book, and engage others in debate over the merits of and ideas in a book. For many of us, reading has been a lifelong passion. Reading constitutes the core of most of our studentsʼ academic lives at UConn, even though they may read differently than past generations – on their smartphones, iPads, or Kindles.

Earlier this year, President Susan Herbst launched a new initiative called UConn Reads. It is designed to provide a common reading experience for all of our campuses and members of our University community. We hope that UConn Reads will enhance our campus community experience by engaging our alumni, students, faculty, staff, and members of our University family in a common reading program.

UConn Reads invites all alumni, faculty, staff, students, and community members to participate in a common intellectual discussion by reading a book selected by a University-wide committee and then participating in events and online discussions with faculty, staff, community members, and students throughout the year.

UConn Reads is designed to:

Engage our campus and extended community in an enriched and focused reading experience; Generate discussions and exchanges of diverse ideas; Promote literary connections among students, faculty, staff, alumni, and the wider community; Bridge learning experiences inside and outside the classroom.

For the inaugural year of our UConn Reads program, the 2011-12 Steering Committee has chosen Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Pulitzer Prize-winners Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn, a nonfiction bestseller centered on the oppression of women and girls in the developing world.

The UConn Reads Steering Committee combed through many worthwhile nominations over the past several months, ultimately narrowing down this yearʼs selection to three finalists. The runners-up were That Used to Be Us: How America Fell Behind in the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back, by Thomas Friedman and Michael Mandelbaum; and A Peopleʼs History of the United States, by Howard Zinn.

Come spring, we look forward to bringing Kristof and WuDunn to campus, as well as holding discussion groups and other exciting events in person and online, for our alumni, faculty, staff, students, alumni, and other members of the UConn community.

For more information, including how to access this yearʼs book selection, please visit uconnreads.uconn.edu.

Sally Reis ʼ81 Ph.D. is a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in the Neag School of Education; vice provost for academic administration; and chair of the UConn Reads 2011-12 Steering Committee.

College Prep Program for Bridgeport Schools
 Awarded $368,000 Grant

Classroom in a CommPACT schoolA grant supporting a college readiness program for two Bridgeport schools – Bassick High and Longfellow School—has been awarded by the Lloyd G. Balfour Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee to the University of Connecticut for an initiative to be run by the Neag School of Education’s CommPACT Schools Program.

The $368,000 grant will go to a four-year program with a preparatory curriculum called “CollegeEd” that will be targeted to at-risk students in grades 7-12 and administered by teachers, school professionals, and Neag School counseling faculty and graduate students. The program will build on the Neag-generated CommPACT Schools reform that seeks to close Connecticut’s achievement gap—the largest in the nation.

“The Lloyd G. Balfour Foundation is pleased to continue to support the Neag School of Education’s public school reform efforts in Connecticut,” said Michealle Larkins, V.P., Foundation Officer with Bank of America. “The CommPACT College Readiness Program in Bridgeport will help normalize the attainment of a college degree for underserved students and provide them with a step-by-step guide to attaining a degree. This work complements the Balfour Foundation’s mission of promoting college readiness, access, and success for underserved populations.

“I’m very, very excited,” says Dr. Robert Colbert, principal investigator on the project and an associate professor in the counseling program at Neag, “in particular because in our area—school counseling—it’s very difficult to get grant funding for what school counselors do.” Colbert says that intensive lobbying in Washington has begun to raise interest in college readiness efforts. “This puts us in a good place so that, when the federal government awards some large grants in the future, we’re ready.”

About 1,900 students at Bassick High School and Longfellow School will participate over the life of the program. Since being reorganized as CommPACT schools and improving their state test scores, both Bridgeport schools, where the student base is 95 percent poverty level and more than 90 percent students of color, have “Safe Harbor” status under No Child Left Behind.

“Expansion to Bassick High School is a logical extension,” the application for the grant reads. “It will be the first high school in the state to participate in CommPACT, developing the ‘pipeline’ aspect of the initiative.

This latest gift from the Balfour Foundation follows a $195,000 grant to the CommPACT Schools initiative in 2009. “The Balfour Foundation’s consistent engagement demonstrates a strong commitment to increasing opportunities for all students, and we truly appreciate this ongoing partnership,” said Chris Petkovich, director of foundation relations at the UConn Foundation.

The heart of the program is a three-stage curriculum: (1) Who Am I? Students will explore their own interests and life goals; (2) Where Am I Going? Students then will identify life and career goals; and (3) How Do I Get There? Students will investigate the importance of college, understand the planning process and build a plan to get to college and to succeed there.

In addition, the program will provide an open house weekend in the fall and spring for a select group of Bassick students and their families. A larger group of seniors from Bassick will be invited to a one-day fall visit to the campus for a tour and conversation with UConn students from Bridgeport.

The college readiness program mirrors the spirit of collaboration modeled by CommPACT Schools, which are autonomous public schools run with the support of community, parents, administrators, children and teachers.

This new idea, which will be launched this school year and continue through 2014-15, will create a partnership between the Neag School, the Bridgeport partner schools, the UConn Admissions Department and peer mentors from Student Support Services.

Colbert and Dr. Rachelle Pérusse, co-principal investigator and also an associate professor in the counseling program at Neag, will oversee the project, visit the schools twice a month and conduct assessment seminars. The team includes Michele Femc-Bagwell, co-principal investigator and director of CommPACT; a doctoral student who will coordinate the program and graduate students in the Neag counseling program who will do the classroom teaching. Lawrence Williams, interim associate director of admissions at UConn, will coordinate the open houses for Bridgeport students and families, along with Bidya Ranjeet, director of Student Support Services at UConn. Williams is a graduate of Longfellow, Bassick and UConn, where he served in the peer mentoring program.

Although, Colbert says, “the main goal is to get them to go to college,” he is excited about making the UConn connection to students at Bassick. In recent years, about three to five incoming freshmen are from the Bridgeport high school, and UConn hopes to increase that number to 10 after the first year of the program.

“We’re ambitious. We’re going to try to double it,” Colbert says.

The program seeks to lay the groundwork for long-term use of CollegeEd, a curriculum developed by the College Board. The college readiness program “is designed to set young people on the path to college, to employment, and to becoming engaged citizens,” the project outline reads.

Neag School Hosts Speaker on “The Expressway to Health”

Carol GarberThe Neag School welcomes Neag alumnus Dr. Carol Ewing Garber for a presentation on “The Expressway to Health: Essentials of Exercise for (Almost) Everybody and Every Schedule” on Thursday, Feb. 9 from 4-5 pm. at the UConn, Storrs Campus. The presentation, hosted by the Neag School’s Department of Kinesiology, is free and open to the public and will be held at the Center for Undergraduate Education (CUE), room 122.

Dr. Carol Ewing Garber is chair of the American College of Sports Medicine’s (ACSM) position stand on principles of exercise prescription for optimizing health. She is an associate professor of movement science and director of the Graduate Program in Applied Physiology at Columbia University. Dr. Garber earned her BS, MA and PhD from the Neag School of Education at UConn.

“It’s very clear that a little bit of exercise makes a big difference,” says Carol Ewing Garber, author of the ACSM new guidelines on quantity and quality of exercise for adults. “The recommendation to get 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise is still one of the goals, but the message needs to be heard that doing less is also helpful.” USA TODAY

For more information, contact the Department of Kinesiology at 860-486-3623 or Kinesiology@Uconn.Edu.

Accolades: Read About the News and Accomplishments from our Alumni, Students, Faculty and Staff

104516017-hands-clapping1-300x2001Accolades – below are news and notes from our alumni, faculty, staff, and students. We are proud of all the amazing accomplishments by our Neag family. If you have an accolade to share, we want to hear from you! Please send any news items (and story ideas) to shawn.kornegay@uconn.edu.

PROGRAMS/DEPARTMENTS

Husky Sport was one of 13 organizations recognized with a 2011-2012 Extended Schools Hours Grant Program from the Hartford Public Schools. Extended School Hours Programs are intended to provide opportunities for academic improvement, which include the provision of instructional services to help students meet state and local performance standards.

STUDENTS

Janine Firmender and Lisa Rubenstein won doctoral student awards at the NAGC conference.

Kendrick Henes, a Secondary Science major, has been invited by Liz Buttner of the State Department of Education to serve on the committee reviewing drafts of the Next Generation Science Education Standards – the only student pre-service teacher to serve in CT and nationally.

Nicole LaPierre and Melanie Rodriguez would like to thank everyone who “liked” the photo on Facebook of Clark Elementary and Middle Academy. They won the “We Give Books” contest and will now receive a library of books for Clark School in Hartford! They are renovating and reopening the currently closed school library in Clark for their Masters Inquiry Project and these books will help immensely. They are appreciative of the support.

ALUMNI

Maurice Doolittle (B.S. Physical Therapy ‘65) has retired after working as a physical therapist in five different states. He is looking forward to his retirement in Louisiana with his wife, Sunnie.

Craig Esposito (Ph.D. Educational Administration ‘10) won a spot on the Town of Stonington’s school board.

Theresa (Dombrowski) Forbes (B.S. Elementary Education ’97, MA Curriculum and Instruction ’98, 6th Year in Educational Psychology ’05) and Sean Forbes announce their marriage on July 16, 2011, in Manchester, Conn. Theresa is a teacher in Glastonbury, Conn.

Greg Fuller (B.S. Sport Science ’97) and Nicole (Perras) Fuller ’98 (RHSA) announce the birth of their second child, Evan, on July 15, 2010. He joins older brother Jackson, 4.

Carol (Ewing) Garber (B.S. Recreational Service Education ’75, MA Sport and Leisure Studies ’83, Ph.D. Sport and Leisure Studies ’90) is associate professor of movement sciences and education at Teachers College, Columbia University in New York, N.Y. She serves as vice president of the American College of Sports Medicine.

Allen R. Jones Jr. (B.S. Physical Therapy ’87) opened Dominion Physical Therapy & Associates’ seventh office, in Norfolk, Va. Dominion specializes in sports, work, and personal injuries.

Peter MacGillis (B.S. in Exercise Science ’93, MBA ’98) was featured on the Travel Channel’s “Man v. Food Nation” on Aug. 18, 2011.

Louise Tarnowski Plack (B.S. Elementary Education ’84, MA Special Education ’90) is a special education teacher at Marlborough Elementary School and executive board member of Pocketful of Joy, a nonprofit organization that provides health care and education opportunities to children in northern Tanzania. From January to March 2011, she worked in Tanzania with educators at the local and district level to improve education for primary and secondary schoolchildren.

Lois Greene Stone (B.S. ’55) and her husband, Dr. Gerald E. Stone, celebrated 55 years of marriage and welcomed their 15th grandchild this spring. Lois, a writer and poet, is syndicated worldwide.

James Zullo (B.S.’66) retired as a high school basketball coach in New York with 528 wins.

Dr. Marianne Kennedy, Southern Connecticut State University’s Interim Provost, was selected as the Lead Campus Administrator until Southern’s new President, Dr. Mary Papazian, arrives on February 1. During her 17-year career as a faculty member, department chairwoman and administrator at Southern, Dr. Kennedy has attained a wealth of institutional knowledge and earned a reputation as an active scholar, an excellent communicator, and an effective collaborator.  Dr. Kennedy earned her Ph.D. in special education from the University of Connecticut and joined Southern’s Communication Disorders Department in 1994.

William J. Pesce (BS sports and leisure studies, ‘85) was named chief of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the Hospital for Special Care in New Britain. Pesce has specialized experience in the areas of neurologic and orthopedic rehabilitation, spasticity management, electrodiagnosis, musculoskeletal disorders and pain management. He joined the hospital in 1993 and has been an attending physiatrist since 2006. Pesce is also an assistant professor at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine.

Race issues, the role of the media in 21st century politics and public perceptions of President Barack Obama’s communication style are all examined in a recently published book by Dr. Mark P. Orbe, Western Michigan University professor of communication. “Communication Realities in a ‘Post-Racial’ Society: What the U.S. Public Really Thinks About Barack Obama” was published in November by Lexington Books. The first book its kind, it draws from a large national qualitative data set generated by 333 diverse participants from 12 different U.S. states across six regions and provides comprehensive, in-depth coverage of the similarities and differences that exist among diverse groups of everyday Americans.

Several English Education Neag graduates and students traveled to Chicago in November to participate in the 2011 Workshop of the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the National Council of Teachers of English.  Ricki Ginsberg (Rockville High School, Vernon) and Tiffany Smith (Parish Hill High School, Chaplin) presented a breakout session entitled, “Forging Ahead: Proposing, Designing, Teaching and Defending a High School Young Adult Literature Elective.” Ricki also serves as an elected Director on the ALAN Board.

  • Kelly Thurston (Francis T. Maloney High School, Meriden) and Ethan Warner (O.H. Platt High School, Meriden) shared their expertise in a panel, “Using YA Literature to Bridge the Gap for Male Readers.”
  • Cleo Rahmy (Portland Middle School), Emily Hernberg (New Canaan High School), and Claire Peyser (Westwood High School, MA) examined the challenges faced by teachers new to the profession in their presentation, “Young Adult Literature As A First-Year Teacher: A Second-Year Retrospective.”
  • Danielle King (East Hampton High School) chaired an author panel entitled, “Middle grade titles: In those in-between spaces.”
  • Elizabeth Stagis (East Hartford High School) was named the 2011 recipient of a Gallo Grant awarded to a talented early career teacher for attendance at his/her first ALAN Workshop.
  • Mike Hurst (West Hartford Middle School) and Marisa Ives (UConn) were both first-year attendees who represented UConn well with their passion and professionalism.

FACULTY

Lawrence Armstrong and Richard Schwab were elected as Faculty At-Large to UConn’s University Senate. Schwab was also elected to the Faculty Review Board.

Robin Grenier was elected to the Academy of Human Resource Development Board for a three-year term. AHRD is a global organization made up of, governed by, and created for the Human Resource Development (HRD) scholarly community of academics and reflective practitioners and has over 500 members worldwide.

Jason Irizarry was one of two featured speakers at the CSDE and SERC 2011 Black & Hispanic/Latino Male Statewide Forum, held in December at Central Connecticut State University.

 

Tom Kehl was awarded the Outstanding Contribution to Training by the National Association of School Psychologists. He will be recognized at the NASP National Awards Lunch in February.

Professor Michael Young has been elected to the Board of Education for the Town of Ellington.  Congratulations to Mike.

Odvard Egil Dyrli, emeritus professor of curriculum and instruction in the Neag School of Education, was elected to a third four-year term on the Board of Trustees of Messiah College, Grantham, Pa (www.messiah.edu). Dyrli serves on the executive council, chairs the education committee, and is on the steering committee for re-accreditation by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.

Letter from the Dean: You’re Invited to the Neag Alumni Society Awards Dinner

Alumni Awards programDear Alumni and Friends of the Neag School of Education:

The Neag School of Education Alumni Society and the faculty of the Neag School of Education cordially invite you to attend our 14th Annual Awards Dinner on Saturday, March 31, 2012 at the South Campus Ballroom (Rome Ballroom) on the Storrs campus. Click here for directions or here for the UConn campus map.

This evening promises to be memorable as faculty and alumni gather to formally recognize the achievements of some of our outstanding graduates. It is our hope that you will be among those returning to the University for this event. Our award recipients are educators who have made significant contributions across all levels of education. We know that you will agree with our outstanding selection of alumni to honor:

The Outstanding Higher Education Professional is Dr. Marcia Gentry, Sixth Year Diploma in Special Education ’92, Ph.D. ’96, professor of educational studies and executive director of the Gifted Education Resource Institute at Purdue University in West Lafayette, IN.

The Outstanding School Administrator is Ms. Claudia Norman, Sixth Year Diploma in Educational Administration ’98, co-principal of Lewin G. Joel Elementary School in Clinton, CT.

The Outstanding School Educator is Mrs. Kimberly Ruiz, BS ’99, MA ’00, fourth grade teacher at Dorothy C. Goodwin Elementary School in Mansfield, CT.

The Outstanding Kinesiology Professional is Dr. Avron Abraham, MA ’82, Ph.D. ’90, director of the Center for Academic Success and University Studies and associate professor in the Department of Health and Exercise Science at the University of Delaware in Newark, DE.

The Outstanding Physical Therapy Professional is Ms. Mary Duffy Zupkus, PT ’73, president and clinical director of Physical Therapy Associates of Concord, in Concord MA.

The Outstanding Professional is Dr. Les Sternberg, ’68 BA, ’70 MA, ’73 Ph.D, special advisor to the provost of the University of South Carolina (USC), and previously served as dean of the College of Education at USC in Columbia, SC.

The Outstanding Young Professional is Dr. Anthony R. Artino, Jr., ’08 Ph.D., associate professor with the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and commander in the Medical Service Corps of the US Navy, both in Bethesda, MD.

The Outstanding School Superintendent is Dr. Mary P. Conway,  Sixth Year Diploma in Educational Administration ’95, Ed.D. ’05, superintendent of schools in Vernon, CT.

The Outstanding Alumni of the Year is … (to be announced at the dinner)

Come and bring others with you to honor your colleagues and friends who are so influential in the field of education. The evening begins with a reception at 5:30 p.m., followed by dinner at 6:30 p.m. The entrees include a choice of teriyaki strip steak or stuffed sole. A vegetarian meal will also be available. Attire is semi-formal. No-host bar. The cost of the dinner is $45.00 per person for members of the UConn Alumni Association ($55 for non-members). To make reservations, go online to www.UConnAlumni.com/NeagAwards or call (888) 822-5861 by March 16, 2012. If you have questions, please contact Shawn Kornegay at (860-486-3675) or shawn.kornegay@uconn.edu.

We look forward to greeting you on March 31st for our celebration.

Sincerely,

Thomas C. DeFranco

Dean, Neag School of Education

TFA Teachers: How Long Do They Teach? Why Do They Leave?

Few observers doubt that Teach For America (TFA) has high aspirations. Established in 1990, TFA strives to close persistent racial and socioeconomic achievement gaps in U.S. public education by recruiting high-achieving college graduates to teach for two years in low-income urban and rural schools. In recent years, applications to TFA have soared, especially at highly selective colleges. In 2009-10, for example, 18 percent of Harvard University’s seniors applied to the program. Proposing to expand its teaching corps from 7,300 to 13,000 over the next five years, TFA recently won $50 million in the federal i3 (Investing in Innovation) competition and succeeded in raising $10 million in matching funds.

TFA’s rapid growth and success in garnering financial support from public and private sources exhilarates some — and angers others. Proponents vigorously cite the program’s merits, contending that TFA attracts academically strong and motivated young people who would otherwise not consider teaching, especially in high-poverty schools. Its detractors, with equal passion, argue that by requiring only a two-year commitment from corps members who have received only five weeks of formal preparation, TFA undermines efforts to stabilize and improve staffing in the very schools most overwhelmed by teacher turnover and most in need of consistency in the classroom.

Moreover, critics argue that TFA compromises teaching as a profession by minimizing the importance of preservice preparation and casting teaching as a prelude to the higher-status careers that many corps members enter after their TFA experience. Some cynically assert that the program functions primarily as a résumé booster for ambitious upper-middle-class college graduates, intent on fashioning the most compelling application to the nation’s top law or medical schools.

Debates about whether TFA can revive chronically failing schools or will further aggravate the problems facing these schools often turn on competing claims about how long TFA teachers stay on the job. Critics conclude that corps members routinely leave their school after their two-year commitment, if not before. For their part, TFA relies on internal surveys, which show that 60percent of corps members remain in education, holding various roles at various levels of the system.

Until now, however, solid information about how long TFA teachers actually remain in teaching and in their low-income schools has not been available to policy makers and school officials. Our large-scale, nationwide analysis of TFA teacher turnover presents a more detailed picture of which TFAers stay, which ones leave the profession and some suggestions about why they leave. In our study, we learned:

  • Nearly two-thirds (60.5 percent) of TFA teachers continue as public school teachers beyond their two-year commitment.
  • More than half (56.4 percent) leave their initial placements in low-income schools after two years, but 43.6 percent stay longer.
  • By their fifth year, 14.8 percent continue to teach in the same low-income schools to which they were originally assigned.

Our findings suggest two explanations for how long TFA teachers stay in the profession and in their placement schools. The first involves their initial intentions and their background in education before entering TFA; the second is the working conditions in their schools.

WHY RETENTION MATTERS

Teacher retention, particularly in low-income schools such as those where TFA teachers are placed, is critically important. Attrition, already high among new teachers across the nation (Ingersoll, 2002), has its greatest impact in low-income, high-minority schools. In the most recent data available, 21 percent of teachers at high-poverty schools leave their schools annually, compared to 14 percent of their counterparts in low-poverty settings (Planty et al., 2008).

As teachers transfer within districts, they typically leave schools that enroll lower-income students and enter schools with higher-income students (Hanushek, Kain, & Rivkin, 2004).This revolving-door effect (Ingersoll, 2004) leaves the very schools that most need stability and continuity perpetually searching for new teachers to replace those who leave. When teachers leave their schools after only a few years, those schools incur substantial costs. Most importantly, students are likely to suffer. Novices typically fill vacancies. As a result, students are taught by a stream of first-year teachers who are, on average, less effective than their more experienced counterparts (Murnane & Phillips, 1981; Rockoff, 2004).

When effective teachers leave, schools also lose their investment in formal and informal professional development (National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, 2003). Moreover, routinely high levels of teacher turnover impede a school’s efforts to coordinate curriculum, to track and share important information about students as they move from grade to grade, and to maintain productive relationships with parents and the local community. Quite simply, they cannot build instructional capacity. Given such high stakes, knowing more about TFA teachers’ careers in low-income schools and in the profession more broadly is essential.

WHETHER, WHEN, AND WHY

In 2007, we set out to understand whether, when, and why TFA teachers left the teaching profession and/or their low-income placement schools. We surveyed all members of three cohorts (entering in 2000, 2001, and 2002) from all TFA sites across the country and asked them to provide information about their work lives in the four to six years since they began teaching. They reported whether and when they left public teaching and/or their initial school and they explained why.

Sixty-two percent of the total population completed the survey for a final sample of 2,029 individuals. We used a statistical approach, called “discrete-time survival analysis,” to estimate teachers’ unbiased probability of leaving their schools or the profession in a given year. We were able to focus on the choices that the teachers made — to stay at their school, change schools, or leave teaching — because we could identify and set aside career changes due to involuntary transfers, layoffs, and dismissals.

HOW LONG ARE TFA TEACHERS’ CAREERS?

We expected to find that a large proportion of TFA teachers in our sample would have left teaching after completing their two-year obligation to TFA. But, we found that 60.5 percent of teachers taught in K-12 schools longer than two years and more than one third (35.5 percent) taught for more than four years. After five years, 27.8 percent were still in teaching. This retention rate is markedly lower than the 50 percent estimated for new teachers across all types of schools (Smith & Ingersoll, 2003). Good data are not currently available that would allow us to compare TFA teachers’ turnover to teachers’ turnover in similar high-poverty schools, although reports from Philadelphia suggest that the rates may be roughly comparable (Neild, Useem, Travers, & Lesnick, 2003).

Most people would be surprised to learn that a substantial percentage of TFA teachers — 43.6 percent — remained in their initial, low-income placement school beyond their two-year obligation. However, many individuals who stayed in teaching did leave their original placement schools at some point. About half of those who remained in teaching after their third year had changed schools. And, after the fourth year, only 14.8 percent continued to teach in their original school. This level of turnover is very problematic from the perspective of low-income schools and their students.

HOW DID TFA TEACHERS’ ORIGINAL PLANS AND EDUCATION INFLUENCE THEIR RETENTION?

When we examined the survey responses, we found two explanations for these teachers’ career choices. The first emerged from self-reports about their original plans when they applied to TFA as well as evidence about their prior educational preparation.

Although most people think TFA corps members are much alike, we found two distinct subgroups in this sample of over 2,000 teachers. Those in one subgroup had short-term expectations for a teaching career from the start, thus fitting the “two-years-and-out” picture that most people have in mind when they think of TFA. Teachers in the other subgroup had more traditional, longer-term expectations for a teaching career.

The majority (56.59 percent) of those in the sample indicated that, when they applied to TFA, they had planned to teach for two years or less. Such intentions were especially apparent for nearly one-tenth (9.28 percent) of the sample who had applied to graduate school in another field and then deferred their enrollment for two years while teaching in TFA. Controlling for demographic and placement variables, in years 1-3, those who had deferred graduate school before enrolling in TFA were significantly and substantially more likely to leave teaching than those who had not deferred graduate school.

In contrast, nearly half (43.41 percent) of the sample said that, from the beginning, they had expected to teach longer than TFA’s requirement. Notably, 11.34 percent reported that they had intended to make teaching a lifelong career when they entered TFA. Some (3.34 percent) had already completed a traditional teacher preparation program; others (5.28 percent) had majored or minored in education; and an additional 5.82 percent of the sample had taken pedagogical classes as undergraduates. Thus, almost 12 percent of the sample had some training in teaching, whether a major or minor in education, completion of a teacher preparation program, or completion of a teaching methods class, before enrolling in TFA. Moreover, 6.94 percent of the sample had applied to another teaching job in addition to TFA. These actions signal a deeper commitment to teaching that preceded their TFA experience.

In fact, those who displayed an early commitment to teaching did stay in the classroom longer than other TFA peers. For example, 71.3 percent of education majors taught longer than four years, while only about half that proportion in the entire sample — 35.5 percent — taught that long. Of those with an education major or minor, 62.4 percent taught for longer than four years as did 53.0 percent of those who had applied for another teaching job, again a much higher proportion than the overall sample. These groups are small, but noteworthy because they had substantially higher retention rates than others in the sample.

It is impossible to say whether these teachers’ longer stay in the classroom was due to their initial commitment to teaching or to the success they achieved with their students as a result of the knowledge and skill they acquired through undergraduate studies in education. In an earlier study, we found that new teachers’ “sense of success” with their students figured centrally in their decisions about whether to continue teaching (Johnson & Birkeland, 2003). Given the limited induction and support that the TFA teachers probably received in their high-need schools, it seems likely that both their prior coursework and their original intentions played a role in their career decisions.

These findings show that Teach For America teachers are far from being exclusively short-term in their intentions or actions. Some appear to use the program as a path to an extended career in teaching. They may choose TFA as a way to bypass longer preparation programs, licensing requirements, or the bureaucratic obstacles associated with landing a teaching job, especially in a large, urban district. They also may have wanted the status and camaraderie that come with becoming TFA corps members. Whatever their reasons, it seems clear that a considerable proportion of those in the sample expected to make a longer-term commitment to teaching from the start.

WHY DID TFA TEACHERS LEAVE TEACHING OR TRANSFER TO OTHER SCHOOLS?

Our survey also provided insight into why some TFA corps members decided to leave teaching. When asked to select the most influential factor in their decision to leave teaching, the top reasons selected were:

  • To pursue a position other than K-12 teacher (34.93 percent);
  • To take courses to improve career opportunities in education (11.79 percent); or
  • To take courses to improve career opportunities outside of education (10.26 percent).

These top three reasons relate to the teachers’ interest in professional advancement, either outside or inside education. However, the fourth reason, cited by nearly one-tenth of the teachers (9.83 percent), was poor administrative leadership at their school. In addition, some attributed their decision to other deficiencies in their working conditions — lack of collaboration (2.11 percent), inadequate discipline (2.98 percent), or general dissatisfaction with their job description and responsibilities (2.84 percent). Therefore, nearly 18 percent of those who left teaching cited such school-based factors as the primary reason for their departure.

Beyond teachers’ self-reports about working conditions, our analysis revealed that their teaching assignments affected retention. Those who were assigned to teach more challenging assignments — split grades, multiple subjects, or out-of-field courses, for which they were not prepared — were more likely to resign from teaching or leave their jobs than those with single-grade, single-subject, or in-field assignments (Donaldson & Johnson, 2010). For example, 76.2 percent of math teachers with a math major taught more than two years, compared with 60.0 percent of math teachers without a math major. Fifty percent of math teachers without a major in math left teaching within 2.51 years, while half of those with a math major left within 4.08 years.

Those with short-term intentions not only chose to leave teaching in favor of other professional opportunities, but also because they found their working conditions to be subpar. By contrast, when individuals with long-term intentions left teaching, they tended to leave, not because they preferred a different profession or were dissatisfied with their work, but because of a major life change, such as pregnancy or child-rearing.

Notably, not all of those who left teaching within six years permanently abandoned the field of education. When we asked respondents who had left what they were doing now, we learned that 21.0 percent held positions in K-12 schools and 10.7 percent had returned to the classroom as teachers. Contrary to popular expectations, only 3.7 percent were lawyers and 1.6 percent were medical professionals. We found that teachers who reported or provided evidence of longer-term intentions — for example, by having taken courses in education — remained in teaching and in their original school in much higher proportions than those with short-term intentions. We asked teachers who stayed in teaching, but had left their original placement school, why they had made the change. Six percent had been reassigned through an involuntary transfer. Among others who chose to transfer, the reason most often cited was a change in residence (29 percent). However, more than one-third reported transferring because they were dissatisfied with their original school — poor administrative leadership (16 percent), lack of philosophical alignment (14 percent), lack of discipline (3 percent), or dissatisfaction with job responsibilities (2 percent). For those who remained in teaching, working conditions were central in deciding to leave their original placement.

CONCLUSION

This study provides much-needed information about the careers of TFA teachers. The good news is that nearly two-thirds stay in teaching beyond their two-year commitment. However, less than a quarter stay in their initial, low-income school for more than three years. Given TFA’s commitment to closing the achievement gap — a goal shared by many other fast-track preparation programs — this revolving door transfer of teachers from the schools that most need skilled, experienced teachers remains a serious problem.

We were struck by the higher retention rates among teachers who initially had longer-term plans for teaching, especially those who had taken education courses in college. This seems to suggest that new teachers benefit from having more preservice preparation than fast-track programs usually provide. We need to learn more about the type, timing, and length of preparation that new teachers find most valuable.

The TFA teachers who stayed in teaching but changed schools reported that their decisions were significantly influenced by the working conditions in their initial school — the principal’s leadership, their teaching assignment, student discipline, and the school’s philosophy. These responses suggest that if hard-to-staff schools are to succeed in serving their low-income students, it won’t be because they receive a steady stream of well-educated, committed novice teachers, but because they become places where those individuals find they can succeed and, therefore, choose to stay.

MORGAEN L. DONALDSON is an assistant professor in the Neag School of Education at the University of Connecticut. SUSAN MOORE JOHNSON is the Jerome T. Murphy Professor of Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Reproduced and distributed with permission of Phi Delta Kappa International, www.pdkintl.org. All rights reserved.