Tara Kilbride
EPIC, Michigan State University
Katharine O. Strunk
EPIC, Michigan State University
Salem Rogers
Michigan State University
Usamah Wasif
EPIC, Michigan State University
A Research Report From EPIC
Tracking Progress Through Michigan’s Teacher Pipeline
June 2023
In this report, we combine data about students in Michigan’s K-12 public schools and public universities with educator certification testing, credentialing, and employment records to examine how the pool of prospective Michigan teachers changes as candidates progress through the pipeline and into the workforce.
KEY FINDINGS:
- Enrollment in undergraduate teacher education courses has decreased over time and varies by demographic group.
- Only a fraction of the students who take an initial education course become student teachers.
- Prospective teachers of color are disproportionately likely to exit the pipeline during the advanced coursework, student teaching, and licensure testing stages.
- Recent cohorts of teacher preparation graduates are more likely to work as public school teachers in Michigan.
- Black teacher preparation graduates are more likely to enter and stay in Michigan’s public school teaching workforce.
- The pool of prospective Michigan teachers becomes less diverse as candidates progress between the coursework, licensure, and employment stages.