Clay school district partners with UNF to recruit teachers

Clay County District Schools, the University of North Florida’s College of Education and Human Services, and UNF’s College of Arts and Sciences have been awarded an over $7 Million partnership grant to address the critical teacher shortage and create equitable teaching outcomes for every student.

According to a UNF news release, the university said Project PREP, which stands for Partnering to Renew the Educator Pipeline, spans five years, with first-year funding at $1,012,347.

“This school-university-district partnership grant is a systemic approach to building an educator pathway to enhance the recruitment, preparation, induction, and retention of teachers and teacher leaders across the teacher pipeline in a high-need school district,” UNF said.

Clay Schools Superintendent David Broskie said teachers and students would benefit from his organization participating in the Teacher Quality Partnership.

“No doubt we have all seen that there is a national teacher shortage and a need for strong teacher preparation programs for recruitment and retention of educators,” he said. “We know that the greatest influence on a student’s academic achievement is a strong, well-trained teacher. This partnership will allow us to invest in the next generation of teachers and leaders who will help our students achieve their dreams.”

The project comprises five components to help develop and diversify the educator workforce. These components include high school dual enrollment, undergraduate teacher preparation and certification, new teacher induction, teacher leadership graduate certificates and advanced credentials stackable towards a Master’s in Education at UNF, and school principal learning through professional learning Communities, an M.Ed., and an educational doctorate in educational leadership offered through UNF. Each component will be aligned with the infusion of 10 PREP research-based strands for equity and inclusion.

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