Students across Minnesota are back in classrooms this year, but school districts are scrambling to make sure there is someone to instruct them, especially when their regular teacher needs a day off.
A shortage of substitute teachers is forcing schools to try new strategies to staff schools each day, including raising pay and pleas to parents who might be interested in getting licensed to fill in. The state's teacher licensing board even suggested that schools preemptively license every staff member with a bachelor's degree, including janitors and nurses, to increase the pool of possible substitutes.
"It continues to be a significant challenge is what I'm hearing from our school superintendents," said Scott Croonquist, executive director of the Association of Metropolitan School Districts. "On any given day, they can be dozens short."
The teacher shortage predates the COVID-19 pandemic, but many school leaders say it has worsened because the retired teachers who often worked as substitutes have been leery of returning to the classroom. At the same time, the pandemic means teachers may be absent more often if they need to quarantine or care for family members.
When there's no substitute, districts sometimes combine classrooms or look to administrators and other staff to plug holes, Croonquist said: "It's just kind of an all-hands-on-deck approach they have to take."
There's no statewide data on how dire the problem has become because no agency tracks teacher absences or unfilled requests for short-term substitutes, said Alex Liuzzi, executive director of the Professional Educator Licensing and Standards Board.
But at Teachers On Call, a Bloomington company that contracts with 103 Minnesota districts to provide substitutes, Al Sowers said demand has increased by 40% since 2019-20, the last "normal" school year.
Sowers, Teachers On Call's vice president and practice leader, said his company can fill just over 70% of the vacancies compared with 90 to 93% before the pandemic. He gets about 1,000 requests for subs daily with students learning in person again this year.