Genesis Lara Some math lessons in Tucson Unified School District could be streamed onto classroom screens by teachers from a Chicago-based company because the district is struggling to find enough teachers here.
The contract, potentially for $780,000, would cost significantly less than the approximate $1.77 million it would cost the district to fill all 24 vacancies. Board members have not yet taken action on the matter, as the district is still focusing on recruiting additional teachers. But Huitt said it was important to discuss in case the district needs to contract with Elevate K-12 in time for the first day of school on Aug. 4.
“It created a lot of burnout, a lot of employee anxiety and frustration as they were taken away from their primary duties and moved into, essentially, substitute roles, so we want to make sure we don’t replicate that mistake again,” Trujillo told the Arizona Daily Star. Lenhart said Elevate's curriculums align with Common Core and state-specific standards. In addition, she said, the company would work with the district to ensure the lessons also align with TUSD's math curriculum guidelines.
Huitt said Elevate offers the district the opportunity to both relieve teachers of the heavy workload to prevent burnout, and ensures that students always have a certified teacher to present the material. Reactions to more virtual learning Christina Berry, mother of an incoming sophomore student at Pueblo High School, one of the schools on the list of vacancies, said she understands why the district had to turn to this potential solution.
"If it's math only and it's that one period and they're going to be in a classroom supervised while a teacher is teaching them online, I think that's OK," Berry said. Teacher costs are the sameThe cost of an Elevate teacher wouldn’t be much different than the cost of an average salary for a TUSD teacher, she said.
She added that Elevate would also be responsible for replacing any of its absent teachers, rather than the schools and TUSD teachers scrambling to find a last-minute replacement. Trujillo said TUSD had already advertised vacancies for teacher assistant positions that were budgeted in the original fiscal year 2023 budget proposal, prior to considering the Elevate K-12 partnership.
Why does AZ have continuing teacher loss? Among lowest teacher pay in US. AZ at bottom of states funding for education. MAGA mask mania proved AZ's disrespect for teachers. AZ legislature & MAGA parents force teaching their uneducated MAGA world view in schools.
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