ETSU receives over $215,000 for overseas teacher retention project
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (Dec. 9, 2021) – East Tennessee State University has received over $215,000 in grant funding from the U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Education & Rehabilitative Services for an initiative known as “the Republic of the Marshall Islands Teacher Retention Project.” The grant proposal, written in part by Dr. Dawn A. Rowe, associate professor and interim chair to ETSU’s Educational Foundations and Special Education program, received nearly $1.25 million total in funding.
According to the Republic of the Marshall Islands Public School System (PSS), teachers
with temporary and provisional licenses are leaving the profession at much higher
rates compared to those with professional licenses. Many of the teachers who work
in special education are amongst those with temporary or provisional licenses.
“In the Republic of the Marshall Islands (MH), their licensure process is a bit different
from ours,” said Rowe. “When someone in the MH gets a degree in education, they tend
to leave special education for general education or some other administrative position.
Many educators do not currently have the capacity to teach special education, and
this grant aims to change that.”
The main goal of the grant includes facilitating an improved teacher workforce by
creating a comprehensive retention plan for those seeking a career path in special
education. The first year of the grant is allocated to development, and partners with
the grant are currently collaborating with one another to conduct needs assessments.
“We have to be creative with how we collect data due to internet availability in the
MH, and be mindful of some of the different challenges we need to work around,” said
Rowe. “There are five islands, and twenty-nine atolls. Some of the outer communities
rely on radio to report school attendance. Some school facilities don’t have bathrooms.
While infrastructure is not something we can control, it’s one of many different things
we need to take into consideration when determining how we can best support our teachers.”
Rowe’s responsibilities as a stakeholder with The Republic of the Marshall Islands
Teacher Retention Project include the conceptual, administrative and fiscal leadership
roles. Working in collaboration with the College of the Marshall Islands and the PSS,
she will lay the foundation of professional development and assist in the overall
design of not only the program, but the teacher coaching systems that emerge from
it.
“My partners at the MH are some of the most incredible people I have ever worked with,”
said Rowe. “They are also phenomenal at developing a plan and following through with
the intended actions. This is crucial to realizing the full potential of this grant
project. Regarding special education students, in their current work related to the
State Systemic Improvement Plan, the MH PSS has improved the graduation rates from
20% to 92%, and those students are going out into competitive employment and postsecondary
education. I can’t praise them enough.”
To learn more about The Republic of the Marshall Islands Teacher Retention Project
and how ETSU is working to bring teacher education to the Marshall Islands, contact
Rowe at roweda@etsu.edu or 423-439-7171.