From EdNC, by Matthew Springer, July 17, 2024
The post-pandemic education landscape is in a state of flux, demanding that North Carolina’s school systems break free from the status quo. With the $3.6 billion in federal ESSER III funding set to expire this fall, the need for lasting, structural changes is pressing.
In this critical moment, strategic staffing emerges as a beacon of opportunity for school leaders to optimize human capital, enhancing both organizational efficiency and efficacy. …
Strategic staffing practices have served as a catalyst for targeted interventions within K-12 education, from addressing the inequitable distribution and access to high-performing teachers to reconsidering conventional teaching paradigms.3 Promising approaches, such as North Carolina’s Advanced Teaching Roles Program, Public Impact’s Opportunity Culture, and innovative models led by the National Institute for Excellence in Teaching, integrate and take advantage of strategic staffing practices by expanding teacher leadership, refining resource allocation, and enriching student learning opportunities. These and similar programs across the country, such as efforts to rethink professional educator preparation pathways and standards, show that this multiplicity of strategic staffing approaches will help advance the educational landscape, make education a more fulfilling and sustainable profession,4 and ensure all students receive a sound, high-quality education. …