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May 12, 2009

For Many Teachers, a Famously Fertile Market Dries Up Overnight

Javier Hernandez:

Larissa Patel dreamed of teaching English at a Brooklyn public school this fall, motivated by a desire to help low-income children. But instead, on Friday, Ms. Patel spent the day filling out applications for 30 jobs at private schools.

Ms. Patel's abrupt change in plans was precipitated by a new citywide ban on hiring teachers from outside the school system.

"Suddenly, overnight, I am rethinking my entire career," said Ms. Patel, 30, a student at St. John's University who left a job in the digital imaging industry to work as a substitute teacher and pursue an education degree. "It's a very bleak point in time. It's forced me to sort of look in a new direction."

In an effort to cut costs and avoid teacher layoffs, the Department of Education on Wednesday ordered principals to fill vacancies with internal candidates only. As a result, aspiring teachers at education schools and members of programs like Teach for America -- a corps of recent college graduates -- and the city's Teaching Fellows -- which trains career professionals to become teachers -- are scrambling for jobs.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at May 12, 2009 1:00 AM
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