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For-Profit Teacher Training

Jeffrey Miron

Many public schools face persistent teacher vacancies. Lacking fully certified candidates, they often hire uncertified teachers instead.

Evidence from Texas shows that expanding certification to for-profit teacher training programs

reduced schools’ reliance on uncertified teachers. … [T]he lower-cost training routes [also] brought new types of certified teachers into the profession.

Teachers from for-profit programs

were of lower quality than standard-trained teachers as measured by turnover rates and … the average increase in their students’ standardized test scores … [But] they were significantly better on both metrics than uncertified teachers.

Also,

the main effect of the policy for teachers was to reduce the time and cost of training[,] … [suggesting] that the reduction in teacher training requirements was a net positive for public education in Texas.

Yet again, fewer government rules lead to more efficient outcomes. 

Cross-posted from Substack.