Ohio’s Performance
Ungraded
Explore the key policy levers below to learn more about how Ohio is implementing policies to diversify its workforce. (NCTQ does not assign rankings to states for this policy area.)
See how Ohio performs across policy levers to improve Teacher Diversity.
Strong
Moderate
Weak
Unacceptable
Ungraded
Why focus on Teacher Diversity?
Teachers of color positively impact all students, especially those of color. For students of color, having a teacher of color can increase academic achievement, reduce discipline incidents, increase high school graduation and college attendance, as well as increase social-emotional outcomes like grit and sense of self-efficacy.1 Research also finds that teachers of color produce additional positive academic and behavioral outcomes for all students, regardless of race, compared to white teachers.2
Recommendations for Ohio for Teacher Diversity
Data Systems
- Publish explicit goals for increasing the racial/ethnic diversity of the teacher workforce
- Publish enrollment and completion data of teacher candidates disaggregated by race/ethnicity on the state website
- Publish pass rate data disaggregated by race/ethnicity on the state website
Financial Incentives
- Include targeted scholarships in the state's strategy to increase the racial/ethnic diversity of the teacher workforce
- Include loan forgiveness in the state's strategy to increase the racial/ethnic diversity of the teacher workforce
Supports for Teachers of Color
- Include retention initiatives, mentorship, and/or affinity spaces in the state strategy to increase racial, ethnic, and linguistic diversity in the teacher workforce
Teacher Pipeline Programs
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Support Grow Your Own programs
State does provide guidance to districts wanting to develop their own GYO programs through the state's Human Capital Resource Center. - Fund teacher prep programs within minority-serving institutions
References
- Egalite, A., Kisida, B., & Winters, M. (2015). Representation in the classroom: The effect of own-race teachers on student achievement. Economics on Education Review, 45, 44-52; Goldhaber, D., & Hansen, M. (2010). Race, gender and teacher testing: How informative a tool is teacher licensure testing and how does it impact student achievement? American Educational Research Journal, 47(1), 218-51; and Dee, T.S. (2004). Teachers, race, and student achievement in a randomized experiment. The Review of Economics and Statistics, 86(1), 195-210. Lindsay, C., Monarrez, T., & Luetmer, G. (2021). The effects of teacher diversity on Hispanic student achievement in Texas. Policy brief. Texas Education Research Center. Gottfried, M., Kirksey, J. J., & Fletcher, T. L. (2022). Do high school students with a same-race teacher attend class more often? Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 44(1), 149-169. Gershenson, S., Hart, C. M., Hyman, J., Lindsay, C., & Papageorge, N. W. (2018). The long-run impacts of same-race teachers (No. w25254). National Bureau of Economic Research. Grissom, J. A., Kabourek, S. E., & Kramer, J. W. (2020). Exposure to same-race or same-ethnicity teachers and advanced math course-taking in high school: Evidence from a diverse urban district. Teachers College Record, 122(7), 1-42.; Lindsay, C. A., & Cassandra M. D. Hart. (2018). Exposure to same-race teachers and student disciplinary outcomes for Black students in North Carolina. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 39(3), 485-510. Scherer, E., & Cleveland, C. (2022). The effects of teacher-student demographic matching on social-emotional learning. Annenberg Institute at Brown University.
- Blazar, D. (2021). Teachers of color, culturally responsive teaching, and student outcomes: Experimental evidence from the random assignment of teachers to classes. EdWorkingPaper No. 21-501. Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University; Cherng, H. Y. S., & Halpin, P. F. (2016). The importance of minority teachers: Student perceptions of minority versus white teachers. Educational Researcher, 45(7), 407-420.