Overview
Key Findings
Credentials and Experiences of CS Teachers
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Almost 3/4 of teachers took at least one computing course during their undergraduate education. Nearly 30% of teachers graduated with a Computer and Technical Sciences degree and 6% graduated with a minor in CS.
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95% of teachers held at least one teaching credential. Of those, 46% held a credential in Computer and Technical Sciences, 23% in Career Technical Education, and 1% in another STEM subject.
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Over half of respondents had more than 11 years of classroom experience (53%), but considerably fewer teachers reported 11+ years of experience in CS classrooms (16%).
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Less than 2/3 of teachers (61%) reported participating in a professional learning community and less than 1/3 of teachers (28%) reported participating in ongoing coaching.
Challenges to Equitable CS Classrooms
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When educators were asked if they had the material, supplies, equipment, and space necessary to implement CS teaching, only 65% reported sufficient resources. Teachers serving lower-income, elementary, and more racially-diverse schools were disproportionately affected by resource inaccessibility.
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Over 1/4 of teachers felt limited by their own subject matter expertise, specifically in elementary schools and lower-income schools, and expressed the need for low-cost CS professional development and collaboration opportunities, particularly relating to specific programming languages.
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Inequitable access to early computing exposure coupled with lack of support to pursue computing often restricts and deters students historically excluded from the field, with 24% of teachers reporting concern about students’ lack of CS exposure and 21% of teachers reporting concern about students’ lack of interest in CS. Teachers were more likely to report these concerns at lower-income and more racially-diverse schools.
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Just 61% of teachers saw the importance of covering computing’s role in perpetuating biases related to racism, sexism, and other inequities in the classroom. This was most prevalent among teachers in elementary, higher-income, rural, and less racially-diverse schools.
Current State of Culturally-Relevant Pedagogy in CS Classrooms and Challenges to Implementation
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65% of teachers believed that existing CS curricular resources meets the needs of a diverse student body.
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Only slightly more than half felt that current CS content is culturally relevant and in alignment with student interests, and 55% of teachers found themselves having to revise existing curricula to make it more engaging and relevant.
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While 77% of teachers acknowledged the importance of incorporating diverse cultures and experiences to the success of their students, only 57% felt equipped to utilize culturally-relevant pedagogical practices.
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Despite making up the majority of the CS teacher workforce, only 59% of white teachers (compared to 67% of Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and Pacific Islander teachers) were confident utilizing material highlighting race, ethnicity, and culture.
Recommendations
- Develop incentive structures to recruit, retain, and diversify the pool of CS teachers
- Build comprehensive teacher training, certification, and endorsement programs aligned to an equity-focused computing education framework
- Expand access to ongoing teacher professional development
- Prioritize CS as a core course across the PreK-12 pipeline
- Build a district-wide coalition to champion an equitable CS implementation plan