@EdWorkingPaper{ai22-684, title = "Teacher Shortages: A Unifying Framework for Understanding and Predicting Vacancies", author = "Danielle Sanderson Edwards, Matthew A. Kraft, Alvin Christian, Christopher A. Candelaria", institution = "Annenberg Institute at Brown University", number = "684", year = "2022", month = "December", URL = "http://www.edworkingpapers.com/ai22-684", abstract = {We develop a unifying conceptual framework for understanding and predicting teacher shortages at the state, region, district, and school levels. We then generate and test hypotheses about geographic, grade level, and subject variation in teacher shortages using data on teaching vacancies in Tennessee during the fall of 2019. We find that teacher staffing challenges are highly localized, causing shortages and surpluses to coexist. Aggregate descriptions of staffing challenges mask considerable variation between schools and subjects within districts. Schools with fewer local early-career teachers, smaller district salary increases, worse working conditions, and higher historical attrition rates have higher vacancy rates. Our findings illustrate why viewpoints about, and solutions to, shortages depend critically on whether one takes an aggregate or local perspective.}, }