Teacher supply and demand issues are of critical importance as our
society enters the 21st century. Over the next decade, about two million
new teachers will be needed largely because of a dramatic increase in
enrollments and high attrition rates as an aging teacher workforce
becomes eligible for retirement. It is important to understand where
these teachers will come from and where they will teach. This is
especially important for high-poverty districts that tend to have large
numbers of students at risk of educational failure. These districts,
which also tend to be disproportionately minority, are already facing
difficulty recruiting and retaining qualified teachers. Given this, it
is important to ask whether we will be able to staff high-risk and
high-minority districts. National data show that these districts are
staffed predominantly by minority teachers. Thus, the answer to the
question of who will staff these districts revolves around whether we
will have enough minority teachers. This report aims to fill part of
this information gap by examining demand and supply of minority teachers
in Texas.