Veterans and educators alike have voiced concerns about a new Ohio bill that aims to address the teacher shortage by letting veterans teach without backgrounds in education, News 5 reported.Sen. Jerry C. Cirino
Senate Bill 361 – in the Ohio Senate – would allow school districts to reduce teacher requirements for veterans.
Veterans will be eligible if they have 48 months of active-duty military service; an honorable discharge or medical separation from the armed forces; and one of the following: a letter from a former commanding officer that states that the individual is qualified to teach; a master training specialist certification from the U.S. Navy; time serving as a training officer or a lead instructor in the armed forces; time serving as a noncommissioned officer, a warrant officer, or a senior enlisted person.
"This is great news for our veterans, it's great news for our school systems that are working hard to try to find teachers,” said state Sen. Jerry Cirino (R-District, the bill’s cosponsor. “And we got all this pent-up experience in training out there in our vets. Let's tap into what and that's what this bill will allow school systems to do."
To note, school districts would get a choice on whether to implement this policy.
"Obviously, we have a great deal of respect for our veterans and the work that they've done for our country and their level of expertise," Ohio Federation of Teachers President Melissa Cropper said. "But that level of expertise doesn't necessarily transfer over into a classroom."
Cropper criticized how lawmakers did not look to address issues that teachers have cited as reasons for leaving the profession, such as burn out due to feeling a lack of autonomy in the classroom, the pandemic, teacher shortages, and lack of fair wages.