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This California school district will pay you to become a teacher. Here’s how it works

Teacher’s aide Heidi Ochoa works with preschool students at Natomas Park Elementary School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2016. New state funds allowed Natomas Unified to double the number of half-day preschool classes from four to eight, for a total of 100 new seats, district spokesman Jim Sanders said.
Teacher’s aide Heidi Ochoa works with preschool students at Natomas Park Elementary School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2016. New state funds allowed Natomas Unified to double the number of half-day preschool classes from four to eight, for a total of 100 new seats, district spokesman Jim Sanders said. rbenton@sacbee.com

Natomas Unified School District is offering money to those willing to become teachers through its Diverse Future Teachers program.

Applications for the program opened Jan. 24, and will close next week, Sept. 15. The onus of the program is to recruit former school district students who are pursuing a career in education, using money as an incentive to lure them back to Natomas.

The greater statewide initiative also targets retired educators — to get them back in the classroom — to help California battle its teacher shortage.

“Teacher shortages are a growing national issue exacerbated by COVID-19, and California is no exception,” State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond told the Senate Education Committee earlier this year.

There were more than 10,000 teacher vacancies across California during the 2021–22 school year, according to the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing.

How to apply for the Diverse Future Teachers program

Applicants must agree to a three-year commitment to teach in the NUSD. Applications can be submitted on the districts website.

Below are incentives teachers receive for signing up, according to the NUSD website:

  • NUSD will pay for 80% of the cost in getting a teaching credential
  • A Macbook to use while getting a teaching credential
  • $500 monthly stipend for a year for teachers who live within the NUSD boundaries while attending the credentialing program
  • Successful applicants will receive an additional $5,000 for diversity — for having lived in a ZIP code that matches the school district’s demographics, for being bilingual, demonstrates academic interest in subjects such as gender, race, multicultural studies and support for underserved students. Another $5,000 is available to educators who earn credentials in hard-to-fill subjects such as math, science, special education and world language.

This story was originally published September 7, 2023 at 12:49 PM.

JP
Jacqueline Pinedo
The Sacramento Bee
Jacqueline Pinedo was a reporter on The Sacramento Bee’s service journalism team.
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