Arkansas, like many states, has struggled to protect its classrooms from significant shortages of certain educators, in part because of declining completion rates at traditional teachers colleges and the profession’s low pay.

“There are just a lot of questions about … the return on investment of a teaching degree,” said Lizzy Hetherington of the Arkansas Teacher Corps, a three-year alternative certification program that helps educators in the state become licensed to teach while working.

Overworked, underpaid? The toll of burnout is contributing to teacher shortages nationwide

The corps recently shifted from recruiting newer college grads to helping teachers already working but who aren’t licensed. It now offers its intensive training and coaching virtually, too. The result: Fewer corps members are leaving within the first year of the program. 

“It just makes it much more accessible to the demographics of teachers that we’re now working with,” said Hetherington, who oversees teacher development for the corps. About 85% of corps members are people of color, and it largely partners with rural, high-needs schools. “Most of these teachers are established in their communities. They have families. They can’t just go off for seven weeks to live in a dorm and leave their families behind.”

Districts and states across the U.S. are experimenting to address stubborn vacancies, establishing or expanding programs that remove some of the hoops people traditionally have to jump through to become a teacher. Programs in Arkansas and elsewhere are giving college graduates without teaching licenses an accelerated path to certification, allowing them to work and study simultaneously. Policymakers in a dozen or so states, meanwhile, are rolling out apprenticeships and similar models in which people without bachelor’s degrees get paid on-the-job training to become teachers.  

Early evidence suggests these programs, when done right, could be key to filling positions with people who are dedicated to and will stay on the job – and will better reflect the demographics of their students.

But can some of these shortcuts make it almost too easy to become a teacher?

From preschool teachers to professors:A breakdown of teacher salaries.

Teacher shortages a ‘huge equity issue in our schools’

Vacancies are most pronounced in low-income communities and schools serving large percentages of students of color. (Read more about the disparities.)