Investing in Educators:

A Promising Strategy to Address Teacher Staffing Challenges

Across the country, policymakers are confronting a growing teacher-workforce crisis: persistent shortages in high-need fields, declining enrollment, and tightening budgets that threaten student outcomes.

Our new analysis with the National Parents Union (NPU) shows that strategic approaches to pay and staffing, like those used successfully in nursing, can help attract and retain talented educators where they’re needed most.

Unequal pay structures deepen inequities in who teaches whom.

Across the country, the most experienced teachers tend to cluster in schools serving more advantaged students. Step-and-lane pay scales and transfer rights reward seniority, not need—so district funding and teaching talent often flow toward low-poverty schools.

Differentiated pay helps rebalance that equation by offering incentives for educators to work in the hardest-to-staff schools and subjects, ensuring that the students who need the most support get access to the most experienced teachers.

  • Equalizing access to high-quality teachers
  • Promoting fiscal equity
  • Alleviating domain-specific shortages
  • Reducing churn and instability
Most large school districts offer no extra pay for hard-to-staff roles.

Analysis of teacher contracts in the 100 largest school districts shows that fewer than half include differentiated pay for special education, English Learners, or STEM—and only about 15 percent offer incentives for high-poverty schools.

Even when policies exist, bonuses are often temporary, buried behind approval requirements, or too small to influence where teachers work. NCTQ research suggests that differentials must reach roughly 7.5 percent of base salary to affect staffing decisions—well above what most districts currently offer.

In nursing, extra pay for harder shifts is standard practice.

Nurses and teachers share many workforce similarities—education levels, gender representation, and union affiliation—but their pay systems diverge sharply. Contracts for nurses represented by the same national union (AFT) routinely include 10–20 percent premiums for overnight, weekend, or other hard-to-staff shifts. Teacher contracts in the same cities often provide little or no comparable compensation.

This comparison shows the issue isn’t unionization or membership priorities—it’s outdated pay structures in education that fail to recognize differentiated roles.

Evidence-based strategies show differentiated pay can work.

Districts and states that have adopted meaningful, sustained incentives have seen measurable improvements in recruitment, retention, and student outcomes:

  • Transfer Incentive Program (TTI): 93 % of participating teachers stayed through the first year, improving achievement in high-need schools.
  • Hawai‘i: $10 k + $8 k stackable bonuses cut unfilled positions by one-third.
  • Dallas ACE: Teacher stipends and strategic staffing boosted reading scores.

It’s time to invest in educators where they’re needed most.

Teacher shortages aren’t new, but they’re solvable. Differentiated pay gives states and districts a practical, evidence-based way to staff every classroom with skilled, supported educators.

Let’s make equity real by aligning how we pay teachers with what students need most.