The Scramble To Recruit New Teachers And Keep Them In Hawaii
Kaitlyn Cleveland was halfway through her first year teaching fourth grade at Solomon Elementary School in Wahiawa earlier this year when she entertained the idea of leaving Hawaii to go back to the mainland once the school year ended.
For the Washington state native, living in the countrys most expensive state on a teachers salary isnt easy: rent is more than half of her monthly take-home pay, fresh produce is no longer on her grocery budget and trips back home are too costly.
It is a challenge, theres no way around that, said Cleveland, 27.
Cleveland, who has a masters in education from the University of Hawaii Manoa, nearly became part of an all-too familiar group here: the hundreds of non-local teachers who leave after a year or two due to the high cost of living and the vast distance from family and other support networks back on the mainland.
Read more: www.civilbeat.org/2017/07/the-scramble-to-recruit-new-teachers-and-keep-them-in-hawaii/