U.S. Departments of Education and Labor Continue Biden-Harris Administration’s Push for Better Pay and High-Quality Pathways into Education Professions

The U.S. Department of Education (ED), in coordination with the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), announced new efforts today to expand high-quality and affordable pathways into teaching, as well as to increase pay and strengthen working conditions across the early childhood, K-12, and higher education workforce.

Today, ED joined the Biden-Harris Administration’s Good Jobs Initiative, a call to action across the federal government to help shore up access to and retention of good jobs as the foundation of a thriving economy that lifts all people in our nation. As part of this initiative, ED is issuing a set of Good Jobs Principles for Education describing high-quality working conditions that comprise a good job and will help attract and retain a high-quality education workforce in all roles and at all levels, from early childhood through higher education. Additionally, since President Biden took office, the number of states with teacher registered apprenticeship programs has grown from zero to 34 states and Puerto Rico. Building on this progress, today ED and DOL are announcing availability of new funding and resources to support the expansion of high-quality and affordable pathways into careers in education, addressing a key factor driving educator shortages.

These announcements will be made as part of a joint trip between U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona and Acting U.S. Secretary of Labor Julie Su in Reno and Las Vegas, Nevada this week.

“Recruiting and retaining high-quality educators and education staff to provide and support core instruction from pre-K through college is central to student success—and to creating strong pathways to good, family-sustaining jobs,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona. “The new funding the Department is releasing, alongside the Education Good Jobs Principles published today, recognize that when workers have access to competitive wages, benefits, working conditions, and growth opportunities, their voices are respected, their communities thrive, and they can develop the next generation of skilled workers, leaders, and citizens.”

“We depend on educators to open doors for their students. It is equally important that we ensure our nation’s educators enjoy the benefits and security of having a good job,” said Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su. “Through these Principles and in partnership with the Department of Education, we seek to open doors for a new generation of educators, including expanding access to Registered Apprenticeships and readiness programs, especially for workers in historically underserved communities. While careers in education are often referred to as a calling, we must ensure that those educating our young people are in good, family-sustaining jobs by building clear pathways to higher wages, increased benefits, and better working conditions.”;

Today’s announcements include:

Good Jobs Principles

A strong educator workforce is vital to preparing students for college and career pathways and workplaces offering good jobs. The Biden-Harris Administration’s Good Jobs Initiative, led by DOL, promotes economic mobility by helping embed good jobs across our communities. The north star for this effort is the Good Jobs Principles, a shared federal vision of job quality—published by DOL and the U.S. Department of Commerce in 2022—that has impacted nearly $240 billion in federal investments through Investing in America (IIA) awards toward infrastructure and technology. These Principles describe how workers can be provided with stable, quality jobs that provide equitable treatment to all applicants and employees.

Building on this work, ED is publishing the Good Jobs Principles for Education, developed in coordination with DOL, to align educators’ working conditions with a federal framework that can help guide how jobs in the education field are treated nationwide. Good Jobs Principles have helped shape high labor standards in other areas of Administration policy, including through requiring, prioritizing, or encouraging high labor standards in grant-making, procurement and other investments. The Good Jobs Principles for Education encourage all education institutions, systems, and organizations to provide quality jobs that provide a competitive wage, family-sustaining benefits, job security, safe working conditions, and access to career advancement opportunities as the foundation for good quality jobs. ED will seek out best practices from labor management collaboration to innovative collective bargaining agreements to uplift models in education for workforce resiliency. ED will promote the Principles and encourage their adoption across educational settings and, where possible, in Department practice.

ED is the seventh agency to announce its partnership with the Good Jobs Initiative, joining the U.S. Departments of Interior, Commerce, Transportation, and Energy, as well as the Environmental Protection Agency and the General Services Administration.

While in Reno, Secretary Cardona and Acting Secretary Su will speak to educators at Washoe County School District where, as a result of the most recent contract negotiated by the Washoe County School Board with the district’s unions, and additional matching funds provided by the state, teachers will get a 20 percent pay raise over two years, and education support professionals will receive a 20 percent pay raise as well. Retention bonuses will be given to special education teachers and in-demand job categories like bus drivers, custodians, and food service workers for an additional year.

High-Quality and Affordable Pathways into Education

ED and DOL are additionally taking actions today to further expand access to high-quality and affordable pathways into education professions, including residency, grow your own, and Registered Apprenticeship programs. Too many young people, paraprofessionals, and potential career changers dream of becoming a teacher but cannot afford to pursue high-quality pathways into the profession due to financial barriers. Yet teachers who go through comprehensive, evidence-based pathways are two to three times more likely to remain in the profession compared to their peers who go through low-quality pathways. Investments to help grow high-quality and evidence-based pathways, and provide future teachers with robust clinical experience and financial support, can help to make sure they enter the classroom better prepared to teach on day one.;

While is Las Vegas, Nevada, Secretary Cardona and Acting Secretary Su will visit Laura Dearing Elementary School to highlight paraprofessionals apprentices working towards their teaching certification as part of the University of Las Vegas Paraprofessional Pathways Project, in partnership with Clark County School District.;

The Departments’ funding opportunities include: