Pennsylvania is Getting Stuff Done and Getting More Teachers into the Classroom

New report shows increase in newly certified teachers as Shapiro Administration cuts processing times for teacher certifications and makes historic investments in teacher workforce and public education.

Harrisburg, PA – The Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) today reported that the educator workforce shortage is trending in the right direction, with 97 more Instructional I certificates issued in the 2023-24 school year than the previous year. Since the 2021-22 school year, the department has seen a steady increase in the number of Instructional I certificates issued every year. Overall, the department issued a total of 6,612 in-state and out-of-state Instructional 1 certificates in 2023-24.

“Throughout the past several years, PDE has made it a priority to bolster our educator workforce and encourage students to join the teaching profession, so learners across the Commonwealth have access to a high-quality education, with highly qualified educators in the front of their classrooms,” said Acting Secretary of Education Dr. Carrie Rowe. “Our dedication toward these efforts is paying off, and we’re excited to continue supporting and lifting up our current educators, while encouraging others to join the profession, get certified, or continue on the path to becoming a Pennsylvania educator.”  

The Act 82 Report compiled and published each year by PDE also showed an increase of 793 newly certified PK-4 educators, 85 more health and physical PK-12 educators, and 762 PK-12 special educators over the past two years.

These improvements are the result of the Shapiro Administration’s efforts to recruit and retain teachers by working collaboratively with leaders in the education field to ensure there is a robust pipeline of educators in place to provide a high-quality education to learners of all ages across the Commonwealth. Some of those efforts include reducing teacher certification processing times by more than 10 weeks, making intern certificates free to aspiring educators, creating a new Career and Technical Education (CTE) program in Education for high school students, developing accelerated certification programming to prospective special educators, and creating and expanding the Student Teacher Support Grant Program to provide a stipend to student teachers.

Earlier this year, the Accelerated Special Education Teacher Certification Program recently produced the first cohort of 142 students completing the program, and announced that the second round of awards for the Accelerated Special Education Teacher Certification Program will provide more than $1 million in funding to 14 postsecondary institutions throughout the Commonwealth.

Additionally, the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) opened the second round of applications for the Student Teacher Support Grant Program last week, and more than 3,000 would-be teachers applied in the first 24 hours for stipends to assist with completion of their student teaching placements in the 2025-26 school year.

As of the 2023-2024 school year, Pennsylvania’s teacher workforce stands at 123,190, with the largest shortages in Grades 4-8, Special Education PK-12, Mathematics 7-12, Life & Physical Sciences 7-12, and Career and Technical Education 7-12. The United States Department of Education has designated these areas as critical shortages.

Media Contacts

PDE Press Office

717-783-6788
Department of Education Media

Erin James

Press Secretary 717-783-6788
Department of Education Media