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Wisconsin Educator Retention Crisis: Only 52.6% Remain by Year 8

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Summary

The Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction released its Educator Preparation Program and Workforce Analysis Report using 2023-24 data, revealing that only 52.6% of new teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms by their eighth year. Of 5,256 individuals completing educator preparation programs, only 3,568 entered Wisconsin schools, representing a 30% loss of potential educators. Special education teacher retention is even lower at 43.2% by year eight.

Published by WI DPI on content.govdelivery.com . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

The Wisconsin DPI released its 2024 Educator Preparation Program and Workforce Analysis Report, presenting retention data for the 2023-24 school year. Key findings include that 1,688 potential educators (roughly 30%) did not enter Wisconsin schools after completing preparation programs, and mid-career teacher compensation is 22% lower in real terms than in 2010.

This data bulletin does not impose compliance obligations but informs policy discussions. Educational institutions and state policymakers may use this report to inform workforce planning and budget decisions regarding teacher recruitment and retention initiatives.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

News: Wisconsin Must Act Urgently To Retain Educators, New Data Warns

Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction sent this bulletin at 04/06/2026 09:31 AM CDT
| View as a webpage  /  Share |

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, April 6, 2026

| # Wisconsin must act urgently to retain educators,
new data warns |

| Just 52.6 percent of new teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms by eighth year

MADISON — Wisconsin's ability to meet the growing demand for high-quality educators depends on retaining more teachers and keeping newly trained graduates in the state, according to new data in a report released today by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

The latest Educator Preparation Program and Workforce Analysis Report highlights both encouraging progress and ongoing challenges, reinforcing the DPI’s focus on educator recruitment and retention as part of its strategic plan.

"The time to act has already passed," State Superintendent Dr. Jill Underly said. "What remains is whether we are willing to meet this moment with the urgency it demands. Strengthening educator recruitment and retention is essential to ensuring every Wisconsin student has access to high-quality educators."

Using 2023-24 data, the report shows that while Wisconsin continues to prepare thousands of new teachers each year, too many are not entering or staying in the state’s classrooms. Of the 5,256 individuals who completed educator preparation programs, just 3,568 entered Wisconsin schools, meaning the state lost 1,688 potential educators – or roughly 30 percent.

The report also points to modest improvements in overall teacher retention, but keeping educators in the profession remains a significant challenge. By their eighth year, just 52.6 percent of teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms. Retention is even lower among special education teachers, with only 43.2 percent remaining by their eighth year.

To address this issue, the DPI launched the Special Educator Induction Program in 2023, which supports first- and second-year special education teachers and aims to improve long-term retention. The program has supported about 750 early-career educators, with 95 percent reporting they are likely to remain in their positions in the field.

"The Special Educator Induction Program is making a meaningful difference in strengthening the special educator workforce," Dr. Underly said. "This kind of support is helping early-career teachers build confidence, form a network of peers, and feel more connected to their schools."

Compensation continues to play a major role in educator retention. After adjusting for inflation, total compensation for mid-career educators (those entering their 15 th year) is 22 percent lower than it was in 2010.

"Districts cannot solve this challenge on their own," Dr. Underly said. "With no new general aid in the most recent state budget and rising costs, schools are being asked to do more with less. Without meaningful, sustainable state investment, districts are forced into an impossible situation, balancing tight budgets while trying to retain the educators students depend on.

"If we’re serious about addressing the teacher shortage, it’s past time we compensate educators similar to their professional counterparts."

For more information and to view the full report, visit the DPI’s website.

###

Contact: Media.Inquiries@dpi.wi.gov | | View as a webpage  /  Share | # Wisconsin must act urgently to retain educators,
new data warns | Just 52.6 percent of new teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms by eighth year

MADISON — Wisconsin's ability to meet the growing demand for high-quality educators depends on retaining more teachers and keeping newly trained graduates in the state, according to new data in a report released today by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

The latest Educator Preparation Program and Workforce Analysis Report highlights both encouraging progress and ongoing challenges, reinforcing the DPI’s focus on educator recruitment and retention as part of its strategic plan.

"The time to act has already passed," State Superintendent Dr. Jill Underly said. "What remains is whether we are willing to meet this moment with the urgency it demands. Strengthening educator recruitment and retention is essential to ensuring every Wisconsin student has access to high-quality educators."

Using 2023-24 data, the report shows that while Wisconsin continues to prepare thousands of new teachers each year, too many are not entering or staying in the state’s classrooms. Of the 5,256 individuals who completed educator preparation programs, just 3,568 entered Wisconsin schools, meaning the state lost 1,688 potential educators – or roughly 30 percent.

The report also points to modest improvements in overall teacher retention, but keeping educators in the profession remains a significant challenge. By their eighth year, just 52.6 percent of teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms. Retention is even lower among special education teachers, with only 43.2 percent remaining by their eighth year.

To address this issue, the DPI launched the Special Educator Induction Program in 2023, which supports first- and second-year special education teachers and aims to improve long-term retention. The program has supported about 750 early-career educators, with 95 percent reporting they are likely to remain in their positions in the field.

"The Special Educator Induction Program is making a meaningful difference in strengthening the special educator workforce," Dr. Underly said. "This kind of support is helping early-career teachers build confidence, form a network of peers, and feel more connected to their schools."

Compensation continues to play a major role in educator retention. After adjusting for inflation, total compensation for mid-career educators (those entering their 15 th year) is 22 percent lower than it was in 2010.

"Districts cannot solve this challenge on their own," Dr. Underly said. "With no new general aid in the most recent state budget and rising costs, schools are being asked to do more with less. Without meaningful, sustainable state investment, districts are forced into an impossible situation, balancing tight budgets while trying to retain the educators students depend on.

"If we’re serious about addressing the teacher shortage, it’s past time we compensate educators similar to their professional counterparts."

For more information and to view the full report, visit the DPI’s website.

###

Contact: Media.Inquiries@dpi.wi.gov | |

new data warns |

MADISON — Wisconsin's ability to meet the growing demand for high-quality educators depends on retaining more teachers and keeping newly trained graduates in the state, according to new data in a report released today by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

The latest Educator Preparation Program and Workforce Analysis Report highlights both encouraging progress and ongoing challenges, reinforcing the DPI’s focus on educator recruitment and retention as part of its strategic plan.

"The time to act has already passed," State Superintendent Dr. Jill Underly said. "What remains is whether we are willing to meet this moment with the urgency it demands. Strengthening educator recruitment and retention is essential to ensuring every Wisconsin student has access to high-quality educators."

Using 2023-24 data, the report shows that while Wisconsin continues to prepare thousands of new teachers each year, too many are not entering or staying in the state’s classrooms. Of the 5,256 individuals who completed educator preparation programs, just 3,568 entered Wisconsin schools, meaning the state lost 1,688 potential educators – or roughly 30 percent.

The report also points to modest improvements in overall teacher retention, but keeping educators in the profession remains a significant challenge. By their eighth year, just 52.6 percent of teachers remain in Wisconsin public school classrooms. Retention is even lower among special education teachers, with only 43.2 percent remaining by their eighth year.

To address this issue, the DPI launched the Special Educator Induction Program in 2023, which supports first- and second-year special education teachers and aims to improve long-term retention. The program has supported about 750 early-career educators, with 95 percent reporting they are likely to remain in their positions in the field.

"The Special Educator Induction Program is making a meaningful difference in strengthening the special educator workforce," Dr. Underly said. "This kind of support is helping early-career teachers build confidence, form a network of peers, and feel more connected to their schools."

Compensation continues to play a major role in educator retention. After adjusting for inflation, total compensation for mid-career educators (those entering their 15 th year) is 22 percent lower than it was in 2010.

"Districts cannot solve this challenge on their own," Dr. Underly said. "With no new general aid in the most recent state budget and rising costs, schools are being asked to do more with less. Without meaningful, sustainable state investment, districts are forced into an impossible situation, balancing tight budgets while trying to retain the educators students depend on.

"If we’re serious about addressing the teacher shortage, it’s past time we compensate educators similar to their professional counterparts."

For more information and to view the full report, visit the DPI’s website.

###

Contact: Media.Inquiries@dpi.wi.gov |

|

Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction • Jill K. Underly, PhD, State Superintendent
201 West Washington Avenue • Madison, WI 53703 • dpi.wi.gov

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Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction • Jill K. Underly, PhD, State Superintendent
201 West Washington Avenue • Madison, WI 53703 • dpi.wi.gov

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|

Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction • Jill K. Underly, PhD, State Superintendent
201 West Washington Avenue • Madison, WI 53703 • dpi.wi.gov

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
WI DPI
Published
April 6th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Educational institutions
Industry sector
6111 Higher Education
Activity scope
Teacher recruitment Educator retention Workforce planning
Geographic scope
US-WI US-WI

Taxonomy

Primary area
Education
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Employment & Labor Public Health

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