Prepared for Day One | Page 10

service teachers completed preparation programs in Tennessee. Seventy-seven percent of these completers were women. An overwhelming majority of completers (85 percent) in the 2013-14 cohort identified themselves as white. African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians made up just 11 percent of completers. By comparison, these three racial and ethnic groups make up 24 percent of the Tennessee population.13 Figure 1 provides a breakdown of racial and ethnic demographics of teacher candidates as well as students in 2013-14. Several EPPs in Tennessee are developing strategies to recruit a more racially and ethnically diverse group of candidates. Lipscomb University, for example, in 2015 created the Pionero Scholarship Program, which attempts to bridge the gap between the number of immigrant and refugee students and teachers in Metro Nashville Public Schools (MNPS). This year, Lipscomb offered its first six academic scholarships to local, first-generation and minority, academically talented high school seniors who planned to enter the teaching field. These MNPS graduates represent a range of racial and ethnic backgrounds, including Hispanic, Bosnian, and Filipino. The program includes an intensive mentoring component, with mentors who are teachers of color from four local high schools. After obtaining their degrees and licensure recommendations through Lipscomb, Pionero scholars will be encouraged to teach in an MNPS school. However, there is no requirement for teaching in an MNPS school for a certain number of years. The University of Tennessee-Martin also recently approved funding to launch the Call Me MiSTER program, an initiative to recruit teachers from more diverse backgrounds that will launch in fall 2017. Each year’s cohort is restricted to five students. The cohort sizes are intentionally small because participation in the program involves an intensive commitment from 11 Largest EPPs in Tennessee In 2013-14, the latest year for which data are available, TICUA, TBR, and the University of Tennessee system represented 90 percent of EPP com pleters. Middle Tennessee State University produced the largest number of completers in the state (404), followed by Tennessee Technological University (386), and the University of Memphis (278). Lipscomb University in Nashville graduated the largest number of new teachers among private institutions, with 239 program completers. Figure 1: Racial and Ethnic Diversity of Teacher Candidates, 2013-14 8% 2% 1% 85% White African American Hispanic Asian Racial and Ethnic Diversity of Students, 2013-14 8% 2% 24% 66% White African American Hispanic Asian