Excited to be at my first @aeraedresearch.bsky.social this week in sunny LA #AERA2026
I'll be sharing my postdoc research from Canada, and looking forward to connecting with colleagues from the US and UK (and elsewhere!) again ☀️
Posts by Emily MacLeod PhD
Gordon Flett presenting his keynote on mattering
Truth and reconciliation slide opener from Learn Quebec
It was great to attend the Leadership Committee for English Education in Québec (LCEEQ) conference this week #LCEEQ
Highlights were Gordon Flett's keynote on 'mattering' and reflecting upon indigenous experiences in education today through @learnped.bsky.social's Truth and Reconciliation session 🌳
What are science identities, and why are they important?
Here's my recent piece for Let's Talk Science, a charity who has been playing a role in young people's science identity across Canada for over 30 years letstalkscience.ca/news-media/d...
Front page of report
Screengrab of: Recommendation 2. As part of its Strategic Education Workforce Plan, the Welsh Government either undertake or commission work looking at whether the costs to a student of ITE acts as a barrier to entry and successful completion; whether these barriers are higher for particular groups of potential students; and what options there may be to remove these financial barriers. This work should be done within the context of the current financial climate to ensure any recommendations for change are feasible and affordable and will improve recruitment and retention
Pleased to see the Welsh Parliament's report on Teacher recruitment & retention
Having researched *potential* teachers I especially support the recommendation to look at whether the costs of Initial Teacher Education bar entry into the profession for some laiddocuments.senedd.wales/cr-ld17778-e...
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Oh no, I hope Anna calms down 😆 so that you can get home OK
A snowy trail surrounded by trees covered in snow
Wishing a happy new year to all from a beautiful and very snowy Québec ❄️
Interesting stat from today's release: more than half of physics trainees are now non-UK and non-EEA nationals. A remarkable shift from 6% of trainees in 2021 to 59% in 2025. Encouraged by the bursary eligibility change in 2022/23, but how many have gone on to state-sector employment?
... if you want to read more about my research in this area here's my open access paper in @berj-2025.bsky.social sky.social 🔍 bera-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
In other words, the issues of teacher recruitment and teacher retention require different approaches to counter them. It makes sense, then, that these issues should not be constantly bundled together but should be considered and tackled separately (5/5)
These would-be teachers didn’t mention the things that current and former teachers have said push them out of teaching: the profession’s high workload, stress and poor wellbeing (4/5)
My research shows that young people who previously aspired to teach did not pursue teaching because the profession no longer held 'status' or 'safety' (3/5)
In this piece I share how my research with aspirant teachers indicates that the reasons teachers leave teaching are not the same as the reasons people choose not to become teachers (2/5)
'Teacher recruitment and retention are separate issues – they need tackling in different ways'
My new article in @uk.theconversation.com is now out (1/5 🧵)
theconversation.com/teacher-recr...
Great to see this new report from @theeef.bsky.social & @teachertapp.bsky.social adding to the evidence on teacher retention
Teachers looking at adverts for new jobs valued the promise of more PPA time, smaller class sizes and healthcare offers
educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/projects-and...
Good to see this analysis by Natasha Plaister @fftedudatalab.bsky.social showing consistent increases in the proportion of female students taking A-Level physics in the UK ffteducationdatalab.org.uk/2025/10/has-...
Why do people enter and exit teaching? New analyses from @ambitioninstitute.bsky.social with @drsamsims.bsky.social report that professional development, flexible working and additional paid leave could be as valuable as pay rises for reducing teacher shortages www.ambition.org.uk/why-people-e...
You can read the full open-access paper here: bera-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/... (11/11)
Importantly, this paper demonstrates that the reasons why young people do not pursue teaching are not the same reasons why people leave the profession
🚫 i.e., we should not always group teacher recruitment and retention together, they are not caused by the same issues (10/11)
This raises questions about how we can raise the status and safety of teaching for all... (9/11)
The framework shows that the reasons why people want to become teachers go beyond their individual desires (e.g., wanting to work with children), and include how potential teachers see themselves, and are seen by others, in relation to teaching (8/11)
In this framework I propose that status and safety are relative to a person's background and/or the social and cultural inequities that they experience.
e.g. teaching is not 'low in status' for everyone, at all times ‼️(7/11)
Using these analyses I propose a new framework of status and safety with which to examine why some people become teachers, whilst others do not:
*teacher-makers and teacher-breakers* (6/11)
Those who chose to pursue teaching by age 22 maintained or returned to teaching as both high in status and safety
Those who dropped their teaching aspirations lost the relative status and/or safety of teaching (5/11)
I found that teaching was seen as a profession which afforded both respect (status) and minimal risk (safety) by all aspirant teachers in this study
But that these perceptions shifted over time - status and status can be lost and gained (4/11)
In the paper I present analyses of qualitative data from interviews tracking aspirant teachers in England over 11 years 👶➡️🧑 (3/11)
This paper is part of a special issue focusing on teacher shortages and ways forward for policy, research and practice in teacher supply
Thanks to Beng Huat See, Gemma Moss, Robert Klassen, Mark Ledger, Sophie Thompson-Lee & Rebecca Snell for the opportunity (2/11)
*What makes or breaks teaching for young people?*
I have a new open-access paper out in @berj-2025.bsky.social bera-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Teacher-makers and teacher-breakers: (Re)defining how status and safety influence trajectories into and away from teaching
🧵(1/11)
A great new paper out from Sophie Thompson-Lee & colleagues evidencing that financial incentives are not effective in recruiting more STEM teachers
Teacher recruitment efforts need to focus on more than just 💰
stemeducationjournal.springeropen.com/articles/10....
McGill University in the sunshine
Today marks my one year anniversary at @mcgill.ca ☀️