Alternative pathways into teaching: Broadening access and expanding diversity
Christina Schweickert and
José Manuel Torres
No 342, OECD Education Working Papers from OECD Publishing
Abstract:
Teacher shortages, changing labour markets and growing expectations for workforce diversity have led many education systems to expand alternative pathways into the teaching profession. While these pathways are increasingly prominent, they remain highly heterogeneous and difficult to compare across contexts. This working paper provides an international perspective on alternative pathways into teaching, examining their drivers, potential benefits and key challenges. The paper introduces a structured analytical framework that classifies alternative pathways using four criteria: pathway modality, programme oversight, entry requirements and licensure outcomes. This framework enables the systematic mapping and comparison of programmes across systems, clarifying how alternative routes complement traditional initial teacher education. Drawing on comparative evidence, recent TALIS data and case studies from OECD countries, the paper highlights both opportunities – such as expanding teacher supply and recognising prior experience—and challenges related to preparation, quality assurance, equity and sustainability. It concludes by identifying enabling system conditions needed to integrate alternative pathways into coherent, high-quality teacher preparation systems.
Keywords: alternative pathways; education; education research; higher education; TALIS; teacher; teacher education; teacher pathways; teacher programmes; teacher training (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-03-03
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:oec:eduaab:342-en
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