
The Harvard EdCast Why Teachers Stay: What Research Reveals About Retention
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Feb 25, 2026 Suzanne Poole Patzelt, assistant professor focused on induction and mentoring, and Doug Larkin, professor researching teacher retention and school ecosystems, discuss what keeps teachers in schools. They highlight how strong colleague relationships, reduced isolation, meaningful induction, and supportive leadership shape retention. They also explore how pay interacts with culture and the idea of teacher embeddedness.
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Relationships Outweigh Pay For Retention
- Supportive collegial relationships are the number one reason teachers stay, outranking pay in every district studied.
- Doug Larkin and Suzanne Poole Patzelt found this pattern across varied contexts, calling teachers "relational organisms" who rely on who they work with.
Pay Perception Doesn't Predict Staying
- Teachers generally perceived their pay as adequate, so higher salaries alone didn't predict longer retention.
- Doug Larkin notes pay didn't follow simple behavioral logic like "10% more pay equals 10% more effort" in their data.
Design Induction To Foster Informal Supports
- Create induction beyond onboarding by building informal, day-to-day supports rather than only formal mentors.
- Examples: bus tours linking new teachers to community, roaming new-teacher coaches not tied to evaluation, and lunch/hallway peer ties.

