As Impact Florida’s Teacher Workforce Consultant, I’ve spent the past year working closely with our Teacher Workforce Cadre, a committed group from districts across the state who share my passion for finding real, lasting solutions in education, not just quick fixes. If there’s one lesson this journey has taught me, it’s that meaningful change begins when we slow down, get curious, and look beneath the surface of our most persistent challenges.
Early in this work, I saw how easy it is for schools and districts to leap straight to solutions. There’s a problem, so we try to fix it. But too often the fixes target symptoms instead of root causes. That’s why root cause analysis has become a cornerstone of our approach within the Cadre. We don’t just want to know that teachers are leaving. We want to understand why. And just as importantly, we want to understand what would help them thrive.
For me, root cause analysis means stepping out of the “tyranny of the urgent,” a familiar state in education where filling vacancies, improving test scores, and putting out fires can consume every minute . Instead, we give ourselves permission to slow down and examine the full picture. With the Cadre, that begins with gathering more than numbers. We bring in teacher stories, classroom observations, research, and perspectives from colleagues across districts. That combination helps us understand not only what’s happening, but why it’s happening.
One moment that has stayed with me was a warm up we did recently. We asked teams to explore a universal question: why do people struggle with sleep? It seems simple, but it opened the door for rich analysis. Some groups dug into research, others interviewed teammates, and others examined their own experiences. Even working from different sources, everyone began uncovering similar patterns. That exercise set the tone for tackling larger, more complex issues like teacher retention. It helped teams see what happens when you look beyond assumptions and gather evidence from all angles.
This blend of data and listening is where real insight happens. I’ve learned there can be a wide gap between what the numbers say and what people experience. Only when we bring those voices into the room can we accurately map all the “bones” of a fishbone diagram and understand what is actually driving a problem.
Below is the five-step process we use to help teams build clarity before they build solutions.
Five Steps District Leaders Can Take to Strengthen Root Cause Analysis
- Warm up with a simple, low-stakes problem. Before diving into a major workforce issue, start by practicing the process with a problem that carries no emotional weight. A question like “Why aren’t people getting enough sleep?” allows teams to play with gathering data, identifying patterns, and considering multiple viewpoints before the real work begins. This step helps everyone see how root cause analysis works in a concrete, relatable way .
- Ground the work in a clear and specific problem statement. A focused problem statement is essential. This alignment work must happen before the analysis begins: the problem has to be specific, actionable, and shared by everyone participating. Without that clarity, the rest of the process loses precision .
- Gather individual reflections on why the problem exists. Next, invite each team member to reflect privately on why they believe the problem is occurring. Those reflections should draw from their vantage point in the system, teacher experiences they’ve heard, and any relevant research or data. Individual reflection protects equity of voice, ensuring that early ideas aren’t shaped by the most vocal or senior person in the room .
- Build and refine a fishbone diagram using collective evidence. From there, bring the individual reflections together and begin grouping them into categories. This is where themes appear and where assumptions often fall away. Together, the team labels the “bones” of the fish so that an outside observer could clearly understand what the evidence suggests. This diagram should be treated as possibly wrong and definitely incomplete and continually refined with new perspectives as needed.
- Prioritize root causes that are both meaningful and within your control.Finally, identify which causes offer the greatest opportunity for impact and which the team can influence. In our Cadre, we use a hearts and stars activity to elevate what matters most and what is most actionable. Teams facing complex problems often feel overwhelmed until they identify where to begin. Prioritizing creates momentum and helps teams choose a starting point that is both strategic and doable.
Designing solutions after this process feels far more authentic. Instead of feeling burdened by everything that’s wrong, we choose one root cause and design a prototype intervention. Sometimes that means adjusting how teachers transition into new roles. Other times it means redesigning recognition systems, deepening peer collaboration, or refining professional learning.
Digging deep is worth it. When we pair rigorous root cause analysis with genuine listening, we move from surface-level fixes to real breakthroughs. And when we do that together, we build conditions where teachers can not only stay, but thrive.