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Maryland needs teachers. Former federal civil servants are stepping up to the plate.

Wanting to do good for others led Amanda Leiter to make something good happen – just in time.

Ms. Leiter was a law professor at American University in Washington, DC for 12 years before accepting a position in the Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of General Counsel under President Joe Biden. She knew she wouldn’t be able to transition into the current administration. She also followed friends working in government and read headlines about the massive layoffs the Trump administration initiated once in office.

“I was actually volunteering when I was leaving the Biden administration. As soon as we saw that the Trump administration was laying off a lot of people, a group of us got together and we tried to put together resources to help people who had been laid off,” says Ms. Leiter.

Why we wrote this

With former federal employees looking for jobs, Maryland saw an opportunity to support its schools. A new program gives them three months of teacher training – and the chance to make a difference in the classroom.

She compiled a list of job banks and resume review programs.

“And one of the things I found was this really inspiring video from the governor [Wes] Moore saying, basically, if the federal government doesn’t want our dedicated public servants, we in Maryland can take advantage of you.

Mr. Moore made the video and used the opportunity to fill jobs in his state with laid-off federal employees. His state had a gaping hole of teaching vacancies in Maryland, which numbered more than 1,600 as of March. The initiative, Feds to Eds, began in June and is part of a $1 million grant awarded to 11 Maryland colleges to help train new teachers and place them in classrooms. This approach is specific to federal employees, but is ultimately a continuation of the state’s Alternative Certification for Effective Teachers (ACET) program. Under ACET, interns can earn a teaching license, but not a degree.

Courtesy of Carsen Bryant/Montgomery College

Members of Montgomery College’s first Feds to Eds cohort participate in the training on August 5, 2025.

Schools in the Feds to Eds program include Montgomery College, the University of Maryland’s College Park and Baltimore County campuses, Morgan State University and Bowie State University.

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