Categories
Teacher Education

Week of March 9 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
International Council on Education for Teaching  Due to the coronavirus epidemic we are postponing the ICET2020 World Assembly at Bath Spa UniversitySubject to confirmation, we are hoping to host the conference on the equivalent dates next year – the ICET Board Meeting on Monday 21st June, 2021 and the World Assembly on Tuesday-Thursday 22-24 June, 2021. 

UNESCO.
1) Distance learning solutions
2) With one in five learners kept out of school, UNESCO mobilizes education ministers to face the COVID-19 crisis   UNESCO’s expertise in open and distance learning spans teacher training platforms, the design of e-learning school models, online communities of practice and the development of national ICT in education policies, with a priority focus on Africa.

UNITED STATES
AACTE/SCALE. edTPA COVID-19 State Outreach and Support    … candidates may submit edTPA portfolios within 18 months from their registration dates for both initial submissions and retakes… As necessary, Pearson will extend registrations for candidates impacted by COVID-19 without any change fee.  

American Educational Research Association. AERA 2020 ANNUAL MEETING FACT SHEET  In the coming weeks, AERA will provide detailed information on the AERA website about the virtual meeting.

EdWeek. 
1) Map: Coronavirus and School Closures
2) Culturally Responsive Teaching Is Promising. But There’s a Pressing Need for More Research   Many teachers feel uncomfortable discussing ethnicity and social equity, and many do not themselves have deep knowledge of nondominant political and cultural histories.
3) Future Teachers Are Unfamiliar With Basic ‘Learning Science,’ Report Finds  Aspiring teachers are unfamiliar with basic principles of learning science and should learn how to connect those principles to practice, according to a new report from Deans for Impact.
4) Teaching About Coronavirus: 3 Lesson Plans for Science, Math, and Media Literacy
5) What Happens to Student Teachers When Schools and Colleges Close Due to Coronavirus?   Teacher-preparation programs in 18 states are required to use the edTPA, which is administered by Pearson. In a statement, Pearson spokesman Scott Overland said edTPA registrations are valid for 18 months, and candidates can submit their portfolios for both initial submissions and retakes at any point during that time. 

George Mason University. Mason heads effort to recruit more teachers for the visually impaired and blind   … few U.S. colleges offer programs that prepare teachers to educate students who are visually impaired, according to Kimberly Avila, professor-in-charge of the teacher preparation program in blindness and vision impairment within the College of Education and Human Development.

Inside Higher Education. So You Want to Temporarily Teach Online

The Verge. The Smithsonian has released more than 2.8 million images you can use for free   Included are images from all 19 Smithsonian museums, nine research centers, libraries, archives, and the National Zoo

Ukiah Daily Journal. California K-12 schools prepare for coronavirus-related closures   “I think it would be a mistake for school districts, including PAUSD, to prematurely commit to online instruction for all students,” said Palo Alto Unified superintendent Don Austin. “I would be concerned about teacher training, student access to connectivity and devices…

WFAE. UNC Charlotte Changes How It Trains Student Teachers   Real-time coaching is part of a national trend – some schools call it “bug in the ear coaching,” referring to an earpiece that can be used to relay messages from the veteran teacher to the rookie. McIntyre is a member of Deans For Impact, a Texas-based coalition of almost two dozen university officials trying to improve teacher preparation.

WTOK. Teacher licensure bill clears Mississippi Senate   Senate Bill 2511 would allow college students to enter a School of Education if they have achieved a 21 ACT score, 3.0 grade point average on pre-major coursework, or a passing score on the Praxis Core, the test traditionally used in teacher certification programs.

NEW YORK STATE
Chalkbeat. Coronavirus live updates: CUNY and SUNY move to remote learning   Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that the state and city university systems  — SUNY and CUNY — would begin a “distance learning model” on March 19 — following the footsteps of several other universities across the country.

NYSED. Guidance for Colleges and Universities on Addressing the Needs of Students Impacted by the Coronavirus   Professional licensure or certification clinical experience courses must meet regulatory requirements. If present emergency circumstances create challenges associated with meeting clinical experience requirements, institutions should contact NYSED concerning appropriate alternatives to meet requirements, such as clinical simulation options.

NEW YORK CITY
Bklyner. A New School Focused On Raising Global, Urban Citizens To Open In Brooklyn   … in terms of the non-Chinese faculty, we’re looking particularly for people with training and experience with Reggio Emilia. Reggio is a very important prerequisite, and experiential learning is a very big part of our program even as early as preschool. 

Chalkbeat. NYC reluctantly readies for online learning if the coronavirus forces school closures    “It’s going to be highly contextual. It might be really difficult to say, ‘Everyone is going to do this one thing.’ It might be more like a buffet,” said Detra Price-Dennis, an associate professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College, who is focused on digital learning and digital literacy in K-8 classrooms.

Teaching Residents at Teachers College (TR@TC). March 2020|Winter Edition NewsletterRaising Consciousness, Induction Spotlight, Teacher Grant Resources…

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of March 2 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
India Education Diary.
1) Chile teacher training programme brings green science to life in indigenous regions   A teaching programme in one of the poorest and most densely populated rural regions of Chile is leveraging indigenous knowledge to use science and education for sustainable development (ESD) to improve lives.
2) IIM Kashipur launches an Innovative 2-week Madrasa Teacher Training programme    In tandem with Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s vision for the development of Muslim youths to hold the Quran in one hand and computer in other, Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Kashipur launched an innovative two-week Madrasa Teacher Training Programme today. 

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
1) How can education systems better understand teachers’ well-being?   … governments need to support teachers in meeting these new demands, from integrating new technologies and developing new teaching practices, to managing increasingly diverse classrooms. This is even more true in a world where teaching as a career is losing its appeal and teacher shortages are common. 
2) Initial Teacher Preparation (Itp)  Study  Promoting policies and practices for a stronger teaching profession – from initial teacher education to the first years of teaching

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Call for Proposals, Reviewers for 2021 AACTE Annual Meeting: “Resisting Hate, Restoring Hope: Engaging in Courageous Actions”

Chalkbeat.
1) Colorado State Board calls for more teacher training on reading, not less   Some board members raised concerns about that change, noting that inadequate college classes on reading instruction have contributed to low reading proficiency rates and shouldn’t get a pass on the front end of the process.
2) Dyslexia just got its first mention in Michigan law. Will it make a difference for struggling readers?   What’s more, teacher training programs in Michigan, like others across the country, aren’t doing enough to prepare educators to work with struggling readers, including dyslexic students. Only three out of 24 teacher prep programs statewide received an “A” rating for early literacy from the National Council on Teacher Quality, while eight were rated “F.”

Education Week.
1) 9 Things Educators Need to Know About Coronavirus
2) Teacher-Candidates Get a Safe Space to Air Touchy Issues of Identity   …there’s a lot of value in meeting with others who have a shared experience, Emdin said. Teachers College’s Reimagining Education Summer Institute, which is an annual conference for classroom teachers focused on integrated schools, has the opportunity for attendees to participate in affinity groups
3) Teachers in These States Have to Pass a Rigorous Test on ‘Science of Reading‘   Which 19 states, you ask? The list is here, in a newly updated database built by the National Council on Teacher Quality. The NCTQ has been monitoring state policies on teacher preparation for many years.
4) When Teaching Media Literacy, Which News Sources Are Credible? Even Teachers Don’t Agree   The findings suggest a few different things. First, teaching programs probably need to help teachers recognize that they come into their classrooms with particular ideological perspectives, and that they need to reflect on that as they design learning experiences.

Forbes. 5 Reasons School Districts Should Consider Developing Their Own Teachers   … if we can bring a sense of community back, develop and grow our best educators, we might be able to help lower teacher attrition rates and raise the bar for youth—in a place where everyone can empathize with one another.

Inside Higher Ed.
1) Blunt: No Cuts to Work-Study   Democrats on the committee also assailed a number of the president’s other proposed cuts, including to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.
2) Higher Ed Deal in the Works?  Senator Lamar Alexander says a bill to reauthorize the Higher Education Act should pass the education committee in about a month, to give it time to get through Congress this year.

JTE Insider. Author Interview: Roegman & Kolman  …insights from Rachel Roegman [TC EdD ‘14] and Joni S. Kolman [TC EdD ‘13], co-authors of the article “Cascading, Colliding, and Mediating: How Teacher Preparation and K-12 Education Contexts Influence Mentor Teachers’ Work.” What consistently emerged, and we had yet to fully describe in our previous writing (both with A. Lin Goodwin [TC Evenden Prof. of Ed.]), was how mentor teachers are navigating the pressures asserted by two different contexts—teacher preparation and K-12 education—as they work with teacher candidates. 

Library of Congress. Education Resources from the Library of Congress

Philadelphia Enquirer. This Camden principal was once a homeless, single, teenage mom. Now, her story inspires young girlsWith a leap of faith, she eventually packed up her daughters, Charity and Cheyanna, in 2001 and moved to Huntsville, Ala., where she graduated cum laude from Oakwood University in 2006 with a bachelor’s in elementary education. She returned to Camden and landed a teaching position at Parkside Elementary, and later was selected by her colleagues as Teacher of the Year for five straight years.

USA Today. Math scores stink in America. Other countries teach it differently – and see higher achievement.   “Math phobia is real. Math anxiety is real,” said DeAnn Huinker, a professor of mathematics education at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee who teaches future elementary and middle school teachers. New research suggests that when teachers improve their attitude toward math, it can help to raise student test scores.

NEW YORK STATE
LOHUD. Frances Wills, former schools chief in Briarcliff Manor, Putnam Valley, chosen for Board of Regents   Wills served in education for more than 50 years. She retired on July 1, 2019, as Putnam Valley superintendent after six years on the job. She previously served as Briarcliff Manor’s schools chief for 16 years. Before that, she worked in Maine for 25 years.

NYSED Board of Regents. Statement from Chancellor Betty A. Rosa and Interim State Education Commissioner Shannon Tahoe on Board of Regents Appointments    We are thrilled to congratulate Regents Cashin, Collins, Ouderkirk, Tilles and Young on their re-elections to the Board of Regents….We are also delighted to welcome Dr. Frances Wills to the Board of Regents and look forward to working with her to raise the knowledge, skill, and opportunity of all the people in New York.  

NYSED Board of Regents Meetings.
Early Childhood Education Blue Ribbon Committee Recommendations:

  • Strengthen New York State’s Early Childhood Teachers and Leaders
  • Birth to Grade 3: Consider expanding Early Childhood Education certification to include Grade 3 to align with Board of Regents policy.
  • Preservice Teacher and Leader Preparation
  • Teaching Assistant Certification

Proposed Amendments to …Regulations of the Commissioner of Education Relating to the Eligibility Requirements for Loan Forgiveness and Grant Programs

NEW YORK CITY
EdSurge. This Program Is Building a Pipeline of Special Education Teachers   …Terrero enrolled in our Grow Your Own Workforce Development Program (GYO), which is designed to recruit and retain new early childhood educators in New York City. The program exposed her to strategies for working with children with special needs, which she is now applying both at home and in her new role as a certified teacher assistant at the Kennedy Children’s Center, a public special education preschool in New York City. 

Teachers College Human Resources. edTPA Video Services Assistant. Apply now Job no: 505620 Position type: Staff Location: New York City Categories: Information Systems/Technology

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Feb. 17 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
ABC Radio News and Current Affairs   Researchers propose overhaul of teacher training   Australia’s failing to make the most of its best teachers. That’s the finding of a new report from the Grattan Institute on the way experienced teachers are used to train their more junior colleagues. To fix the problem, the researchers are suggesting a professional training model more like that used in Singapore and China.

AhramOnline. Egypt, US discuss cooperation in student scholarships, teacher training   Egypt’s Minister of Education Tarek Shawky discussed on Thursday with US Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs Marie Royce boosting cooperation in the various fields, especially in education and training.

Human Rights Watch. Vietnam: LGBT Youth Unprotected   Teachers are often untrained and ill-equipped to handle cases of anti-LGBT discrimination, and their lessons frequently uphold the widespread myth in Vietnam that same-sex attraction is a disease…

The Star. Why teacher training programme for UEC holders discontinued, asks MCA   The Education Ministry must explain why there are no UEC (Unified Examination Certificate) holders entering the Bachelor of Education teacher training programme (PISMP) this year, says Datuk Chong Sin Woon… “This is the first step towards having UEC recognised in Malaysia,” he said, adding MCA president Datuk Seri Dr Wee Ka Siong was instrumental in drawing the policy when he served as deputy education minister a decade ago. Chong said this in response to concerns raised by Chinese stakeholders following the Education Ministry’s “calculation” that there were sufficient Chinese language teachers, thus resulting in zero allocation of seats for UEC holders to undergo the teacher training programme this year.

Winrock International. Educating Girls, Changing Lives: Against fierce odds, a village bands together to protect a school for girls in rural Mali   A former university student, Camara says her education provided the opportunity to pursue a life of greater independence. “I’ve been to school, and it’s because of that I can be a teacher today,” she says. “If I hadn’t been to school, today I would be married and cooking for my husband.”

 

UNITED STATES
American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.  The President Recommends Big Cuts for Education: Will the Congress Agree?
Higher Education

  • Student loan programs take a $190.8 Billion cut over 10 years,
  • Public Service Loan Forgiveness program is eliminated,
  • Subsidized student loans are eliminated.
  • Graduate Assistance in Areas of National Need is eliminated.
  • Teacher Quality Partnership Grants are eliminated and considered for inclusion in the “Elementary and Secondary Education for the Disadvantaged Block Grant” noted above.

Association of Teacher Educators. 2020 100th ATE Annual Meeting [Atlantic City, NJ February 15-19]

Chalkbeat. Well-meaning white teachers: it’s time to disrupt your language around Black History Month

Education Week.
1) An Unorthodox Strategy Closes Academic Gaps   In the last few years, Molloy faculty have worked closely with Baldwin to help develop their academies in new-media studies and teacher education. Bogner also singled out the teacher education academy for praise because part of the district’s goal is attracting a more diverse group of potential teachers at a younger age.
2) Principals Say They Need Help to Support Students With Disabilities  The report results parallel findings from a 2019 survey, from the National Center for Learning Disabilities and Understood.org, that found many teachers consider themselves unprepared to meet the needs of millions of children with disabilities in the nation’s public schools.

Forbes. This Entrepreneur Already Is Where Education Will Be   Elangovan has three Masters degrees – one each in public health (Boston University), business (University of Iowa) and elementary education (Teachers College at Columbia University). She taught science at a public school in the Bronx, was a teacher and instructional leader at a private school in Iowa and worked as a director for the National Center for Teacher Residencies…As a result, Elangovan started to think about what it meant to support and develop teachers, and how to do that at scale.

Hechinger Report.
1) Subscribing to college and other visions of higher education’s future: Academic labs test artificial intelligence, virtual reality and other innovations to boost learning, lower costs   …less sophisticated simulations are being used in schools of education, where trainee teachers practice coping with simulated schoolchildren in computer-generated classrooms. 
2) ‘You can’t help but to wonder’: Crumbling schools, less money, and dismal outcomes in the county that was supposed to change everything for black children in the South   In recent years, the state has pushed “grow your own” efforts to shore up the local teaching force in rural areas. In 2019, the state education department launched teacher residency programs in four districts… The approach has limitations, beyond the difficulty of convincing students to come back to communities devastated by poverty. Some aspiring teachers educated in under-resourced schools struggle to pass the tests required to enroll in the state’s teacher prep programs. In several Delta districts, the education department is piloting an alternative license program for teachers with temporary licenses who have difficulty passing certification exams, but show promising talent in the classroom.

InsideHigherEd.
1) 41% of Recent Grads Work in Jobs Not Requiring a Degree   Recent graduates of programs in education, engineering and nursing have among the lowest unemployment and underemployment rates…
2) Hardin-Simmons Cuts 22 Academic Programs   President Eric Bruntmyer said the Christian institution is cutting a doctor of ministry program, as well as several master’s programs in education… and two teacher certification programs.
3) Title IX Complicates Hill Negotiations on Higher Ed   Any deal to update the law governing federal student aid would have to overcome concerns about the highly charged new rule U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is about to release on what colleges are required do about allegations of sexual assault or harassment on campuses… a stumbling block toward reauthorizing the Higher Education Act.

LPI.
1) California’s Special Education Teacher Shortage   California’s worsening shortage of special education teachers is a “five-alarm fire,” with two of every three new recruits entering without having completed preparation programs.
2) Inequitable Opportunity to Learn: Student Access to Certified and Experienced Teachers   Nationally, urban schools have the largest percentages of uncertified and inexperienced teachers, but CRDC data show that in all kinds of schools—rural, suburban, and urban—students in schools with high enrollment of students of color have less access to certified and experienced teachers than their white peers.

NYTimes.
1) Bringing a New Vibe to the Classroom: Some educators are experimenting with their approaches to teaching to make course materials more relevant to various cultures and communities.   At the forefront are teachers like Christopher Emdin, 40, a science educator and the author of “For White Folks Who Teach in the Hood … and the Rest of Y’all Too.” He has been a leader in the #HipHopEd initiative, which integrates urban youth culture with learning. The Science Genius program, for example, uses hip-hop music and rhymes in teaching science.
2) An Old and Contested Solution to Boost Reading Scores: Phonics   … findings have pushed some states and school districts to make big changes in how teachers are trained and students are taught… Even some leading researchers in the science of reading, including Professor Seidenberg, acknowledge that studies do not yet point toward specific curriculum materials that will be most effective at teaching phonics.

University of St. Thomas. Key Partnerships Help School of Education Diversify Minnesota’s Teaching Workforce   In a partnership with St. Thomas through school residencies (including the St. Paul Public Schools Urban Teacher Residency Program and the Minneapolis Special Education Teacher Residency) and the Work and Learn program, districts “grow their own” educators by investing in people already working for them. 

 

NEW YORK CITY
Teachers College.
1) TC Dance Educator Barbara Bashaw is Featured on the Cover of Dance Teacher Magazine   Bashaw (Ed.D. ’11, M.A. ’96) is the Arnhold Professor of Practice in Dance Education… “a pioneer” in dance education and “an inspiring force in teacher training” who uses her past experience as a public school teacher as “a touchstone”…
2) TC’s Felicia Mensah Teams with a Former Student to Write about Teaching Science and Technology to Girls   Mensah’s research addresses issues of diversity, equity and identity in science teacher preparation and teacher professional development.

 

 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of February 10 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
International Council on Education for Teaching (ICET). Keynote Speakers 64th Annual Conference [Bath Spa University
23-25 June, 2020]

Their World. 20 reasons why, in 2020, there are still 260m children out of school   Too many teachers don’t have the training or qualifications needed to deliver a quality education. Only 85% of primary school teachers globally have been properly trained – in sub-Saharan Africa it’s just 64% (and only 50% of secondary teachers). Many existing teachers, especially in the least developed countries, are untrained, underpaid and working with scarce resources.

UNITED STATES
AACTE. 2020 National Award Winners

Chalkbeat.
1) Colorado wants to ensure teachers know how to teach reading. But some say proposed rules lack teeth and transparency.   Asked how state education department staff will determine which classes at which teacher prep programs satisfy the requirements, a department spokesman said in an email that they’ll decide once teachers submit documents about the class they took, such as the course syllabi, their transcript, and proof they passed the final exam.
2) Is the future of teaching homegrown? Colorado lawmakers hope so.   In recent years, Colorado has invested in a host of “grow your own” teacher programs, offering fellowships and stipends to rural teachers and creating new opportunities for student teachers in districts across the state. But some programs have been sparsely utilized, even as others don’t have the resources to meet demand.
3) Step into this state-of-the-art Indiana classroom — and pretend the students are real   The Marian students are getting an early start on learning how to run a classroom, rather than waiting until their junior or senior year to student teach real-life children. The university’s new and unusual approach is part of a retooled program for training teachers…
4) The Trump administration wants to cut federal education spending — including money for charter schools   The individual programs on the chopping block include: Supporting Effective Instruction State Grants, which is also known as Title II, Part A, which districts can use for teacher training and to reduce class sizes ($2.1 billion)

CPRE Knowledge Hub. Study Questions Reliability of edtpa Performance Assessment System [Podcast]

Education Commission of the States. 50-State Comparison: Teacher Recruitment and Retention   Most states rely heavily — and sometimes exclusively — on traditional teacher preparation programs to train teacher candidates. However, in 2017, three states and the District of Columbia reported that more than 50% of their educator preparation program graduates came from alternative preparation programs.

Education Week.
1) Q&A With Presidential Candidate Tom Steyer: ‘Trump Doesn’t Believe in Education’   And he wants to incentivize states to raise teacher pay using federal aid, as well as forgive teachers’ student loan debt after they’ve taught for a decade.
2) See the 29 Education Programs Trump Wants to Condense Into a Block Grant   •Teacher Quality Partnerships…
3) Trump Seeks to Slash Education Budget, Combine 29 Programs Into Block Grant … the proposed budget would eliminate Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which teachers can use to eliminate federal student loan debt under certain circumstances.

InsideHigherEd. New International Enrollments Climb at U.S. Grad Schools
Change in First-Time Graduate Enrollment by Field of Study

  Fall 2014-15 Fall 2015-16 Fall 2016-17 Fall 2017-18 Fall 2018-19
All Fields +5% +5% -1% +1% +4%
Education 0% +7% -16% -31% +9%

The74. Interview: TN Ed Chief Penny Schwinn on Her Radical Plan Using Schools to Bring Social Services to Rural Areas — and Her Whole-Child Approach to Training Teachers   Schwinn talked to Beth Hawkins about the challenge of introducing social-emotional learning in Southern, red-state schools, her hope of training teachers free of charge … We are committed to not just get more teachers who are trained in the way that we’ve always trained teachers; we would like every teacher in the state to be dual certified in their area as well as special education.

The Teacher Education Podcast. New online resource exploring the stories and research of professionals in teacher preparation

US News & World Report. Officials announce initiative to attract more teachers Kentucky’s largest school system has teamed up with the University of Louisville to start a teacher residency program… would allow people who received a degree in a field other than education to get a master’s degree from U of L while shadowing an experienced teacher at Jefferson County Public Schools…

Washington Post. Trump education plan slashes student loan program in contrast to Democrats   The reductions would eliminate popular initiatives such as a loan forgiveness program for students who take public service jobs and subsidized lending for low-income students.

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED Board of Regents February Meetings. Higher Education Committee:
1) Proposed Amendments to Section 3.14 of the Rules of the Board of Regents Relating to the Composition of the Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching
2) Amendment to Subparts 30-2 and 30-3 of the Rules of the Board of Regents Relating to Annual Professional Performance Reviews (APPR) of Classroom Teachers and Building Principals to Implement Chapter 59 of the Laws of 2019

New York State Register. The public comment period is open on a proposed amendment to regulations to allow a time extension for the Initial Reissuance and Provisional Renewal.

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. What NYC’s departing special education chief learned overseeing the nation’s largest school system   We recently opened up an inclusive ICT class with a focus on literacy that we’re piloting where the teachers are trained in Orton-Gillingham, and we have also opened up an intense program for students on the spectrum that are non-verbal… What we have learned since the publication of the first City Council report is that where there are shortage areas we need to work with the state in terms of the certification of teachers. 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of February 3 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
EducationInternational. Morocco: Report highlights inequities caused by increased privatisation of education   …as Abdous points out, the government has recently launched a partnership with Teach for Morocco, an organisation that places unqualified teachers with just a few weeks of training in public schools, undermining the status of the profession.

GovInsider. How Finland designed its schools around well-being   Teachers are trained in developmental psychology and how children learn, so they’re able to monitor their students’ learning progress on a daily basis. They can then give more attention to struggling students. This has allowed Finland to do away with mandatory standardised tests to track students’ progress. Teacher education also empowers teachers to “have their researcher glasses on” as they teach and to constantly analyse if their methods are effective. 

InsiderHigherEd. Open Society University Network Launched With $1 Billion Gift: Bard College and Central European University will lead new network focused on a range of education, social, civic, human rights and environmental issues.   It will also be involved in teacher education programs that focus on student-centered learning…

NLTimes. More Students Opting To Become Teachers, Nurses   This academic year the number of new students studying to become a teacher in primary education increased by 9.5 percent.

PressProgress. Doug Ford’s Government is Now Looking For Private Companies to Test Ontario Teachers’ Grade 3 Math Skills   In the Ontario Legislature, Ford claimed “one-third of teachers at teachers’ college have failed grade 6 and grade 7 math.” 

UNITED STATES
AACTE.
1) AACTE Member Alumni are Finalist for Teacher of the Year   The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) have announced the four finalists for the 2020 National Teacher of the Year, all of whom are graduates of AACTE member institutions…
2) Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Video Series: Building the Special Education Pipeline

Arkansas Democrat Gazette. More people taking Arkansas teacher prep courses   A recent three-year drop in the number of people enrolled in Arkansas teacher preparation programs appears to have bottomed out, and the number is on the upswing, preliminary data from the Arkansas Division of Elementary and Secondary Education show.

Chalkbeat.
1) Teacher pay, literacy, and mental health are priorities in Tennessee governor’s proposed budget   To complement salary increases, Lee wants to set aside $8.5 million to launch the Governor’s Teaching Fellowship to provide college scholarships for 1,000 of “our best and brightest” students to train to become teachers.
2) What the Democratic presidential candidates have said about education: Teacher diversity   Biden has said he would support dual-enrollment classes for high school students who are aspiring teachers, help teachers aides get their teaching licenses, and invest in HBCUs…Sanders says he would establish a fund to create and expand teacher-training programs at HBCUs and other minority-serving institutions… Warren has said she would boost teacher diversity by investing in HBCUs and other minority-serving institutions. She’s also said she would increase funding for Grow Your Own Teacher programs and teacher residency programs…

Commonwealth. Unpacking Riley’s teacher licensing proposal: It’s a crack in the armor of high-stakes testing…would allow teachers who fail the MTEL state teacher licensing exam repeatedly to be vetted by experts who observe their actual work in the classroom… Massachusetts’ high-stakes licensing exam for teachers has resulted in a teaching force that does not resemble its students.

Education Week.
1) ‘Government Schools’ or Public Schools? Trump, DeVos, and the Language of School Choice   The phrase has a long history in both scholarship about school choice and in messaging policies like private school vouchers, said Jeffrey Henig, a professor of political science and education at Columbia University’s Teachers College. “It’s had this history that’s been tied to one sector that’s really animated by economic principles and ideas… then there’s the part of that community that’s been animated by religious autonomy and prayer in schools. Those folks aren’t necessarily the same …Trump’s more instinctually reacting to the elements of that that are tied to protecting religion and the rights of institutions and individuals to act based on their religious beliefs.”
2) Tennessee Seeks New Teacher, Principal Requirements in ‘Science of Reading’  Programs that prepare teachers and principals would be required to teach evidence-based reading instruction “exclusively,” Schwinn said. 
3) When Teachers Are Tough Graders, Students Learn More, Study Says    The study found that teachers who attended selective colleges, hold graduate degrees, and have more experience tend to have higher grading standards. Teachers with graduate degrees have grading standards that are about 19 percent of a standard deviation stricter than teachers without higher degrees—possibly because they experienced a more challenging academic environment. 
4) White Teachers Need Anti-Racist Therapy    I have also found the work of Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz, a professor at Teachers College, helpful. In a process she calls “Healing Through the Archaeology of Self,” Sealey-Ruiz asks teachers to dig, reflect, and discover their identities in relationship to their students, systems of oppression, and how teachers can be interrupters of the status quo.

InsideHigherEd.
1) Prepping for a Community College CareerDoctoral education doesn’t necessarily prepare future faculty members for the jobs they’re likely to get at teaching-intensive institutions. A new grant program takes aim at that problem.
2) Simplifying Public Service Loan Forgiveness  The U.S. Department of Education signaled it will make it easier to apply for Public Service Loan Forgiveness after the application process has faced criticism for being too unwieldy.

NEA Today.
1) Black History Month Lessons & Resources
2) Hawaii Educators Tackle Teacher Shortage With Ambitious 5-Year Plan  … include partnerships to help fund college tuition for students who commit to teaching in public schools for 3-5 years; an expansion of “Grow Your Own” programs; and working with lawmakers and the private sector on ways to increase affordable housing for educators.

New York Times. The New York Times Learning Network now on YouTube

The 74. Q&A — Three Minutes With CZI’s Brooke Stafford-Brizard: What the Schools Best at Supporting the Whole Child Have in Common [interview with Greg Richmond]    I started my career as a middle school teacher in the Bronx. I was a Teach for America corps member. I wasn’t an education major. I went back to graduate school after I taught middle school, and the program I focused on was cognitive sciences in education, a doctoral program in human development that was part of Teachers College at Columbia, and I learned the science of learning and development. 

The Colorado Sun. Most Colorado public school teachers are white, but almost half of their students are not. Can the state close the gap? Through the legislation, aspiring teachers would be able to see more detailed data about Colorado’s educator preparation programs and understand what programs are best preparing candidates to test for their licensure

Washington Post. News Literacy Project   The News Literacy Project empowers educators to teach students the skills they need to become smart, active consumers of news and other information and engaged, informed participants in civic life.

WDRB. JCPS, U of L launch residency program to get more teachers in local classrooms   Hoping to address its teaching shortage and attract more minorities into the profession, Jefferson County Public Schools announced a new one-year residency program with the University of Louisville on Thursday.

WRAL. Kansas City using a fellowship program to train new teachers   Not only is the program helping KCK retain teachers, it’s also helping the district recruit more diverse educators. About half of the teaching fellows come from diverse backgrounds. The district’s students are about 50% Latino, 27% black and 13% white.

NEW YORK STATE
Chalkbeat. Your child’s birth month matters: NYC students born in November and December are classified with learning disabilities at higher rates   “New York’s Dec. 31 cutoff leads to unbalanced comparisons,” said Mariana Souto-Manning, professor at Columbia’s Teachers College and director of Early Childhood Education and Early Childhood Special Education Programs. “The misalignment of cut-offs across states and New York’s cut-off being Dec. 31 end up pressuring New York education leaders and teachers to push-down academic skills in ways that are inappropriate.” 

New York State Education Department (NYSED)
1) Letter of Intent Posting (LOI)– New York State Teacher Performance Assessment Seeking LOIs from vendors to administer and report a program of Teacher Performance Assessment (TPA) for New York State (NYS) teacher candidates as part of the NYSTCE program. *For the NYSTCE’s TPA program, NYSED currently uses the edTPA, which is a subject-specific, summative assessment designed to measure the knowledge and skills that candidates need to effectively teach subject matter to students. In NYS, the edTPA is administered to approximately 10,000 NYS teacher candidates annually. The edTPA is a multi-state assessment that is administered to a large racially/ethnically and geographically diverse population of teacher candidates in 41 states and Washington D.C. Currently, 20 states have policies that require candidates to pass a teacher performance assessment in order to obtain teacher certification. The edTPA has been approved as a teacher performance assessment for certification purposes in all of these states. * Note: Pearson’s contract ends later this year.
2) Seeking Experts for Review of NYSTCE Bilingual Education Assessments
NYSED is seeking educators to participate in a review of the New York State Teacher Certification Examination (NYSTCE) Framework for the revised Bilingual Education Assessments. A Framework Review Conference is scheduled for March 13, 2020, at the Hilton Albany, 40 Lodge Street, Albany, NY 12207. The framework for the current assessment is available here. Nominate qualified educators* here: http://research.net/s/NYSTPNominate. NYSED would appreciate nominations by February 14, 2020. All nominees must complete the online application here. Participants receive an honorarium and, if needed, reimbursement for travel expenses and lodging.

NYSED Board of Regents.
1) Approved in January: Amendments to the Regulations Relating to the Addition of Subject Areas to the Limited Extension and Statement of Continued Eligibility (SOCE) for Certain Teachers of Students with Disabilities and Technical Amendments to the Limited Extension, SOCE, and Subject Area Extensions in Grades 7-12 for Certain Teachers of Students with Disabilities | Regents Memo HE (A) 1 *. More information is available about this requirement and the subject area certification options on NYSED’s Special Education Teacher Certification Options webpage.
2) Conditionally Approved in January: New York State K-12 Computer Science and Digital Literacy Learning Standards |Regents MemoP-12 (A) 4 and Supplemental Presentation: Standards are grouped into four grade bands: K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12 and students are expected to master the standards by the end of the last year of the grade band. SED plans to return to the Regents for final adoption by later this spring, kicking off a multi-year roll out with full implementation planned for September, 2024.
3) Meeting Agenda for February 2020

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. De Blasio adds little to his education agenda in ‘State of the City’ speech   Also expanding: a program designed to recruit more men of color into city schools, a group that makes up less than 9% of the city’s teachers, state data show. Officials said the city would put 1,000 more men of color “on the path to becoming teachers” by 2022. That’s identical to a promise the city made to add 1,000 men of color into the teaching pipeline by 2018, a goal officials said they accomplished. The education department hired some 1,700 men of color over three school years, running through the end of the 2018-2019 school year, officials said.

Teaching Residents at Teachers College (TR@TC) Winter Edition Newsletter

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of January 20 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Center For Innovation In Teacher Education And Development (CITED).   Performativity, Presentism and Practice: New Teacher Survival and Development, with Dr. Adam Unwin, UCL, Institute of Education, London, UK. [29 January, Teachers College, New York City]

Federation University. Teaching our next teachers – educator awarded Fulbright Scholarship.  Associate Professor Robyn Brandenburg, the Associate Dean of Research in the School of Education, will spend three months at Montclair State University in the United States to research the effectiveness of teacher education programs designed to meet Teacher Performance Assessment Standards (TPAs). She will look at the impact TPAs have on teacher educators, pre-service teachers and mentors in schools.

Rising Sun Overport. KZN teachers jet off to study in Columbia University   A group of 20 top academics (mostly teacher educators) from three South African universities, the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN), Durban University of Technology and the University of Zululand are participants of an intensive four-year programme, Accelerated Academic Leadership Development Programme (AALDP)… Now, in their third year of study, the educators will be flying to the Teachers College, Columbia University for a five-month residency.

The Hindu. Playing with learning: On status of early childhood education   …surveys such as ASER call for a deeper look at how governments approach funding of institutions and teacher training for better outcomes. It is as important to let teachers feel invested in anganwadis as play-and-learn centres aiding children in acquiring cognitive skills, as it is to provide physical infrastructure. Building human resource capabilities would depend on teachers being recruited on the basis of aptitude, their training in credentialed colleges and assurance of tenure of service. 

The National UAE. Thousands of UAE teachers sit licence test   By the end of this year, any teacher wishing to work in the country will be required to have taken and passed the exam… To be awarded the licence, teachers need to two pass two examinations: one on ‘pedagogy’ or approaches to teaching and another specialist exam on the subject they teach.

UNESCO. International Day of Education  [24 January]

UNITED STATES
Education Dive. Teacher prep, equity top list of ‘hot’ literacy topics   According to the survey, teachers were slightly more likely to say they were trained to teach reading using a “literature-based” approach rather than a phonics approach — 69% compared to 63%. Fifty-nine percent said their program emphasized phonemic awareness. But regardless of the method, only about a third or fewer of the respondents said their pre-service programs did an “excellent” or “very good” job teaching them that method.

Education Week
1) An Exit Interview With John White, the Nation’s Longest-Serving State Schools Chief   White… distanced himself from the education reform activity of the last 10 to 15 years at the national level… That movement, he said, intentionally focused on policies concerning curriculum and teacher training and how to make sure schools could succeed in those areas at a large scale.
2) New Mexico switches to new licensing test for teachers   New Mexico has opted for a new teacher candidate exam system that will mean a higher price tag for those taking the test for the first time… But officials tell the Albuquerque Journal that the new system will provide more support to test takers and retakes will be free.
3) Preservice Teachers Are Getting Mixed Messages on How to Teach Reading   Yet an Education Week analysis of nationally representative survey results found that professors who teach early-reading courses are introducing the work of researchers and authors whose findings and theories often conflict with one another, including some that may not be aligned with the greater body of scientific research.
4) Teachers Are Divided on Whether Phonics Is Getting Too Much Attention, Survey Says   Sixty percent of all respondents think that teacher-preparation programs aren’t preparing teachers to deliver effective reading instruction. These concerns have also been reflected in Education Week’s reporting, which has found that teachers often leave their preservice programs without much clarity on evidence-based practices.
5) This Teacher Spent a Day as a 4th Grader. Now She’s Rethinking Her Career   It was a required assignment for a school leadership program I’m completing at Teachers College, Columbia University… Mindfulness and self-awareness training have been a big part of my principal-preparation program, and I believe these techniques could help teachers.

LPI/AACTE. Preparing Educators for Diverse, Equitable, and Inclusive Classrooms  [Webinar 3pm Jan. 30]

NCB Chicago. Pritzker Announces Continued Expansion of Early Childhood Programs   “Our teachers are properly trained,” said Karen Ross-Williams of the Christopher House, a group of schools in Chicago that helps children in low-income families get access to quality educational resources. “That’s the other key piece. We don’t just throw them in and say ‘swim.’” 

Regional Educational Laboratory Program. Study Provides a Clear Picture of Alaska’s Educator Turnover Challenge   … findings suggest policymakers may want to focus on increasing the supply of homegrown educators, as those who were prepared in Alaska were more likely to stay at their school.

UNC School of Education. School to develop ‘deeper learning’ pedagogies in two EdPrepLab-backed projects   School of Education faculty will collaborate with researchers at three other campuses to develop “deeper learning” pedagogies in educator-preparation programs in two projects backed by the Educator Preparation Laboratory, or EdPrepLab… The projects will build upon and extend efforts at the School of Education to incorporate experiential learning practices in the Master of Arts in Teaching program…

San Francisco Chronicle. Diversifying the teaching profession requires confronting history   … following the 1968 Ocean Hill-Brownsville teacher strikes in New York City when white teachers clashed with black and Puerto Rican communities over control of the schools, city leaders identified the hiring of teachers of color as a salve, funding recruitment initiatives and easing certification rules. In this moment, a temporary pathway opened: Thousands of black and Latino adults entered New York City’s schools as paraprofessionals and teachers on temporary licenses. 

NEW YORK STATE
Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Hiring teachers of color is an investment in student success, group says   Educators for Excellence has since asked the State Education Department to double the funding for My Brother’s Keeper Teacher Opportunity Corps — a state grant program that partners with teacher preparation programs to recruit, train and support new teachers of color entering the profession – to $7 million.

North Country Now. SUNY Canton Early Childhood program lands SUNY TeachNY grant funding   SUNY Canton faculty members in the Early Childhood program are integrating video capture into student teaching experiences and internships, and have received a grant to aid the program… The video capture technology will allow students and a college supervisor to record, observe, critique and assess the student teaching experience virtually.

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat.
1) NYC educators: With budget cuts looming, tell us what you think about teacher training   Mayor Bill de Blasio hopes to save money next fiscal year by slashing teacher training costs by $31 million.
2) Teaching the teachers: $13M grant to help NYC students learning EnglisWhile teacher preparation programs in the state require some credit hours in language acquisition, it’s not nearly as extensive as earning a certification in Teaching English to Students of Other Languages. Last year the state moved to require more credit

Teachers College. 37th Annual Winter Roundtable! Teaching To Transform [February 28th-29th]

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Jan. 6 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Citizen Digital. World’s most celebrated teacher Peter Tabichi meets Pope Francis at the Vatican   The Pope shook Peter’s hand, gave him a rosary, and they held a brief conversation about the importance of the teaching profession following the service.

New York Times. In China’s Crackdown on Muslims, Children Have Not Been Spared    To carry out its campaign, the party needed not only new schools but also an army of teachers, an overhaul of the curriculum — and political discipline… “Teachers are the engineers of the human soul,” the education bureau of Urumqi recently wrote in an open letter, deploying a phrase first used by Stalin to describe writers and other cultural workers. The party launched an intensive effort to recruit teachers for Xinjiang from across China. Last year, nearly 90,000 were brought in, chosen partly for their political reliability… The influx amounted to about a fifth of Xinjiang’s teachers last year, according to government data.

tes (UK). Teacher training framework sets bar ‘worryingly low’  Eight specialists in teacher education have come together to voice their concerns about the initial teacher training (ITT) framework in a blog for the British Educational Research Association (BERA).

Teachers College. The Key to Improving Refugee Education? It’s supporting teachers, argues TC’s Mary Mendenhall at a Global Forum   The method and open-source materials developed by Mendenhall and her students to train and support refugees as teachers is now in use in 20 nations worldwide. Mendenhall is currently leading a four-year research study on teacher and student well-being in northern Uganda and South Sudan.

UNITED STATES
Chalkbeat.
1) New report dings Denver’s preschool program quality, but there’s more to the story   Part of the reason the Denver Preschool Program has less stringent rules on class size and teacher credentials than what national researchers recommend is because it follows state licensing rules. Those rules don’t require lead teachers to have a bachelor’s degree, assistant teachers to have an entry-level credential called a CDA, nor 4-year-old preschool classes to be limited to 20 children…
2) Why a local university is investing in a new teacher residency program to fill a pressing need in Detroit and Dearborn schools   The Wayne State program begins with an 18-month period in which the students will receive a $40,000 stipend, complete a master’s degree, and receive a teaching certificate. Following that, for two years teachers would receive mentoring and professional development while teaching.  

Cincinnati.com. More US schools teach in English and Spanish, but not enough to help Latino kids: Classes taught in both languages help students from various backgrounds, but many districts have fought to keep Spanish out of schools.   Would-be bilingual teachers often face challenges such as the cost of their education and the tests they have to take to become certified in bilingual education. “We know that there’s a greater need for bilingual education teachers than we can meet right now,” Schall says.

Education Week
1) Chief Justice Warns That ‘Civic Education Has Fallen By the Wayside’   He mentioned the work of the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, who over the past two decades has “quietly volunteered as a tutor at a local elementary school, inspiring his court colleagues to join in the effort.” That judge is Merrick Garland, whose nomination for the Supreme Court by President Barack Obama was blocked by Senate Republicans in 2016. Garland volunteers at J.O. Wilson Elementary School in the nation’s capital.
2) Finding New Ways to Engage With Language in New Mexico   Pauletta White, assistant superintendent for student support services in Gallup-McKinley County Schools, said the district has at least one Navajo language teacher at every elementary school… But White said teachers, who must be certified by both the Public Education Department and the Navajo Nation, are hard to find.
3) More States Say They’re Teaching Media Literacy, But What That Means Varies   Training teachers and surveying instruction is complicated in part because the media landscape itself is shifting so quickly, said McNeill. “That’s why it’s so hard,” she said. “The curriculum would have to constantly change to keep up.”
4) Quiz Yourself: How Much Do You Know About Teacher Recruitment?
5) Teachers, the Robots Are Coming. But That’s Not a Bad Thing.  If designed with educator input, these technologies could free up teachers to do what they do best: inspire students to learn and coach them along the way.
6) Teaching in 2020 vs. 2010: A Look Back at the Decade   And, perhaps as a consequence of some of these policy shifts, even getting teachers into classrooms is tough. Fewer people are enrolling in colleges of education, and states have reported persistent shortages, including in perennial areas such as special education. There’s been more of an emphasis on recruiting teachers of color into a predominately white profession, but the growth has been slow.
7) The 2020 RHSU Edu-Scholar Public Influence Rankings. TC Professors include Henry (Hank) Levin-37, Christopher Emdin-73, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn-103, Jeffrey R. Henig-108, Amy Stuart Wells-111, Aaron M. Pallas-113, Thomas Bailey-118, Michael A. Rebel-155, Judith Scott-Clayton-160, Sarah Cohodes-194, Henry (Hank) Levin-37, Christopher Emdin-73, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn-103, Jeffrey R. Henig-108, Amy Stuart Wells-111, Aaron M. Pallas-113, Thomas Bailey-118, Michael A. Rebel-155, Judith Scott-Clayton-160, Sarah Cohodes-194, Jordan Matsudaira-196

Hechinger Report. Black boys need the guidance and mentorship of black male teachers: Why do black men comprise just 2 percent of the U.S. teaching force?   A positive snowball effect of representation in classrooms will also increase the number of black boys who aspire to become teachers, aiding generations to come.

KRQE. State lawmaker introduces bill hoping to solve statewide teacher shortage   After 19 years of teaching, State Rep. Debbie Sarinana (D) says it’s time for some changes… That’s why the Manzano High School math teacher is sponsoring House Bill 92, in hopes of starting a Teacher Residency Program.

New York Times. Overlooked No More: Margaret McFarland, Mentor to Mister Rogers   … received her master’s degree from Columbia University in 1928 and later earned her Ph.D. from Teachers College at Columbia University… McFarland was also fond of teaching by parable, gently guiding her students toward clarity by telling stories and asking questions rather than providing critiques. Her methods made a lasting impression.

Star Press. Ball State announces new dean of Teachers College   Anand R. Marri will join the leadership team at Ball State University as dean of Teachers College, effective July 1, BSU announced on Tuesday… In 2003, after earning his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, he joined Teachers College at Columbia University. At Columbia University, his research focused on economic literacy, multicultural and urban education, and teacher education…

Teaching Tolerance. Welcome to The Learning Plan Builder.  Based on the four domains of the Social Justice Standards (Identity, Diversity, Justice and Action), our Learning Plan Builder allows you to select meaningful student texts, choose how you’ll teach them and how you’ll assess student learning.

The Atlantic. What School Could Be If It Were Designed for Kids With Autism: Tracy Murray’s kindergarten classroom in New York City has a unique approach to supporting students on the spectrum.   When a student on the spectrum is present, majority-neurotypical classrooms typically have one certified teacher—many without special-education training—and one or more teacher’s aides, who help students with special needs follow teachers’ directions and complete academic tasks. ASD Nest, meanwhile, places two certified and specially trained teachers in each participating classroom, which allows one of them to provide one-on-one social, emotional, or academic support whenever the need arises, without disrupting the lesson or pulling a student out of the classroom. 

U.S. Department of Education Federal Student Aid. StudentAid.gov Now Offers Aid Resources All in One Place

Washington Post.
1) America’s schools are more diverse than ever. But the teachers are still mostly white.   People of color are less likely to go into teaching and less likely to stay in it. Education requirements, low pay, unhappy workplaces and lack of respect all can contribute. The result: At every step on the road from high school student to classroom teacher, people of color fall away. They are less likely to go to college, less likely to enroll in teacher preparation programs, less likely to graduate and less likely to be certified as teachers, the Education Department found in a 2016 report.
2) How to get kids to love to write   Some schools of education do a poor job of teaching students how to teach the subject, and some school districts do not provide teachers with a valid curriculum. There are, too, teachers saddled with as many as 200 students — “we feel like we’re drowning,” one teacher said — who can’t assign many writing assignments because they don’t have the time to grade them.
3)  Teach for America to Senate president: Ferguson to step into biggest role yet   In a recent interview, Ferguson considered what the Teach for America version of himself might have said about becoming Senate president at the same time Maryland was about undertake the largest effort in a generation to overhaul public school education. “At the end of the day, if we focus on the fundamental point that every child deserves true access to maximizing his or her potential, we will make the right choices,” he offered.

 

NEW YORK STATE
AM NewYork. Board of Regents proposes expanding TOC II and certificate programs to increase teacher diversity   In 2016, the state awarded $3 million from the My Brother’s Keeper initiative to fund TOC programs. Out of the 16 colleges and universities awarded, seven are in New York City; Brooklyn College, Hunter College, Medgar Evers College, Herbert Lehman College, Manhattan College, Queens College and the Teachers College at Columbia University. 

New York State Education Department. Board of Regents Meeting Agendas: January 13-14

NEW YORK CITY
Gothamist. Why Are NYC Parents So Upset At The Idea Of Scrapping ‘Gifted And Talented’ Programs?   “There is no consistent curriculum or standard of pedagogy that gifted teachers are required to invest in,” said Matt Gonzalez, the Integration and Innovation Initiative Director at NYU Metro and a member of the SDAG panel. One of the many problems, it seems, is that the general population has a misguided conception of what being “gifted and talented” means. “It’s not something that we discovered, it’s something we invented about a century ago,” said James Borland, a professor at Teachers College…

Teaching Residents at Teachers College (TRatTC). 2012-2020 production report: 18 peer-reviewed publications, 54 global conference presentations and counting!

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Dec. 16 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
All Africa. Nigeria: ‘A National Campaign Will Boost Image of Teaching Profession’   Teach for Nigeria recruits promising leaders from varied disciplines to teach in Nigeria’s underserved schools, in low-income communities.

Association for Teacher Education in Europe. Spring Conference 2020 [Florence, 20-22 May]

Kings College London. CFP: Pedagogy, politics and teacher education: an international conference. This conference has been organised by the Centre for Innovation in Teacher Education and Development (CITED). [13-15, May]

National Center on Education and the Economy. Global Ed Talks: podcasts now available

Unite for Quality Education. Public Private Partnerships in Liberia Have Failed! The Education Minister Must Act Now to Save The Liberian Education System   Many of our members, qualified teachers at public schools across the country, have not been paid for months…  We urgently need increased investment in education, quality teacher training, robust education management systems, and better accountability mechanisms. 

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE.
1) Bipartisan Christmas Miracles Come to Washington   New Proposed Regulations for TEACH Grants Released… According to DeVos, “This proposed rule ensures educators who received TEACH Grants and who are meeting their service requirements do not have their grants converted to loans improperly or as a result of confusing bureaucratic paperwork.”
2) New Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Educator Preparation video series. For nearly 30 years, the AACTE Holmes Program has supported students who self-identify as racially and ethnically diverse and are obtaining graduate degrees in education at AACTE member institutions.

AACTE/SCALE. Keynotes Announced for 2020 TPA Implementation Conference [March 26-28, Autin, TX]

Chalkbeat. ‘It’s killing children and no one is talking about it’: Asthma is taking a steep toll on Newark’s students and their schools   A decade ago, all of Newark’s public schools earned the group’s “asthma-friendly” designation, meaning that their teachers and nurses were trained to deal with asthma and there was a nebulizer at each school. 

Education Week.
1) Congress Mostly Snubs DeVos Agenda in Deal Increasing Education Spending   Title II for teacher and principal training: $76 million more
2) How Do Kids Learn to Read? What the Science Says 
3) What Should Teachers Need to Do to Transfer Their License to a New State?   Nineteen states make it harder for an out-of-state applicant to qualify for a teaching license if they were prepared to teach through an alternative route. Teachers who did not go through a traditional teacher-preparation program might have to take additional coursework or satisfy additional student-teaching or internship requirements. 

Hechinger Report. Low-income districts find ways to help students make music   A partial list of what any district would need to offer a robust music program includes teachers with advanced degrees in their subject area, class schedules that allow as many kids as possible to participate in music, high-quality curricular resources, professional development opportunities for teachers, and partnerships with local musicians and music organizations.

KQED. ‘I Feel That I’m Needed’: An Effort to Keep Male Teachers of Color in the Classroom  That’s why any effort to increase teacher diversity has to focus as much on what happens after teachers reach the classroom as before, says Travis Bristol [TC PhD ’14], a professor at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Education.

NYTimes.
1) Teaching Impeachment: 7 Ideas From Our Readers
2) The Machines Are Learning, and So Are the Students: Artificial intelligence is starting to take over repetitive tasks in classrooms, like grading, and is optimizing coursework and revolutionizing the preparation for college entrance exams.   The world will still need schools, classrooms and teachers to motivate students and to teach social skills, teamwork and soft subjects like art, music and sports. 
3) What Students Are Saying About How to Improve American Education   Give teachers more money and support. I have always been told “Don’t be a teacher, they don’t get paid hardly anything.” or “How do you expect to live off of a teachers salary, don’t go into that profession.” As a young teen I am being told these things, the future generation of potential teachers are being constantly discouraged because of the money they would be getting paid.

Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, and Equity (SCALE) and Pearson. Affirming the Validity and Reliability of edTPA  Response to “Assessing the Assessment: Evidence of Reliability and Validity in the edTPA,” published in the American Education Research Journal (AERJ).  

Washington Post. American University to offer full scholarships to 10 D.C. students   In 2018, the university launched a program for high school seniors who want to take college-level courses in its School of Education. And officials are designing a program that will offer full scholarships to students who are pursuing bachelor’s degrees in education and promise to return to D.C. Public Schools to teach for at least five years.

NEW YORK STATE

NYSED Office of Higher Education. December Newsletter
*New Deputy Commissioner for Higher Education
*Continuing Teacher and Leader Education (CTLE) and Teachers Who Mentor Teacher Candidates. The Board of Regents adopted a regulatory amendment that a teacher acting as a mentor to a teacher candidate (e.g., student teacher) may, at the discretion of the school district or BOCES, credit up to 25 clock hours toward his/her CTLE requirement in each five-year registration period.
*Recruiting Educators for Test Development Committees

Office of the Governor. S.5410 Sanders/ A.4538 Glick: Relates to the cumulative grade point average admission requirement for graduate-level teacher and educational leader programs.   Governor Cuomo vetoed legislation that would have provided higher education institutions with alternative criteria in determining admissibility into graduate-level teacher and education leadership programs He stated that the bill was not approved because he believes the current GPA requirement is a reasonable condition of admission to graduate-level teacher and education leadership programs.

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. My teachers mispronounced my name. Decades later, it still stings — and influences the way I coach educatorsThose moments speak to cultural insensitivity. And when white teachers are dismissive or derisive regarding students’ names, there is an overlay of racist implications. Educators don’t need to understand why a student has a certain name; they simply need to know why it’s important for them to say a student’s name properly.

EdSurge. How an Unplugged Approach to Computational Thinking Can Move Schools to Computer Science   Yet even though almost all K-12 classrooms have computers or tablets, most teachers aren’t trained to leverage computing education for rigorous learning. Teacher training programs aren’t yet making a dent: Very few, if any, training programs in the U.S. currently offer computing education as part of their teacher training, per one report.

QNS. DOE report finds that a record number of NYC students are receiving computer science education   Since the initiative launched, 1,900 teachers in 800 schools across the city have been trained in computer science through Computer Science for All. The number of students receiving CS education in the 2018-19 school year was 163,734…

SILive. Pilot program to help Staten Island teachers get free arts certification   These teachers receive free tuition and testing fees to support them in gaining their Supplemental Arts Certification from the College of Staten Island (CSI), Willowbrook, on an expedited timeline. The pilot comes as the administration continues to invest in arts teachers and focuses on increasing the number of full-time certified arts teachers in New York City schools.

Teaching Residents at Teachers College. Updated production list 2012-19: 17 peer-reviewed publications, 47 global conference presentations

The American Reporter. Teaching as an Act of Love [OpEd by J. Cowin TC MA ’89, EdD ‘92]  Investing in and providing encouragement to teacher candidates really models what effective teachers do in their own classrooms.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Dec. 9 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
The Guardian. New teachers caught in an ideological trap   The Conservatives’ framework for teacher training ignores recent theories of learning and offers inadequate preparation, write education experts. The next government must hit rewind

International Literacy Association. Advocating for Children’s Rights to Read: A manual for enacting the rights in classrooms, communities, and the world  3. ENSURE teacher preparation and professional development (PD) program requirements meet rigorous literacy standards.

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE. New Board Members for 2020

AACTE/SCALE. October-December 2019 edTPA Community Newsletter

American Educational Research Journal. Assessing the Assessment: Evidence of Reliability and Validity in the edTPA   We examined the technical documentation of edTPA and raise serious concerns about scoring design, the reliability of the assessments, and the consequential impact on decisions about edTPA candidates. In light of these findings, we argue that the proposed and actual uses of the edTPA are currently unwarranted on technical grounds.

Atlanta Journal Constitution. Low pay, underfunded schools and unrealistic expectations make teaching a tough sell: Education professor says teachers held accountable for factors out of their control   During student teaching, which I personally recall as one of the most challenging periods of my long academic career, today’s students must pass the EdTPA, which is a highly challenging performance-based test. All of these tests are evaluated by third parties, not schools of education. The state periodically raises the cut score for passing (which is an odd assessment practice, usually determining proficiency means identifying a performance level and sticking with it).

Chalkbeat. 7 questions asked and answered about Chicago’s new teacher diversity committee   A major and important shift is talking about the pipeline. Instead of thinking about recruitment and how we siphon off more folks in an existing pool of applicants, how can we target people who want to be teachers? How can we think about our students as future teachers, and what would that do to reimagine a pipeline? 

Education Week.
1) 10 Ways the Teaching Profession Has Changed Over the Past 10 Years   7. Fewer people are enrolling in teacher-preparation programs. Across the country, enrollment in teacher-preparation programs has dropped by one-third over the past decade. Program completion has declined as well.
2) Will the Science of Reading Catch On in Teacher Prep?   Teachers often leave preservice without clarity on cognitive science

InsideHigherEd. Required Pedagogy: Online conversation shines a spotlight on graduate programs that teach students how to teach — and those programs that don’t.   Davidson, distinguished professor of English at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center, recently asked her Twitter followers to share names of doctoral programs that actually require students to learn how to teach… The document includes dozens of programs thus far, and the ongoing Twitter conservation names scores more. Davidson says the next big step is to all ask programs that aren’t on the list why not. 

Learning Policy Institute. Promising Models for Preparing a Diverse, High-Quality Early Childhood Workforce   …many of the programs in which educators enroll do not focus specifically on preparing students for teaching, and many do not require supervised student teaching, despite broad acceptance of clinical practice as an element of high-quality teacher preparation. This report is designed for practitioners and policymakers and shares the practices of promising programs that recruit and prepare diverse cohorts of educators to teach in programs serving children birth to age 5…

Missoulian. Montana’s teacher shortage starting to affect bigger districts   Democrat Rep. Tyson Runningwolf from Browning introduced a proposal for a state-funded grow-your-own program — a research-based strategy that focuses on training people who already have roots in a community as teachers. But it carried a $500,000 price tag, and didn’t advance out of committee. 

NCTE. The Act of Reading: Instructional Foundations and Policy Guidelines   NCTE and its constituent groups have developed position statements on a variety of education issues vital to the teaching and learning of English language arts.

NYTimes.
1)  After 10 Years of Hopes and Setbacks, What Happened to the Common Core?   Jack Schneider, a professor of education at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, said the idea of shared, national standards made sense, but that it was “naïve” to expect them to make a big impact on student achievement without broader investments in early childhood education, teacher training and school integration. Ultimately, he added, “I would say that poverty alleviation programs are a better investment than standardized tests.”
2) Screens in the Classroom: Tool or Temptation?   Joseph Bavazzano, the director of Montclair State University’s ADP Center for Learning Technologies, works with college students who will become teachers. His classes use smartphones for video projects and for FaceTime interviews with students from partner universities overseas.

Phi Delta Kappan. Children left behind: Turning education research into film [by TC Prof. A. Stuart Wells, et al]   Over and over, we’ve seen policy makers design and implement school reform models that contradict the professional knowledge of our field. And at the same time, even as they ignore the research literature, they freely lend their ears to publishers, political advocacy groups, and other special interests who urge them to adopt teacher-proof curricula, create fast-track teacher-preparation programs, and disregard the empirical knowledge base about child development in favor of shiny new “data-driven” approaches to classroom management.

Reading Recovery Council of North America. Responding to the Reading Wars: Everyone’s Job   …Reading Recovery teachers are taught how to document students’ knowledge of phonemic awareness and phonics so they can explicitly teach an awareness of the sounds of English and the relationship to letters. Every lesson clearly attends to phonics instruction.

The74. New Education Doctorate Focused on Social-Emotional Learning Is One of the First of Its Kind as Experts Call for Better Teacher Training on the Whole Child   The program also fills a need in the social-emotional learning space: teacher training. A recent Aspen Institute report from researchers, educators, parents and students called for redesigned teacher preparation programs that focus on understanding trauma and teaching social, emotional and cognitive development skills.

Washington Post.
1) How good is your city’s pre-K program? Here’s a new report that grades 40 of them.   The benchmarks … are:
*Comprehensive, aligned and supported early learning and development standards  *Lead teacher has a bachelor’s degree  *Lead teacher has specialized training in pre-K  *Assistant teacher has a child development associate degree or equivalent…
2) Pete Buttigieg releases $1 trillion-plus plan for early-childhood and K-12 education   Double the proportion of new teachers and school leaders who are people of color in the next 10 years by, in part, establishing new guidelines for the use of federal funds aimed at recruiting, training and supporting teachers.
3) When exciting education results are in the news, be skeptical    If we could train teachers to be more effective at increasing student heights, we’d erase a lot of other inequities too… The paper is critiquing the idea that teacher quality can be measured by looking at their students’ test scores.

NEW YORK STATE
Chalkbeat. New York policymakers request $2 billion boost in education funding. But don’t hold your breath that the money will come through.   The Regents laid out other legislative requests including spending additional $8.1 million to improve early learning programs — mostly focused on better preparing teachers — and $15 million for school districts to “enhance” their curriculum and teaching supports for students learning English as a new language. 

NYSED Board of Regents
Board of Regents Advances 2020 Budget and Legislative Priorities and State Aid Request for the 2020-21 School Year
Expand the Provision of Certification Examination Fee Waiver Vouchers to assist economically disadvantaged educator candidates in paying for the examinations required for certification ($1.2M);
Expand the Teacher Opportunity Corps II program to increase the number of certified educators of color and to enhance teacher diversity In New York State ($3M);…

Board of Regents Appoints Shannon Tahoe as Interim Commissioner   William Murphy will serve as Deputy Commissioner for Higher Education. Dr. Murphy has served in various roles at the State Education Department over the past 15 years, most recently as the Director of Professional Education where he led teams responsible for evaluating higher education programs for professional licensure at public and private colleges and universities in New York State and internationally. In this role, Dr. Murphy has maintained relationships with academic accrediting bodies, federal and state education agencies and all sectors of higher education. Prior to joining the Department, Dr. Murphy held positions at the Borough of Manhattan Community College and the Workforce Development Institute. He earned a Ph.D. from the University at Albany, a master’s degree from Baruch College and a Bachelor of Arts degree from LeMoyne College. Dr. Murphy starts his position Dec. 10.

December Meeting; Higher Education Committee.
Amendment of Subparts 30-2 and 30-3 of the Rules of the Board of Regents Relating to Annual Professional Performance Reviews (APPR) of Classroom Teachers and Building Principals to Implement Chapter 59 of the Laws of 2019
Proposed Amendments to Sections 52.21…Relating to Professional Development Plans and Other Related Requirements for School Districts and BOCES
Appointments to the State Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching

Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching. September Meeting Minutes

 

NEW YORK CITY
Bklyner. For the Love of Calculus: Brooklyn Tech Teacher Raises the Bar   Bodner went on to Barnard College, graduating in 2004 with a Bachelor’s in Mathematics. She briefly worked in vector marketing, before signing up as a fellow for Math for America— an organization committed to improving teacher retention nationally by building and supporting communities of outstanding STEM teachers. She received her Masters’ in Math Education at Columbia Teachers’ College and taught at Pace High School for four years.

Chalkbeat. NYC education officials exploring dual language programs for 3-year-olds   While the biggest challenge is finding enough qualified teachers — a common roadblock for bilingual education— it’s still worthwhile, she said. 

NYTimes. A School Empowers a Single Mother of a Girl With Autism   Earlier this year, she spotted a flier for a free program at the education center that provided training to become a teaching assistant… These days, Ms. Terrero is studying for an exam to become a certified teaching assistant. After she takes it, she hopes to enroll in college and eventually become a special-education teacher.

Teachers CollegeTeaching Residents at Teachers College Induction | December-January I Holiday Edition Newsletter

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Nov. 11 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Education International. Iraq: Kurdistan’s education unionists take stock of obstacles to quality education system   The conference discussed several important topics, including: Teaching methods and ways to better prepare teachers professionally;…

International Council on Education for Teaching. CfP 64th Annual Conference Hosted By The Bath Spa University [23 – 25 June, 2020] 

The Guardian.
1) ‘I would burn in hell before returning’ – why British teachers are fleeing overseas  According to the National Foundation for Educational Research’s 2019 report into the teacher labour market, recruitment to teacher training in physics is more than 50% below the numbers required to maintain supply.
2) Will Boris Johnson’s present for hard-up teachers be enough?  The DfE forecasts secondary schools will need 15,000 more teachers as pupil numbers rise

World Bank Blog. Communities working together to end learning poverty   Ivo Ferriera Gomes, the Mayor of Sobral, Brazil …specifically pointed out the need for universities to participate as full community members noting that, in his experience, they do not yet prepare teachers effectively to teach the fundamentals of reading or basic math. Mr. Gomes further explained that teachers are playing a central role in creating the curriculum in Brazil, ensuring that those who will implement the solution are part of creating the solution.

UNITED STATES
AACTE. New AACTE Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Video Series Now Available

Chalkbeat.
1) Colorado Gov. Polis calls for 6,000 more state-funded preschool spots in 2020 budget request   The budget, which represents a 2.7% increase from this year, also includes:

  • $26 million to limit tuition increases at state higher ed institutions to 3%
  • $4.9 million for teacher scholarships
  • $500,000 to expand loan forgiveness programs for educators…

2) Lots more Latino students, not so many Latino teachers: Data reflect Illinois’ disparate changes   To accelerate hiring of more teachers of color, district leaders in some areas are investing in residencies and grow-your-own programs — but those cost money that many cash-strapped school systems don’t have.
3) The fate of DACA is in the hands of the Supreme Court. Here’s how its decision could affect students and teachers.   Many education groups filed friend-of-the-court briefs arguing the DACA program should continue, including the National Education Association, the nation’s largest teachers union, as well as Teach For America, dozens of colleges, and national associations representing superintendents, school boards, principals, and school counselors.

Education Week. What We’re Getting Wrong About Gifted Education   Educators must recognize that America’s talent pool is changing. If scholars and educators are to remain true to the purpose of producing the next generation of leaders, scholars, artists, and creative innovators, then they must explore ways of going beyond traditional metrics and norms.

InsideHigherEd. Supreme Court Takes Up DACA   They are in our undergraduate student population, some are in our medical schools and our law schools, some have graduated and are now serving as nurses, as teachers, as business owners throughout the economy… 

Teaching Tolerance. Teaching Thanksgiving in a Socially Responsible Way   Educators have an ethical obligation to teach accurately about Thanksgiving. Here are some online resources that can help. 

The Carolinian. Grant from U.S. Department of Education Allows Creation of New Teaching Program at UNCG   Students completing the program will earn a Masters of Arts in teaching, as well as a teaching certificate. However, after graduation, graduates must work in an assigned school in Surry or Rockingham county for three years. During this time, the program will continue to provide support and training for teachers.

The 74. DeVos’s First 1,000 Days: Whether Principled Advocate or ‘Flat-Out Disaster,’ the Survivor Secretary at the Education Department’s Helm Remains Uniquely Polarizing   “At least at the K-12 level, I think she’s been pretty ineffectual…She’s still kind of a symbol that people like to rally against, more than for. I don’t know that she’s had a lot of impact in terms of actual policy,” said Jeffrey Henig, a political science and education professor at Columbia’s Teachers College.

Washington Post.
1) Are teachers allowed to think — or expected to simply follow directions?   Teaching may be the only profession where you are required to get an advanced degree including a rigorous internship only to be treated like you have no idea what you’re doing.
2) Teaching impeaching: History comes to life in school as teachers seize on this historic moment. Here’s what some are doing — and how.

NEW YORK STATE
New York State Register. Open public comment period on Annual Professional Performance Reviews of Classroom Teachers and Building Principals  Data, views or arguments may be submitted to: Alexander Trikalinos, Office of Educator Quality and Professional Development, 89 Washington Avenue, 360EBA, Albany, NY 12234, (518) 486-2573, email:[email protected]

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. I made sure New York City’s pre-K classes were filled with play. Then I became a kindergarten teacher and the fun stopped. [by F. Akbar, TC EdD student]   I wished that my school administrators understood what I had seen: that play is far from frivolous; with training, educators can encourage discovery, experimentation, and creativity in kids; and laughter is the sound of children learning.

New York City Department of Education. Nominations open, Big Apple Teaching Awards

Teachers College.
1) edTPA Score Reports to date: 16 (100%) | PASS 13 (81%) | FAIL 2 (13%) | INCOMPLETE 1 (6%)
2) Teacher Preparation Open House  Tuesday, November 19, 2019 at 6:00 PM until 8:15 PM
3) Webinar | The Teaching Secrets of the Best Leaders  [Dec. 11, 5pm]