Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Sept. 21 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Daily News. Reinventing the concept of teacher education. What is the teacher development policy in Sri Lanka?… There is an ongoing debate in many parts of the world including European countries whether teacher education must be done by universities or professionals with the expertise in the field of education. Those who argue for the notion that it must be handled by the universities argue that teacher development is more academic and therefore it must be undertaken by the universities whereas others point out that it is the professional teachers in the field who can produce better teachers.

Phys,org. Research concludes that remote learning might not be a bad thingRemote and blended approaches to teacher education can be as effective as face-to-face approaches concludes a new study from the University of Birmingham. The new report by Dr. Thomas Perry from the University of Birmingham’s School of Education highlights how in March 2020 many teacher educators were forced to expand their remote learning provision and, in some cases, get to grips with remote teacher education for the first time.

UNESCO.
1) Survey of teachers in pre-primary education (STEPP): lessons from the implementation of the pilot study and field trial of international survey instrumentsGood teacher training and support, recognition and working conditions are proven to have positive impact on their capacity, motivation and practice with young children, and therefore constitute a critical policy issue (UNESCO, 2006; OECD, 2006). As a fundamental condition for guaranteeing quality education (UNESCO, 2016), increasing the supply of qualified teachers at all levels has been designated as one of ten global education targets (SDG target 4.c).
2) Towards inclusion in education: status, trends and challenges: the UNESCO Salamanca Statement 25 years on. Drawing on international research and on good practice related to equity and inclusion in education systems, the guide was developed with the advice and support of a group of international experts, including policy-makers, practitioners, researchers, teacher educators, curriculum developers and representatives of various international agencies.
3) Training manual on gender mainstreaming in teacher education in MyanmarThe manual is designed for the education policy makers and  planners for their better understanding in gender issues and assess how they affects gender inequality in teacher education and trainers.

 

UNITED STATES
Education Next. The Rise of Dual Credit: More and more students take college classes while still in high school. That is boosting degree attainment but also raising doubts about rigor.    For dual credit to continue to grow, and thrive, states and schools will need to find ways to train more teachers… They’ll also need to tackle the persistent racial, socioeconomic and geographic gaps that undermine the programs’ goals. Simply expanding the programs, without confronting the causes of those gaps, “could actually exacerbate them,” warned John Fink, a senior research associate at the Community College Research Center.

Education Week.
1) Before We Can Have Anti-Racist Classrooms, Teacher Preparation Needs an Overhaul.   I almost quit my teacher-preparation program midway through after observing a lesson in African American history taught by a young white educator in a Philadelphia high school…I was angry—and inspired to become what Bettina Love, a professor at the University of Georgia, calls an “abolitionist teacher.” Abolitionist teaching, Love says, is steeped in community organizing and informed by critical race theory—the understanding that race is a social construct used by white people for their own political and financial gain. 
2) How to Thwart ‘Zoombombing’ in the Remote Classroom: 10 Tips
3) Teachers Can Take on Anti-Racist Teaching. But Not Alone   “If [teachers] do not have a level of consciousness, they’re not going to talk about race because they don’t think it belongs” in the classroom, Sealey-Ruiz said. “Deciding we’re not talking about issues that impact millions of children . . . it’s unfair to the teachers and to the students who they’re teaching.”

NewsStar. Grambling State’s education department recruits Black men to teaching professionGrambling State University’s Black Male Teacher Initiative has joined forces with Clemson University’s nationally known Call Me MiSTER® program to aid in the recruiting and development of more Black men into the teaching profession.

WalletHub. 2020’s Best & Worst States for Teachers   Education jobs are among the lowest-paying occupations requiring a bachelor’s degree…

 

NEW YORK STATE
EdPrepMatters. Clinically Rich Programs in New York: Western New York Teacher Residency at Canisius College RichIn the fall of 2018, Canisius College developed the Western New York Teacher Residency Program (WNYTR).  The two-year, graduate level program is designed to prepare skilled teachers who are committed to teaching in Buffalo schools, especially schools with high poverty rates and few resources.

NYSATE/NYACTEWebinar: Dr. Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz of Teachers College, Columbia University will share anti-racist teaching and teacher education pedagogies [Thursday, October 1st 4pm].

NYSED. Statement of Interim Commissioner of Education & President of the University of the State of New York, Betty A. Rosa Assembly Committee on Higher Education & Assembly Subcommittee on Tuition Assistance Program   …the Teacher Opportunity Corps or TOC II program aims to increase the pipeline of individuals from historically underrepresented and economically disadvantaged populations who seek out teaching careers. This program also bolsters the retention of highly qualified individuals who value equity and reflect the diversity both inside and outside of our classrooms. TOC II serves approximately 550 undergraduate and graduate students through 16 colleges and universities who have partnered with more than 50 districts and/or schools.

NYSED Office of Curriculum and Instruction. Curriculum Bridge.  To help educators best prepare their students for the 2020-2021 school year, we have created documents listing all the Common Core Learning Standards in English Language Arts and Mathematics.

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat.
1) How a staffing crunch months in the making threw NYC’s school reopening plans into chaos    De Blasio pledged Thursday to fill staffing gaps by deploying 4,500 educators — including education department staffers with teaching licenses, substitutes, adjunct professors, and aspiring teachers pursuing education degrees. That number will only get the city through its first phase of reopening, said Mark Cannizzaro, president of the CSA.
2) NYC’s next ‘gargantuan’ school reopening task: hire thousands of new teachers in little over a weekStarting in August, Education Department officials touted a developing partnership with CUNY to recruit out-of-work adjuncts and graduating education students to fill vacant DOE positions… Mulgrew said only teachers with valid K-12 teaching licenses would be considered for city schools… One reliable teacher hiring pipeline, the New York City Teaching Fellows program — which trains and places nearly 500 new public school teachers each year — axed most of its 2020 class in May amid the city hiring freeze.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Sept. 14 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
ICET/MESH International Symposium. Teacher Experience and Practices in the time of Covid-19. Keynote speaker, Dr. Helen Woodley
*Thursday 8th October 3pm London time, repeated Thursday 15th October 2pm Tokyo time

The Guardian. Covid sees classroom experience slashed for 1,000 New Zealand student teachers: Teaching council says student teachers are not able to complete the requisite number of practical hours because of this year’s lockdowns.   More than a thousand student teachers in New Zealand will graduate this year without having completed their classroom practice requirements amid the disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

 

UNITED STATES
American Association of College for Teacher Education. The Longevity of Education Deans   The professional literature on the lifespan of education deans in their positions indicates that they serve in the role four to six years on average. We discovered a similar finding when we conducted a study through AACTE about education deans’ perceptions of essential characteristics for contributing to their success. 

Education Week. How COVID-19 Is Hurting Teacher Diversity   The Albany-area district was highlighted by the state education department and other groups for its efforts, which included recruiting a more diverse pool of educators, building relationships with historically Black colleges and universities, and creating affinity spaces to help educators of color feel supported once on staff.

Learning Policy Institute. Reinventing School in the COVID Era and Beyond.  9. Prepare educators for reinventing school. Investments in knowledgeable, skilled, and dedicated educators are key to every change discussed here. As shortages continue to loom, policymakers can support high-retention pathways like teacher and leader residencies, and Grow Your Own programs that bring in candidates well prepared for local contexts. 

New York Times. 19 Ways to Teach the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment: Activities to help students learn a more complete history of the women’s suffrage movement, make connections to current events and find ways to “finish the fight.”

Saturday Evening Post. Learning the Wrong Lesson about Education Reform: Does it make sense to think of teachers as factory workers and students as widgets on an assembly line? Why do we keep looking to the corporate model for education reform?   The total number of college graduates from Barron’s “highly competitive” or “most competitive” colleges is approximately 141,956 annually. If fully 10 percent entered into teaching for a two-year period before moving on to other careers, it would provide just 27,655 educators annually, 6 percent of the 438,914 teachers at work in the nation’s largest school districts (as of 2008)….

The 74. Education Policy ‘Ghost’ Carmel Martin Is Biden’s Most Important Staffer You’ve Never Heard Of.   The campaign was seen as a policy blueprint for a possible Hillary Clinton presidency, and convening it required finding a balance between groups on both sides of protracted disputes around teacher training and tenure.

Washington Post. Trump alleges ‘left-wing indoctrination’ in schools, says he will create national commission to push more ‘pro-American’ history.  The federal government has no power over the curriculum taught in local schools. Nonetheless, Trump said he would create a national commission to promote a “pro-American curriculum that celebrates the truth about our nation’s great history,” which he said would encourage educators to teach students about the “miracle of American history.”

 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED Board of Regents. September Meeting
1) COVID-19 Update: edTPA Safety Net Extended
New York State Candidates During the 2020-2021 Academic Year. Candidates who complete a student teaching or similar clinical experience during the 2020-2021 academic year while enrolled in a New York State educator preparation program (EPP) are eligible for the edTPA safety net. They must be on a list submitted by the EPP dean or dean’s designee to OTI verifying that they completed a student teaching or similar clinical experience during the 2020-2021 academic year. Those eligible may pass an Assessment of Teaching Skills – Written (ATS-W) (Elementary or Secondary) in lieu of passing the edTPA, provided that such ATS-W is taken by September 1, 2023.
2) Emergency COVID-19 Certificate.  Candidates who are seeking certain certificates and extensions may be eligible for the Emergency COVID-19 certificate, allowing them to work in New York State public schools or districts for one year while taking and passing the required exam(s) for the certificate or extension sought. Candidates must apply for the non-emergency certificate or extension sought on or before September 1, 2021 (e.g., Initial Childhood Education certificate). They must also apply for the Emergency COVID-19 certificate or extension, in the same title as the non-emergency certificate or extension (e.g., Childhood Education), on or before September 1, 2021.

NYSATE/NYACTE. Fall 2020 Webinars and Professional Learning Opportunities

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat.
1) 7 things we still don’t know about the school year in NYC, but really should   During a town hall with District 15 parents Wednesday night, Carranza said the city is working with the City University of New York to place adjunct professors and graduate students at schools. 
2) At some NYC schools, even in-person instruction will be solely onlineCity Council Education Chair Mark Treyger said the staffing crunch was particularly impacting high schools because they have more specific certification requirements for their teachers than do elementary schools.
3) Manhattan parents tap student teachers to lead free virtual pods.  A group of parents from Manhattan’s District 2 is chipping away at all those problems this fall, by connecting local public schools with teacher training programs to offer virtual pods for students most at risk of falling behind. With student teachers from a handful of local colleges — Pace, Columbia Teachers College, SUNY and Fordham — the initiative aims to provide live support for 1,000 children from three schools every day they are learning online.
4) NYC scales back the amount of live instruction students are guaranteed this fall   The Council of School Supervisors and Administrators, the union representing principals and other school leaders, estimated that some 10,000 additional teachers would be needed to comply with those guidelines. To help fill the gap, city leaders pulled credentialed educators from all corners of the education department — but only came up with another 2,000 people.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Sept. 7 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
International Education News. A View Of The Lockdown And School Closures From Chikodi Onyemerela And Branham Anamon In Ghana  The Connecting Classrooms programme in Ghana is known for its support to basic and secondary education systems and training of teachers and leaders. There are now more online resources for kids and content to support international learning as well. 

NGO-UNESCO Liaison Committee. The Voice of NGOs: “Global citizenship to spur inclusion and diversity”  [Webinar: 14 Sept.]

stuff. Teacher on spreading a love of te reo Māori  Today, Jones lectures at University of Canterbury’s (UC) School of Teacher Education and has taught te reo Māori to more than 2000 students who now work throughout New Zealand.

UNESCO Global Education Monitoring Report. Inclusion and education: ALL MEANS ALL   Lack of preparedness for inclusive teaching may result from gaps in teachers’ knowledge about pedagogies and other aspects of inclusion. Teacher education can address issues ranging from instructional techniques and classroom management to multi-professional teams and learning assessment methods.

World Economic Forum. Resetting the way we teach science is vital for all our futures  … radically transforming the way we teach and learn science and technology skills, from one-way content dissemination and memorization to personalized, self-directed learning. In a rapidly changing world, where we cannot predict what technologies will be ascendant in the future, we have to teach children to teach themselves. 

 

UNITED STATES
EdNote. Integrating the Arts to Ensure All Students Can Engage in Learning   …four policy actions that state leaders can consider to prepare educators for arts integration:
*Include arts-integration options in educator credentials. 
*Require arts integration in educator preparation for teachers of English language learners and special education. …

EdWeek. What a Trump Directive on ‘Anti-American Propaganda’ Means for the Ed. Dept.   Advocates for equity training in schools point to racial disparities in things like school discipline rates and educational outcomes. Helping teachers explore their own internal biases and experiences can help improve the school environment for all students..

Learning Policy Institute. The Federal Role in Advancing Education Equity and Excellence. * Pay for teachers’ preparation. * Expand high-quality pathways to teaching and school leadership for all candidates. * Increase investments in teacher and leader preparation programs at minority-serving institutions of higher education. 

NPR. ‘Learning Hubs’ Offer Free Child Care And Learning — But Only For A Lucky FewStates might need to issue emergency certifications to teaching personnel. It’s been proposed that some kind of national service program be created for unemployed youth and college students who are themselves taking online classes.

University Business. Equity in teacher education   If faculty have the resolve to change the implicit and institutional biases that lead to the underrepresentation of minority candidates, then we can move from performative social justice speak to actual, deep, critical reflection, action and social justice within teacher education programs.

Washington Post.
1) D.C.’s state superintendent for education, Hanseul Kang, to step down   Kang previously served as chief of staff for the Tennessee Department of Education and as a managing director of program in Teach for America’s D.C. regional office.
2) New College Board curriculum puts the African diaspora in the spotlight   The College Board collaborated on the project with the nonprofit African Diaspora Consortium and Columbia University’s Teachers College. Consortium president Kassie Freeman expects the curriculum to catch on quickly and “positively impact Black student outcomes.” 

 

NEW YORK STATE
Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities [CICU]. Mary Beth Labate to End Tenure as President of the Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities in December 2020.  Labate is CICU’s eighth president, serving in the role since Jan. 1, 2017. During her tenure, she strengthened connections among New York’s 100+ private, not-for-profit colleges and universities, as well as between the independent and public sectors of higher education in New York.

NYSED Board of Regents. Monday Sept. 14 Virtual Meeting
*Department staff will present revisions to the proposed amendment relating to the edTPA safety net and the unit of study requirement.
*Department staff will present revisions to the proposed amendments to provide additional regulatory flexibility relating to the application deadline for the Emergency COVID-19 Certificate.
*. . .

 

NEW YORK CITY
NYDaily News. NYC Education Dept.’s remote learning plan for some special education students flouts state law: advocates…on days the blended learning students are home, they’ll have just one teacher. That teacher should have a special education license, if possible, but it’s not a requirement in the guidance — meaning some kids with disabilities could spend several days a week working with a teacher who’s not certified to instruct them.

NYPost. DOE scrambles to fill teaching slots weeks before schools reopen   “Licensed teachers in the Absent Teacher Reserve have valuable classroom experience,” said DOE spokeswoman Danielle Filson. “We’re matching a small number of high-quality staff with no legal history from the Absent Teacher Reserve to schools with vacancies.”

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of Aug. 31 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Hindustan Times. A blueprint for teacher recruitment and training   The real impact on teacher training through the National Initiative for School Heads and Teachers Holistic Advancement/Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya National Mission on Teachers and Teaching could be carried on in these tough times as teachers were able to modify their lesson plans to conduct classes through digital means — such as Google Meet, Zoom, mobile phone, television, or radio broadcast.

ICET/MESH International Symposium. Teacher Experience and Practices in the time of Covid-19 [8th October 3pm London time; Thursday 15th October 2pm Tokyo time]

Tes [The Times Educational Supplement].
1) Ofsted: All initial teacher training ‘good’ or better  Figures for 2019-20 show all Ofsted teacher training inspections resulted in ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’ judgements for the first time
2) Should Rosenshine really be teachers’ definitive guide?   The renowned researcher’s 10 principles have permeated education, from teacher training courses to SLT observations. But although they have come to be seen as the definitive framework for “good teaching”, their context and evidence base are poorly understood…

The Straits Times [Singapore]. More avenues for progression and training for teachers in special education schools.   To get more practical experience, new Sped teachers will also go through a contract teaching stint that will last from six to 12 months, before undergoing a diploma course in special education (DISE) at NIE. Currently, there is no such practice stint for Sped teachers.

 

UNITED STATES
Chronicle. Martin Smithan assistant professor of practice and director of the Secondary Teacher Preparation Program at Duke University, has been named dean of academic affairs at the university’s Trinity College of Arts & Sciences.

EdPrepLab. Blog: Educator Preparation During COVID-19: Lessons Learned for FallDepending on the context, candidates continue to work with cooperating teachers, supporting lesson planning and implementation. They’re also taking on new roles such as working with small groups of students through remote settings, bringing knowledge of technology to bear in supporting virtual instruction, and making unique contributions even as they are learning and adapting to the new environment.

EdPrepMatters. Online Teaching Curricula in Ed PrepIf teacher candidates only experience one course with technology, and it is compartmentalized, then they are not being trained to use technology in context. With the recent challenges of online teaching during the pandemic, many educator preparation programs are now re-evaluating their curricula to integrate technology across the entire program, including courses on online teaching.

Hechinger Report. When schools reopen, we may not have enough teachers: Large numbers of teachers fear returning to the classroom, traditional solutions for filling vacancies are falling short and the pink slips on the horizon may lead to teacher shortages the likes of whi  …many protested that high barriers for entering teacher preparation programs made it harder for states to recruit and train new teachers — especially people of color who are more likely to have graduated from high schools that did not offer challenging opportunities like advanced placement courses, or even have enough certified teachers for the classroom. The lack of strong instruction can derail candidates later as they try to pass exams required for entry to certain teacher prep programs.

NYTimes.
1) A Teacher and Congresswoman Confronts School Reopenings: Representative Jahana Hayes, a former National Teacher of the Year, says that she has many concerns — and that parents need to make their voices heard.   …being an educator is a profession and people train a lifetime to do this, that you have to work hard and practice to get good at it and teaching remotely is a very different skill set.
2) Teaching Resources for Middle School Using The New York Times   Activities and lessons that can be employed by English, social studies, math and science educators, using Times photos, illustrations, graphs, videos, podcasts and articles.
3) The New York Times is available to high school students and teachers across the United States — freeFree digital access continues through September 1, 2021.

 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED Office of Higher Education. August Newsletter
*New USED Grant Program
*NYSTCE Tests Becoming Operational
*Fingerprinting for International Applicants
*edTPA Webinars
*Transitional B, Transitional C, And Internship Certificate Information

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. NYC’s reopening plans leave behind students who aren’t fluent in English, educators sayIn normal times, English learners receive extra support, depending on their needs, from co-teachers certified to teach English as a new language. These teachers also pull some children out of the classroom to give them extra language support individually or in small groups, but that seems to run counter to city health guidance, which says students should stay in their classrooms as much as possible… The department has offered no clear instructions on how schools without enough certified teachers will provide these services for the students who are fully remote.

New York Times. After 90 Years, Columbia Takes Slave Owner’s Name Off a Dorm: Samuel Bard was George Washington’s doctor and delivered Alexander Hamilton’s first son. He was also a “pretty significant slave owner.”   The move was the second one in recent weeks involving a Columbia-affiliated school shedding a name over racist or other offensive ideas and actions. Teachers College at Columbia University, which has its own board of trustees, voted in July to remove the name of Edward L. Thorndike, who promoted eugenics and sexist and anti-Semitic ideas, from a building there.

Teaching Residents @ Teachers College. Induction and Beyond September 2020 I Beginning of School Year Newsletter

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of August 24 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Global Partnership for Education. A new toolkit for gender equality in Asia-Pacific      There is a wide range of tools in the kit, covering all levels of the education system and key thematic areas including education in emergencies, gender-based violence, teacher education and strategic planning.

New York Times. CANADA LETTER: Will It Be Safe to Return to School?   Jason Ellis, a professor of education at the University of British Columbia, said everyone in education has been focused on the return since March… “You can’t space out the kids dramatically in schools because you would need to hire thousands of teachers, and they don’t exist,”…

Washington Post. At least 463 million students around the world have no access to digital or broadcast lessons, UNICEF report says   Among the recommendations in the report to ensure that students can continue to learn during and after the pandemic: *Support and train teachers and parents to effectively manage remote “virtual” classrooms and help children learn at home, at all levels of education including preprimary. 

 

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Virtual 2020 Washington Week [events Sept. 2-23]

AACTE/SCALE. August 2020 Newsletter Correction edTPA   Webinar Series: Completing edTPA in a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE)

Chalkbeat. Virtual charter schools see spike in interest as families grapple with the pandemic’s disruption   “Schools have hired new teachers and are providing rigorous start-of-school training and ongoing professional development in online teaching. Pearson has invested in providing schools with benchmark assessment tools that will allow them to identify learning gaps and put appropriate supports in place right away,”…

EdWeek.
1) Education a Key Issue in 2020 Race Even Before the Pandemic, Poll Finds   “For many decades, teacher educators were divided into two camps: those who favored whole language, characterized by the idea that reading is a natural process gained through exposure to authentic texts, and those who believed in systematic phonics instruction, which is the explicit teaching of sound-letter relationships,”
2) There Is Nothing Fragile About Racism   I called my mentor, Cynthia Dillard, a professor of teacher education and a colleague at the University of Georgia, to discuss her perspective on the idea of white fragility. She pointedly asked me: “Tina, what’s fragile about racism?” She was right. I have never known racism to be fragile… our current education system does not provide white students with anti-racist curriculum, language to call out racism, or teachers of color to learn from. After 13 years of schooling, many white students end their K-12 experience without ever having a teacher of color or being challenged to disrupt their learned racism.

Evolllution. Teacher Preparation and Licensure Requirements During COVID-19: Short-term Solutions with Long-term EffectsTeacher licensure executive orders and emergency regulations are reactions to a global pandemic. They highlight the need to examine teacher preparation across all states so that teacher licensure can move from a reactionary approach to one of preparedness. 

Hechinger Report. How do you teach antiracism to the youngest students?: Educators are finding tools to teach young kids about America’s racist past and present in age-appropriate ways.   Colleges are holding professional development online events for educators on how to reimagine education with racial justice in mind. And school districts are working to expand their curricula on race.

Learning Policy Institute. Restarting and Reinventing School: Learning in the Time of COVID and Beyond   Priority 9: Prepare Educators for Reinventing School Everything described here requires knowledgeable, skilled, dedicated educators; there is no other way to get the kind of teaching we need…

NJInsider. Ruiz Introduces Bill Package to Increase Teacher Diversity  The bills are:
*2825 would establish a loan redemption program for certain bilingual education teachers.
*2829 would establish the “Male Teachers of Color Mentorship Pilot Program” and appropriate $50,000 to fund the program.
*2830 would require educator preparation programs to report passing rates of students who complete certain tests and to disseminate information on test fee waiver programs. The bill would also permit the collection of a student fee for certain testing costs.
*2832 would allow students enrolled in an institution of higher education who have completed 30 semester-hour credits to serve as a substitute teacher.
*2833 would establish the teacher apprenticeship program.
*2834 would mandate training on culturally responsive teaching for all candidates for a teaching certification.
*2793 would require public institutions of higher education to take various actions to improve campus diversity. The bill also directs the Secretary of Higher Education to develop guidance regarding diversity in the faculty search and selection process.

NPR/WNYC. More Than 6,500 Teachers Have Had Unfair Student Debts Erased. … teachers have gotten a second chance to shed millions of dollars in unfair student debts, according to new data from the U.S. Department of Education. The educators had enrolled in the department’s troubled TEACH Grant program, which provides grants to help aspiring teachers pay for college. In exchange, they agreed to teach a high-need subject for four years in a school that serves low-income families.

Observer-Reporter. Few Black teachers in county, but they make a difference in the classroomHaving a Black teacher is also an important way to battle systemic racism, said Dr. Kenith Britt, a Trinity High School graduate who attended Washington School District and now serves as vice president of Marian University’s Klipsch Educators College in Indianapolis, which aims to help talented students of color to become teachers. “Systemic racism in our country can and should end. One way that can have a dramatic long-term impact is ensuring that white students have Black teachers, counselors and school leaders. 

NYTimes.
1) 80 Tips for Remote Learning From Seasoned Educators: Twenty-eight middle and high school teachers from The New York Times Teaching Project tell us how they’re navigating remote instruction this fall.
2) How White Progressives Undermine School Integration: A robust body of research shows the benefits of integration. Why, then, is it so hard to achieve?   But there are all sorts of barriers, including regulatory barriers such as teacher licensing exams in many states that disproportionately exclude people of color, even though there is little or no evidence that your score on those exams impacts the quality of instruction.
3) Pearson Splashes Out to Secure Former Disney Exec Bird as CEO  Although Bird does not have direct experience in education, he has been on Pearson’s board since May … He will be tasked with returning Pearson to growth after students in the United States stopped buying expensive text books…
4) Tracking Coronavirus Cases at U.S. Colleges and Universities

Teacher Education Podcast. Podcast #14.  Dr. Marquita Grenot-Scheyer, the Assistant Vice Chancellor of Educator Preparation and Public School Programs for Calif. State Univ.

Washington Post. A lesson on QAnon for teachers to use in class   The following lesson on QAnon can be used by teachers and anybody else who wants to have a conversation with young people about this conspiracy and how it has entered U.S. politics.

 

 

NEW YORK STATE
InsideHigherEd. Cuomo Adviser Malatras Voted In as SUNY Chancellor   Jim Malatras, president of SUNY Empire State College and longtime advisor to Governor Andrew Cuomo, will take up the chancellorship Aug. 31. His appointment prompted the SUNY Faculty Senate to vote no confidence in the system’s board.

 

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat.
1) Can ‘podding’ be made equitable? Yes, if parents work together: At our Brooklyn public school, parents are trying to create pandemic-safe child care options that everyone can access, but we need help.   We also called after-school programs, tutoring companies and summer camps to see if any could step in and provide trained staff to watch over our kids. They have been enthusiastic about jumping in to help, but the process for getting approval to run these programs outside of schools and licensed child care facilities is opaque. 
2) NYC says classroom teachers shouldn’t also have to teach remotely. Principals fear a staffing crunchLinda Chen, the education department’s chief academic officer, said the city is “concerned” about staffing issues but noted that anyone with a teaching license but who doesn’t typically work in a classroom could be pressed into service. 

Teachers College.
1) Amid COVID and Racial Injustice, Teachers Matter More than Ever: They anchor young people and create safe spaces in times of crisis  [by A. Sabic-El-Rayess TC Assoc. Prof. of Practice]   We need to invest more in our teachers to do this kind of work — in what we pay them, in their professional development, in how we mentor them to counter the racial, religious and ethnic stereotypes in our schools, in the resources we give them, and in how we esteem them for the courageous work they do. This also includes investing in and diversifying the teachers who teach teachers — meaning us — because we have the privilege of influencing teaching and education around the world through our own work…
2) The Public Good. COMING TOGETHER THROUGH STORIES   The Public Good developed this unit in order to support teachers as they work to make their curriculum more culturally responsive and sustaining while engaging their students in timely discussions.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of August 17 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
EcoFin Agency. The future of education in Africa: aligning education to Africa’s development goals   The school curricula in many African countries is outdated and does not reflect the major changes that have occurred during the past few decades in Africa and the rest of the world. The most visible consequence of this the poor quality of teachers on the continent. It also creates a cycle of poor learning which is not nearly helpful in the labor market. Students study outdated materials and eventually become teachers who educate young students using an outdated knowledge base.

NYTimes.
1) Una escuela temporal para los niños en busca de asilo: Los esfuerzos por educar a los niños en la frontera entre México y Estados Unidos se han visto frustrados por la pandemia. Fundó su propia organización sin fines de lucro, llamada International Activist Youth, y reclutó a otros estudiantes universitarios para ayudar a enseñar. 
2) Struggling With Lockdown, Schools Relearn Value of Older Tech: TV   Salvador Herencia, the technical secretary of Investment in Childhood, a civil society group, remembers listening to lessons on the radio as a child. He later worked for the national tele-education system, becoming part of a generation of educators and writers who contributed content as a way of extending schooling to poor Peruvians.

The Guardian. Australian tradies and teachers to be able to work across borders under new licence rules   Under the federal government’s latest red-tape reduction reforms, teachers, real estate agents, electricians and plumbers will be among the workers to have their occupational licences recognised Australia-wide. The move comes as unemployment is estimated to peak at 10% by the end of 2020. 

World Economic Forum. Resetting the way we teach science is vital for all our futures  …Our educational systems around the world were failing before COVID-19 and will continue to fall behind unless we change the way we teach and learn science.

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Moving Educator Preparation Forward During the Pandemic   …virtual reality technology offers access to field-tested classroom simulations, which provide evidence-based results for improving skills essential to working with human development. The collaboration provides teacher candidates an opportunity to complete clinical field experiences remotely without compromising their health and safety.

AACTE/SCALE.
1) edTPA®: June – July 2020 Newsletter
2) Webinars For edTPA Community [sign-in required]
Completing edTPA in Virtual Learning Environments webinars
edTPA Overview for Mentor and Cooperating Teachers webinar series
edTPA 101 and Task-by-Task Deep Dives webinar series

ATLAS/FAVSTE: A Tool and a Framework for Using Video in Teacher Preparation. A group of [science] teacher educators, working under the leadership of NBPTS, has been using the ATLAS (Accomplished Teaching, Learning and Schools) library as a tool and the FAVSTE (framework for Analyzing Video in Science Teacher Education) as a framework for maximizing the efficacy of video tasks. [incl. TC Sr. Lecturer J. Riccio]  Webinar Recording Day 1  Webinar Recording Day 2  ATLAS Resources

Chalkbeat. As families seek help with remote learning, some Newark schools offer an alternative to ‘learning pods’   Unlike private pods, the public versions are free and held in communal spaces such as libraries, recreation centers, and schools where students can take their online classes under the watchful eye of trained adults. 

Education Week.
1) An Open Letter to Well-Meaning White Teachers: Three ways to center Black progress in the classroom   1. Talk about systemic racism, not individual stories.  2. Talk about history in today’s context. 3. Talk about navigating and disrupting racism.
2) COVID-19’s Harm to Learning Is Inevitable. How Schools Can Start to Address It   For districts, the primary challenge to ensuring grade-level access for all students before turning to remediation is the cultural belief among some educators that they should “meet students where they are” in part by introducing some lower-level content. It’s an idea that permeates some reading programs (“just-right books”) and is implicitly a theme in the work of frequently taught theorists in teaching programs (“the zone of proximal development”).

Edutopia. Educators Turn to Bitmoji to Build Community and Engagement   Available through the Bitmoji app, these customizable, mini-me avatars have become stand-in teachers running virtual classrooms, enforcing rules and expectations, collecting assignments…

NYTimes. Pods, Microschools and Tutors: Can Parents Solve the Education Crisis on Their Own?  Instead of hiring teachers, some families are hoping to share the teaching among the parents… One of the dads, who owns a tech company, might teach coding, while Phillips, who is an editor, will teach reading and writing. The parents will ideally teach “whatever they’re good at, or know about or care about,” … If parents are hiring a teacher, they should make sure their credentials include a bachelor’s degree in education and that they meet state requirements said Meg Flanagan, an educational consultant… Consider also hiring a teacher who is Black, Indigenous or a person of color (B.I.P.O.C.), and asking them to implement a social justice-themed curriculum, said Nikolai Pizarro, an educator, author and mother in Atlanta..

Washington Post.
1) ‘A national crisis’: As coronavirus forces many schools online this fall, millions of disconnected students are being left behind   “My teachers can teach virtually, but my students can’t access it virtually,” Akins said. Instead, staffers in the high-poverty district delivered homework along with weekly grocery packages. “Now you’re relying on the parent to help teach, or the student to teach themselves.”
2) High school students are demanding schools teach more Black history, include more Black authors   What American children learn depends almost entirely on where they live, because every state has different requirements. Many teachers say they feel ill-prepared to teach about the subject, and textbooks often provide scant — or skewed — information… Unlike with subjects such as math and science, there is no nationally agreed upon set of standards for teaching social studies and history — each state is allowed to craft its own requirements

 

NEW YORK STATE
Albany Times-Union. Malatras named SUNY chancellor as faculty votes no confidence in board   Only once before — in 1999, when faculty felt that political appointees were meddling with teaching plans — have the faculty held no confidence votes against the board.

Inside Higher Ed. Governor’s Adviser Lined Up to Lead SUNY: The State University of New York Board of Trustees will likely forgo a national search for a new chancellor despite faculty opposition.   The State University of New York Board of Trustees is expected to appoint Jim Malatras as the system’s chancellor today, forgoing a national search to fill the open position with a key confidant of New York governor Andrew Cuomo.

New York Post.  SUNY Board set to appoint Cuomo right-hand Jim Malatras next chancellor: source. The 42-year-old, a key official on Cuomo’s COVID-19 task force who sat beside the governor during his daily press conferences, is set to be appointed chancellor of the State University of New York after the board of the state college system decided to scrap a national search to fill the post…Malatras earned his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from the State University at Albany. He also served a stint as chief of staff to former SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher.

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. De Blasio tells educators to step up and serve. They say the mayor is making that hard.   “Educators chose the profession because they love kids and they care about kids, and they know kids are suffering right now,” de Blasio said. “It’s time to say, public servants rise to the occasion and answer the call… With class sizes of roughly 10 students, the Manhattan principals said they need double or triple the number of teachers. Despite asking on a “near-daily basis for months” how to fill those gaps, they’ve received no guidance…

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of August 10 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Chalkbeat. England is launching a national tutoring program. Could the U.S. follow suit?   The English government has set aside “catch-up” funds for schools, including 350 million pounds — or about $450 million — for a national tutoring program targeted at students from low-income families. That money would fund recent college graduates employed by public schools and also existing tutoring organizations. 

Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE). Six Insights on Teacher Training   All four of the teacher training programmes that our panellists had studied are vast improvements over the typical in-service training model.

UKFIET. Remote teaching and learning during the COVID-19 disruption: experiences of ministries of education, teachers and teacher educators   …information derived from 52 school systems and over 9,600 English language teachers and teacher educators in more than 150 different countries.

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Back to School Series with ATLAS, ISTE and LPI   This August, join us for a “Back to School” webinar series … we will discuss how to apply what was learned this past spring to the upcoming academic year within higher educator preparation programs.

AACTE/LPI. Preparing educators during COVID-19: Lessons learned and new challenges for Fall 2020 Educator Preparation Laboratory (EdPrepLab) third in a series of four webinars on effective teacher and leader preparation. [Webinar Aug. 26]

Chalkbeat. Pods for all? Some districts and nonprofits are reimagining the remote learning trend    “People are hiring nannies and private tutors and college students to help care and guide their students during this period.”

Education Commission of the United States. Building a Diverse Teacher Workforce.  Efforts to recruit teachers from local communities — efforts known as grow-your-own programs— come in a variety of forms and can be geared toward recruiting both high school and college students…Supporting teacher residency programs is a somewhat less common approach states have taken to increasing the diversity of their pool of teacher candidates… Teacher candidates of color often face disproportionate barriers to entering the teaching profession.

Education Week.
1) Students in Special Education, English-Learners May Go Back to Class First. Here’s Why   Well before the coronavirus closed schools, studies determined that states struggled to develop remote learning policies for students with disabilities and that teachers were often not trained—and sometimes not willing—to use digital resources for English-learners, many of whom lack access to high-speed internet access and computers, laptops, or tablets.
2) Low Pay and High Risk: Being a Substitute Teacher During COVID-19   The national average unemployment rate is just over 10 percent, and some of those workers might be interested in subbing. For instance, she said, someone who was laid off from a STEM career would be a “wonderful candidate” to teach a science or math class.

Hechinger Report. The simple intervention that could lift kids out of ‘Covid slide’: Tutoring is more effective than other measures. But can it be expanded to support the kids who need it most?   A soon-to-be-published study by Slavin shows that teachers-in-training — along with trained, stipend-funded volunteers such as those working through AmeriCorps — are just as good at tutoring as certified educators.

InsideHigherEd. Kamala Harris Has Battled For-Profit Colleges  She also included in a plan on raising teachers’ salaries this spring additional money for HBCUs to address the underrepresentation of teachers of color.

NBC News. Amid a racial reckoning, teachers are reconsidering how history is taught  “There’s a decided push for us to really begin to re-examine our own biases and how we approach things in our classroom,” one educator said.

NYTimes. 60 Talented Educators Join The New York Times Teaching Project [incl. Nicholas Stone, Teachers College MA’14 Teaching of Social Studies]

 


NEW YORK STATE

Chalkbeat. NY Board of Regents taps its own chancellor to become interim education department commissioner

New York State Education Department. Board of Regents Appoints Dr. Betty A. Rosa as Interim Commissioner of Education   Dr. Rosa, who will resign her position as Chancellor of the Board of Regents, will assume this position with the Department on August 14… the search for the next permanent Commissioner of Education and President of the University of the State of New York has been extended. AGB Search has reposted the position and applications should be received by October 1, 2020.

Washington Post. Frances Allen, first woman to win Turing Award for contributions to computing, dies at 88   All this was heady stuff for a woman who seemed destined for a career as a high school math teacher in her hometown of Peru, N.Y… A high school teacher piqued her interest in math, and she decided to follow a similar career path. She received a teaching degree in 1954 from the New York State Teachers’ College in Albany (today SUNY at Albany). She took a job teaching math at her high school in Peru and felt she had found her calling.

 

NEW YORK CITY
Teachers College. Speaking Up: She lived in a country silenced by oppression. Now Erika Levy helps kids with speech disorders use “a big mouth and strong voice” — an approach that shapes her online teaching.   The speech comparison project, which helps students understand the speech acoustics and articulation that come into play in different languages and dialects, grew out of the period when Levy’s family lived in Vienna and Levy attended the American International School there.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of August 2 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
DutchNews.NL. Career switch: more people sign up for part-time teacher training   The number of people applying for part-time teacher training courses has gone up 20% this academic year…‘We need thousands more teachers and we have worked hard in the past year to make teacher training more flexible, so people can both study and work”…

International Council on Education for Teaching. Virtual Symposium; Call for Contributions
*Thursday, October 8, 2020 New York Time:  10 am-1 pm
*Thursday October 15, 2020 Tokyo Time:  2 pm-5 pm  

International Forum for Teacher Educator Development (InFo-TED).  ATEE webinar – registration form [8 Sept.]

NYTimes. A Visit to 5 of Patagonia’s Most Remote Schoolhouses. “Teachers who are in rural schools must enjoy living in extreme areas,” Ms. Almonacid said, adding that the management of multigrade classrooms — with students at a variety of levels and abilities — is a constant struggle.

 

 

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Day on the Hill: September 9-10 and September 15-16 [deadline Aug. 14]

Forbes. The Real Test We Need For Our Pandemics Of COVID-19 And Racial Injustice: Assessing Standardized Tests, Teacher Diversity, And Antiracist Education With José Luis Vilson   Diversifying the teacher profession is a key goal of EduColor, which you co-founded… I’d say that the problem with hiring and retaining teachers of color is also the problem with hiring and retaining teachers in general, but it becomes more acute with teachers of color because it’s interwoven with racism and other identity markers.

Hechinger Report.
1) Jobless college students are hired for summer jobs to mentor younger peers: Expanded coaching aims to keep incoming freshmen on track for college and prevent “Covid-19 slide” among elementary kids   Several programs aimed at keeping incoming freshmen on track for college and others that provide tutoring to elementary students are scooping up jobless undergraduates as mentors in relationships that benefit everyone.
2) Martin Luther King Jr.’s sister had it right when she ensured countless teachers of color got the training they need to give students the support they deserve   Farris is the older sister of Dr. King, a former professor of education, and someone who made her share of civil rights contributions as well. As my professor at Spelman College, Farris taught a class on the fundamentals of teaching reading, and she made sure that each of her students showed mastery of the constructs of the English language.

Medium. We Need Meaningful Training For Teachers, And We Need It Now A Reality-Based Teacher Training Model   Reality pedagogy is an approach to teaching and learning that focuses on teachers gaining an understanding of student realities and then using this information as the starting point for instruction

National Public Radio (NPR). Most Teachers Concerned About In-Person School; 2 In 3 Want To Start The Year Online   Despite all the difficulties, 70% of respondents tell NPR/Ipsos that if they could pick a career all over again, they would still choose to be teachers. 

Post and Courier. Winthrop University launches probe after professor’s anti-racism Facebook post angers critics   …social media post containing threats to out teachers who express anti-Black, pro-police sentiments. April Mustian, who focuses on special education, was scheduled this month to start at Winthrop, a public Rock Hill liberal arts college, when a Facebook post she wrote in June caught the eye of online conservative groups.

 

 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED Board of Regents. Virtual Meeting of August 11, 2020

NYSED Office of Higher Education.
1) GUIDANCE FOR NEW YORK STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES ON REOPENING FOR THE 2020-21 ACADEMIC YEAR
*Academics, Student Support Services, And Financial Aid
*Clinical Experiences And Examinations For Educator Certification
*Clinical Experiences And Examinations For Professional Licensing
*Opportunity Programs
*Postsecondary Students With Disabilities
*Data Reporting.
2) July Newsletter
*Guidance For New York State Colleges and Universities On Reopening
*Board of Regents July Items
*New York State Physical Education Learning Standards

 

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. This NYC teacher is determined to diversify computer science — and to help his school navigate a monumental loss   How and when did you decide to become a teacher? Most of my life I wanted to go into medicine. In my senior year of high school, I took a Future Educators of America elective course (mainly to get out of AP Calculus B), and I got to be a teacher assistant in a sophomore World History class with a teacher I really respected…. I think it was that experience that sowed the seeds that would blossom into my current career. 

New Yorker. What Will the First Day of School Look Like? Terrified teachers. Obstinate officials. Exhausted parents. Inside the city’s messy reopening battle.   Shouldn’t teachers, who signed up for a career in public service, be prepared to fulfill their obligations like other essential workers — the workers, in fact, who make virtually all other work possible?

Teachers College. Suspect Performance: Interest in vouchers and Education Savings Accounts appears to be waning, says TC’s Luis Huerta   … private schools are not subject to public regulation and thus not required to meet government standards on measures that range from testing performance to teacher accreditation to instruction for special education students.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of July 27 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
BBC News. Coronavirus: ‘Teacher training application rise’ during lockdown   In recent years numbers training to become secondary school teachers in Wales have fallen, with some schools struggling to fill posts. But figures from the higher education admissions service Ucas show numbers applying increased during the pandemic.

Content Duniya. NEP-2020: A needed change in 21st century Education System of India
*A new National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education, NCFTE 2021, will be formulated by the NCTE in consultation with NCERT.
*By 2030, the minimum degree qualification for teaching will be a 4-year integrated B.Ed. degree. Stringent action will be taken against substandard stand-alone Teacher Education Institutions (TEIs).

 

UNITED STATES
Chalkbeat.
1) Education department grants buoy remote instruction, even as Trump and DeVos push for campuses to reopen   The funds appear to be predominantly going to support remote instruction, including through virtual programs, teacher training, and technology access.
2) Indiana back-to-school teacher training: First, how are you?   Connor O’Day, who student taught in Wayne Township last spring during his final semester of college, will teach completely online this fall. He said he feels comfortable with the assignment now that he’s familiar with the district’s online system…. In addition to coordinating with his fellow sixth grade teachers, O’Day is seeking advice from people with experience teaching online.
3) I’m a teacher who survived COVID-19. I’m not ready to return to the classroom.   But it’s important to remember that our training as teachers focuses on providing students with an education, not all of the other roles we’ve taken on over the years. We are not child care workers or health care workers. The service we are trained to offer can and should be provided remotely until it is safe to enter school buildings.

EdWeek
1) Bitmoji Classrooms: Why Teachers Are Buzzing About Them
2) Map: Where Are Schools Open?

InsideHigherEd. New International Students Barred From All-Online Classes  New U.S. immigration guidance clarifies that new international students — unlike continuing international students — cannot come to American colleges to take a “100 percent” online course load this fall.

NYTimes.
1) $25,000 Pod Schools: How Well-to-Do Children Will Weather the Pandemic   But as part of its fee, the Hudson Lab School will help with the paperwork, mediate parent interaction with the teacher, and align pod curriculums to state standards.
2) More Than 6,300 Coronavirus Cases Have Been Linked to U.S. Colleges

Univ. of Washington, College of Ed. Geneva Gay: A legacy of elevating multicultural education to prominence   This July, Gay will retire following a 29-year career at the University of Washington College of Education in which her internationally-recognized scholarship has advanced the field in profound ways — while making clear the essential role of multicultural education in an increasingly diverse and interconnected world…“Culturally Responsive Teaching: Theory, Research, and Practice,” [pub. TC Press]…now in its third edition, includes examples of culturally diverse curriculum content, programs and techniques that exemplify culturally responsive teaching, and an emphasis on positive, action-driven possibilities in student-teacher relationships.

 

NEW YORK STATE
Chalkbeat. State’s interim education commissioner resigns, latest in string of departures   But on Friday, after this was story published, department spokesperson Emily DeSantis said the Regents’ search will now continue through at least Oct. 1, citing “paramount tasks ahead.” …The board will hold an executive session — a closed-door meeting — on July 31 to discuss “personnel matters,” DeSantis said, but she did not immediately say whether Regents would discuss Tahoe’s temporary replacement or the search for a permanent commissioner.

NYSED.
New York Schools Awarded Nearly $20 Million In Critical Federal Funding To Address Covid-19 Crisis   This will provide more than 190,000 teachers and educational leaders across this State with a combined 450,000 hours of professional support to implement effective practices in remote/hybrid teaching and learning which, in turn, will reach an estimated two million students. 

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. Most teaching will remain virtual this fall. Is NYC working fast enough to improve it?   To help handle students who will be learning remotely, city officials are planning to deploy teachers who are granted medical accommodations to work from home, as well as administrators across the system who have teaching licenses but are not currently working in schools.

Teachers College.
1) A Call for Reality Pedagogy: In The Atlantic, TC’s Christopher Emdin urges teachers to learn from students and embrace the chaos of the world beyond the classroom   …“the best teachers use their pedagogy as protest” to “disrupt teaching norms that harm vulnerable students.” They also view students as “co-teachers” who “can see what teachers have been trained to ignore.”
2) A Grant Getter Who Can Mentor Others: Carol Scheffner Hammer is TC’s first Vice Dean for Research   … boosting our track record of winning large, multimillion grants, not just among big centers like CCRC [Community College Research Center] and TR@TC [a federally funded residency program, now in its third five-year iteration, that prepares highly qualified teachers to teach in New York City public schools]

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of July 20 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
NYTimes. Years After 43 Mexican Students Vanished, a Victim’s Remains Are Found   The students were undergraduates at a teachers’ college in the town of Ayotzinapa in the southern state of Guerrero. The night they disappeared — Sept. 26, 2014 — they were in the process of commandeering buses to carry their peers to a demonstration in Mexico City, a time-honored tradition among students at their college

TESOL International Association. Online Teacher Education Resources in ELT: Blogs, Vlogs, and Podcasts

World Education Blog. How the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting contract teachers in sub-Saharan Africa Contract teachers receive a salary for the work they perform but do not receive the benefits that apply under public sector norms and standards, such as annual leave, pension or health insurance…Due to the teacher shortage, contract teachers have long been used to fill gaps in government schools, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where the school-age population has grown faster than countries’ capacity to train teachers.

 

UNITED STATES
Association of Teacher Educators2020 ATE Summer Online Conference [August 9-11]

American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
1) 2020 Advisory Committee Nominations   Nominate yourself or a colleague by August 7, 2020.
2) Developing Teachers as Critical Thinkers and Learners   … showcasing the work of educators, who have integrated teacher training via virtual reality (VR) simulation into their respective programs or are studying the various aspects of this modality. [mini-series: July 28, Aug. 4, Aug. 11]

Education Week. How to Balance In-Person and Remote Instruction   6. Do not spend too much time lecturing. Particularly for teachers who aren’t trained in delivering individualized instruction remotely, classroom time should be devoted to interacting with students, asking them questions, and constructing active experiences. 

New York Times. The Japanese-American Sculptor Who, Despite Persecution, Made Her Mark   One of her teachers handed her a catalog for the Art Institute of Chicago. She couldn’t afford it and instead chose the Milwaukee State Teachers College… During her third year of study, with the modest aim of becoming an art teacher, Asawa was told her race was a liability — as a Japanese-American, she would not be able to graduate with a teaching certificate, and without that, she would be unable to be hired as a teacher. 

Texas Tribune. As school reopenings falter, some Texas parents hire private teachers. Others can only afford to cross their fingers.  A whole new industry is springing up around the learning pod trend, with new organizations offering to connect pods of families with teachers or tutors. The Texas Learning Pod, for example, started by a University of Texas at Austin student, links families with college students, offering packages that range from $20 to $55 per hour depending on the number of children and grade levels. 

The Atlantic. When Teaching Is a Form of Protest: If educators want to respond to racism, they can start in their own classrooms. (by TC Prof. C. Emdin)  In the fall of 2001, armed with an undergraduate science degree and a rushed teaching credential, I stood in front of a sea of Black and brown middle-school students in the Bronx and announced that I was their teacher….Teachers need feedback from their students, who can see what teachers have been trained to ignore in their blind pursuit of a calm, quiet classroom.

The Teacher Education Podcast. #13: Building the Best STEM Educators with Dr. Anni Reinking

U.S. News. Tennessee State Using Grant for Special Ed Teachers Course   At least 70 teachers are scheduled to take an online course at Tennessee State University this fall to receive their special education endorsement as the school uses a $375,000 grant to help fill the need for more teachers in the field.

Washington Post.
1) The case for treating teachers around the world as essential front-line workers    Schools also need to have plans in place for future closures, and, to accomplish this, governments would do well to continue to invest in distance learning and in training teachers to use technologies that allow remote instruction.
2) The huge problem with education ‘pandemic pods’ suddenly popping up   The emails follow a common template: “I’m reaching out to see if you know of any recent early education graduates of Yale (with experience in teaching gifted children) in need of a position for the fall.” The mother, or in some cases the personal assistant, asks to be matched to a Yale student or recent graduate who can home-school her child this fall.

 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED Board of Regents.
1) July 24 meeting cancelled, rescheduled for July 31
2) Statement From Board of Regents Chancellor Betty A. Rosa and Vice Chancellor T. Andrew Brown   “The Board and I thank Interim Commissioner Tahoe for her leadership during this unprecedented time.” …The Board continues its search to find a permanent Commissioner and expects to appoint an Acting Commissioner before Ms. Tahoe departs on Aug. 13.

NYSED.
1) State Education Department Announces Third Class of My Brother’s Keeper Fellows   …since 2016, NYSED awarded $12 million in Teacher Opportunity Corps II (TOC II) Grants to increase the participation rate of historically underrepresented and economically disadvantaged individuals in teaching careers. 
2) Teacher Opportunity Corps II (TOC II) Virtual Summit [June 10 video archives] The purpose of  TOC II  is to increase the rate of historically underrepresented and economically disadvantaged individuals in teaching careers. TOC II programs incorporate strategies for teacher retention and best practice, such as mentors for new teachers and differentiated instructional techniques.

 

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. In financial crisis, NYC cut $707M from its education budget. These programs will feel the effects.   Other cuts include: *$4 million to pause the Teaching Fellows program, which trains and helps place future teachers.

The74. Report: Deck Stacked Against Young Children of Color, but Leaders Can ‘Seize This Moment’ to Improve Equity   Amy Stuart Wells, a sociologist and desegregation researcher at Teachers College… Implicit bias training, which many districts have pledged to implement since the protests over George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis, can be “one-off things,” especially if teachers think the training doesn’t apply to them, she said. “We get people to reimagine. What are the things you take for granted that maybe you should question?”