Categories
Teacher Education

Week of May 23 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Hungary Today. High Shortage and Workload with Low Salaries in Hungarian Public Education, EC Country Report Finds   …European Commission’s (EC) recently-released 2022 Country Report concluded… More than half of graduates from teacher-education courses end up in other careers due to the high workload and low pay of teachers, especially those at the beginning of their career.

Nation.Cymru
. Number of teachers in Welsh medium training has more than doubled   The annual data is for entrants onto Initial Teacher Education (ITE) courses that led to Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) in the academic year 2020/21. ITE courses that lead to QTS are the main route to becoming a teacher in Wales. The data covers student teachers at universities in Wales and also students from Wales studying across the UK.

UK.GOV. Teacher training to ensure excellent teachers in every classroom: Teacher training qualifications to be free for the next two academic years to upskill teachers across the country   The National Institute of Teaching will deliver high-quality Initial Teacher Training, Early Career Framework, National Professional Qualifications and National Leaders of Education development programmes and will generate and share cutting-edge research and insights into best practice, to improve the quality of teacher training nationwide.

UNESCO. Reimagining the future: developing teachers’ research and collaborative capacity through teacher education curriculum reform   …the International Commission on the Futures of Education has produced a critical report, Reimagining our futures together: A new social contract for education, which brings together inputs from students, teachers, governments and civil society… The report rightly recommends that teachers should more often work in teams, to better engage in knowledge production, reflection and research, and further suggests that teachers should participate in public debate, dialogue and education policy. But to achieve this, a deeper cross-national examination of teacher education curricula may be required. This could help to unpack what learning opportunities exist in teacher education programmes that can support teacher agency and solidarity as a new foundation across a number of different geographies.

UNITED STATES
Chalkbeat. Short on teachers, Michigan schools try to grow their own   Eighty-five years ago, Future Teachers of America chapters began cropping up in high schools to help inspire promising students to become teachers. The group morphed into the Future Educators Association in 1994 when the professional organization Phi Delta Kappa International took it over from the National Education Association. Seven years ago, Phi Delta Kappa relaunched the program under the name Educators Rising. Seventeen schools used the curriculum that first year. Now, 11,180 high schools across the country use it. 

EdPrepLab. Virtual Spring Convening 2022 [June 8 12 noon ET]

EdSource.
1) Most California teacher preparation programs flunk math instruction   Most California teacher preparation programs are failing to adequately train future teachers to teach elementary school level mathematics, according to a National Council on Teacher Quality report…
2) Will California teachers be ready to teach ethnic studies? Some say training needed   Currently, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing believes that high school teachers who are credentialed in social sciences are “sufficiently prepared to teach ethnic studies at the high school level,” said David DeGuire, director of the professional services division for the commission…

EdWeek. Using Virtual Teachers to Fill Vacancies: Smart Solution or Big Mistake?   The companies may have “good marketing,” but they are not necessarily good for students, said Samuel Abrams, a former teacher who is now the director of the National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education at Columbia University’s Teachers College… he sees these companies’ very existence as a “symptom … of a diseased school system” that refuses to pay teachers fairly, or improve their working conditions.

Hechinger Report. Teachers, deputized to fight the culture wars, are often reluctant to serve: New laws to limit instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity leave teachers confused, scared and uncertain of their relationships with some of their most vulnerable students
Jacqueline Rodriguez, vice president of research, policy and advocacy at the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education, said she worries the bills will discourage LGBTQ individuals from pursuing teaching careers by sending the message that “this is not the profession to pursue if you want to bring your whole self to work every day.” Enrollment in traditional teacher-preparation programs dropped 35 percent in the decade between 2008-09 and 2018-19, and fell further during the pandemic.

KNOX Radio. UND forms Office of Teacher Recruitment/Retention   In response to teacher shortages throughout North Dakota and the US…  UND has announced a plan to recruit and retain qualified teachers across the state. The University is launching the Office of Teacher Recruitment and Retention, which plans to be fully staffed by this summer… and starting new initiatives in the fall. The College of Education and Human Development will head the effort.

NYPost. Before they can learn ‘antiracism,’ kids need to be literate — & too many aren’t   In 2013, legislators in Mississippi provided funding to start training the state’s teachers in the science of reading… Other states, including Florida, Colorado, and Tennessee, are gesturing toward taking reading science more seriously.

Seattle Times. Learning Nisqually history starts with building a sense of place   Legislation passed in 2005 set precedent for the Since Time Immemorial curriculum, but only “recommended” it be taught… In 2018, the state Legislature passed a bill requiring teacher preparation programs to include this curriculum. But schools are still lagging… There are current efforts to revive field trips and educator training — halted by the pandemic — on the Nisqually reservation.

The Conversation. Want to expand computer science education? Educate more teachers   Expanding the number of computer science courses depends on educating even more teachers to teach them. But almost half of all U.S. states don’t have a plan to teach computer science at the K-12 level. There are eight states that lack certification for computer science teachers. And 27 states and the District of Columbia don’t offer incentives for higher education institutions to offer computer science teacher education programs…

Washington Post. For five years, they were co-teachers. Then they were gunned down: Fourth-grade teachers Irma Garcia and Eva Mireles were among the victims of the school massacre in Uvalde, Tex.   Both of the teachers were graduates of Sul Ross State University in Texas. Garcia earned a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies in 1997, a university spokeswoman said, and Mireles earned the same in 2003.

NEW YORK STATE
InsideHigherEd. The Prestige Name Game: New York State is allowing colleges in the state that meet certain criteria to formally call themselves universities. Several image-conscious institutions have done just that.   Universities are now defined as “including graduate programs registered in at least three of the following discipline areas: agriculture, biological sciences, business, education, engineering, fine arts, health professions, humanities, physical sciences and social sciences.”… William Murphy, New York State’s deputy commissioner of higher education…cited “increasing competition from institutions chartered in other states recruiting students in New York, nationally and internationally, where the term ‘college’ presents a significant marketing challenge.”

New York State Education Department. NYSED’s Office of Higher Education is seeking candidates for the following position in the Office of Teaching Initiatives: Director, Teacher Certification Location: Albany

Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching. April meeting minutes

NEW YORK CITY
Teachers College.
1) Aligning Entrepreneurship with Education In her pursuit of a doctorate, Kisha Howell (Ed.D. ’22, Curriculum and Teaching) forges new roads to innovative learning and inclusion   Empowering Black students, Howell’s research suggests, requires a transformation of what counts as teacher education. Despite the evidence to support the value of Mississippi’s Freedom Schools, to Howell, the model design by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and its practices have been historically undervalued in the development of education models to recenter marginalized people. “Teacher education is guided by academia,” explains Howell, “and as a result, the value of alternative spaces [such as the freedom schools] is often not appreciated.”
2) From Stage to School, English Language Teacher Audrey Yatdon Takes on His Most Challenging Role Yet: The actor turned educator is teaching English as a New Language in New York City high schools, as part of a new dream that applies old skills   Yatdon in early 2021 entered a program that prepares students to teach English as a New Language to immigrant children. Yatdon credits two TC programs for shaping him as an educator. The Teaching Residents at Teachers College offered an actor accustomed to one-day workshops “an opportunity to spend real time with students in real classrooms”… Meanwhile, for Yatdon, the Teacher Opportunity Corps II created a “space for conversation with other teachers of color at TC and throughout the city.”  The TR@TC and TOC graduate now looks forward to three additional years teaching English immigrant students in the NYC public schools as part of the state requirements. 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of May 16 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
European School Education Platform. Call for abstracts. The present call offers teachers and student teachers an opportunity to submit and have their works on action research published [Deadline May 31]

The Conversation [AUS]. Kids don’t vote but teachers and parents sure do – what are the parties offering on schools?    The Coalition is focusing its efforts on “raising school standards” and “improving the quality of teacher training”. This includes creating a one-year diploma for initial teacher education… It would also need schools to shoulder a greater responsibility for “on-the-job” training.

UK.GOV. Teacher bonuses and funding for schools to level up education   The premium follows the mathematics and physics teacher retention payments scheme piloted in the academic years 2019/2020 and 2020/21. It will be offered alongside the legacy early career payments that the government is continuing to pay to eligible teachers who started initial teacher training up until academic year 2020/21.

UNITED STATES
AP. Whitmer will propose retention bonuses for teachers, staff The governor also will request $600 million for educator recruitment — funding college scholarships for would-be educators, stipends for student teachers, training, and expanded programs to attract and keep teachers in their own communities.

Chalkbeat.
1) Michigan to spend $100 million to open new child care programs, tackle pain points   The initiative will be divided into four parts: … * $11.4 million to recruit, train and retain early educators, including a $4 million apprenticeship program for early educators; and * $14.3 million to speed up a licensing process that many providers say is onerous…
2) Michigan’s teacher shortage: What’s causing it, how serious is it, and what can be done?   In 2018, elementary teachers appeared on the U.S. Department of Education’s critical shortage area list for Michigan. That’s startling in a state that once produced so many teachers that the State Board of Education in 2005 stopped authorizing new college and university teacher preparation programs. 

Education Week.
1) An Unconventional Approach to Teacher Training [interview with R. Hess]  I connected with ASU Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College school dean Carole Basile to learn more about what they’re doing to rethink teaching and teacher preparation.
2) Are Aspiring Elementary Teachers Learning Enough Math?   Experts agree: Elementary teachers need to have a strong foundation in math. But teacher-preparation programs don’t always dedicate much time to elementary math coursework… Undergraduate programs that prepare aspiring elementary teachers now require an average of 19 percent more time for elementary math coursework than they did in 2014.
3) ‘Brown v. Board’ Decimated the Black Educator Pipeline. A Scholar Explains How   After the decision, tens of thousands of Black teachers and principals lost their jobs as white superintendents began to integrate schools but balked at putting Black educators in positions of authority over white teachers or students. Scholars say that the current lack of Black educators in the profession can be traced to the aftermath of the Brown decision… These are people who played by the rules—they were committed. They went North, they got their graduate education, they came back [and were] still underpaid. 
4) Make Teacher Prep Practical, Not Theoretical   (This is the final post in a three-part series.) Teacher-credentialing programs should provide candidates with a window into what equity vs. equality looks like in practice throughout their program of study, spending time looking at student profiles and portfolios and discussing instructional implications. This way, they will be better prepared for meeting the needs of diverse learners in both the field experience and student-teaching…

Hechinger Report. Here’s a solution for attracting more Black, Latino and Indigenous talent to STEM — Start early   First, teacher preparation and training programs should have a systematic focus on elementary school mathematical content instead of counting college-level math courses as content training.

National Center for Teacher Residencies. NCTR’s latest data collection and analysis indicates that the teacher residency movement is continuing to grow in scale and influence with NCTR’s Network residency programs graduating over 2,000 residents during the 2021-2022 academic year.   In spite of national trends that point to declines in enrollment in teacher preparation programs, there was an increase in the number, mean, and median enrollment of residents in NCTR Network residency programs for the 2021-2022 academic year.

New Jersey Herald. Why this Montclair teacher has kept an empty chair in his classroom for 52 years   …he graduated from Columbia Teachers College in 1974 and took a job teaching social studies in a mostly-Black Montclair middle school. It was important to him that he worked and raised a family in a place that was diverse. It was with him when he helped desegregate Montclair’s schools in the early 1970s, by transforming Glenfield Middle School into a magnet school for the arts that became a model for schools mandated to integrate by the landmark case Brown vs. Board of Education.

New Jersey Legislature. Assembly Bill A677 Unanimously passed the Assembly Education Committee.  Prohibits State Board of Education from requiring completion of performance-based assessment as condition of eligibility for certificate of eligibility with advanced standing.

Obama.org. The Voyager Scholarship: The Obama-Chesky Scholarship for Public Service   This scholarship gives college students financial aid to alleviate the burden of college debt, meaningful travel experiences to expand their horizons, and a network of mentors and leaders to support them… Public service can include careers in government, non-profit, or the private sector, ranging from school teachers, community organizers, social workers…

San Francisco Standard. Hayward Superintendent Picked to Lead SF Public Schools   Wayne, who is fluent in Spanish, started his educational career as an English teacher in 1997 in New York…. He holds an undergraduate degree in rhetoric and a doctorate in Educational Leadership from UC Berkeley. He holds two masters degrees—an masters of arts in English education and a masters of education in public school administration from Teachers College, Columbia University.

The Harvard Crimson
. Harvard Ends Undergraduate Teacher Education Program, Closing Off a Path to Teaching for College Students   The Harvard Undergraduate Teacher Education Program, which provided College students with teaching credentials prior to graduation, was recently ended as part of an effort to direct students interested in teaching to the Graduate School of Education’s new Teaching and Teacher Leadership master’s program. UTEP is the second undergraduate education program to be ended in recent years after the Harvard Teacher Fellows was rolled over into TTL last October.

Washington Post.
1) Some Md. parents argue a new health curriculum is unfit for young students   Parents in some Maryland districts are pushing back against their school boards’ efforts to adopt a state health framework that instructs educators how to teach about gender identity. The framework broadly outlines how to teach health topics by each grade level; its family life and sexuality guidelines have been the most controversial. 
2) States are mandating Asian American history lessons to stop bigotry   At the helm of this movement is longtime activist and lawyer Stewart Kwoh, leading the charge with his wife, Patricia, and their nonprofit Asian American Education Project. Alongside other teachers, they have created 53 lesson plans on subjects including racism and immigration, training more than 1,000 educators over the past year online. 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED News. Board of Regents Recognizes Winners of Vice Chancellor Emerita Adelaide L. Sanford Scholarships   Anderly and her family moved to the U.S. from the Dominican Republic when she was 10 years old. During the pandemic, she served as a peer tutor, helping other students struggling mentally and emotionally. Anderly plans to attend New York University as an English education major with a minor in Spanish and Psychology. Her goal is to become a teacher and to inspire students to create their own stories.

NYSED May Board of Regents Meeting
Proposed Amendments:
* Higher Education. Proposed Amendment… Relating to Extending Flexibilities for Incidental and Substitute Teaching
* Higher Education/K-12. Joint Proposed Amendment … Relating to Establishing the Students with Disabilities (All Grades) Certificate, Revising the Registration Requirements for Students with Disabilities (Birth-Grade 2) Programs, and Revising the Requirements for the Extension an
Supplemental Presentation: Proposed Students with Disabilities (All Grades) Certificate
Consent Agenda (Passed unanimously):
* Proposed Amendment… Relating to the Assessment Requirements for School District Leader (SDL) and School District Business Leader (SDBL) Program Completion, the Institutional Recommendation for Professional SDL and SDBL Certification, and the Institutional

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. I’m a high school history teacher. Here’s how I’m addressing the Buffalo massacre in class: As I prepared to discuss the racist violence, I couldn’t help but reflect on what conversations might be banned if I did not teach in New York City. [by S. B. Rosenberg TC MA ’02, Social Studies Ed.]   The U.S. is currently confronting multiple crises: COVID, gun violence, climate change, white supremacy, and systemic racism. It is educational malpractice not to provide the students with time and space to discuss these topics, including Saturday’s shooting. Laws meant to block or dissuade teachers from these conversations are insidious. How can we stop racist conspiracies like the Great Replacement from taking hold if young people can’t even rely on schools to learn the truth? 

New York Public Library. Culturally Responsive Fairy Tale Titles for the Classroom   In teaching nursery rhymes and fairy tales, choosing a culturally responsive title builds upon the knowledge that students have from their own upbringing and expands their understanding of the world around them. Use these titles in your classroom to facilitate a discussion about nursery rhymes and fairy tales and how they have been adapted and reimagined within different countries and cultures.

Teachers College. Grad Pia Maiti Crisscrossed the World to Get to Where She Wanted to Be – TC  … successful submission of an application to the Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program (FLTA), a professional development program that fosters cross-cultural understanding and learning by matching foreign educators with U.S. colleges and universities.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of May 9 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Chalkbeat. How should the U.S. teach about slavery? Here’s how other countries face their most shameful chapters.   Managing difficult emotions in the classroom requires preparation, particularly when many teachers have lived through the difficult history they are now teaching… In Canada, most teachers did not learn about residential schools when they were students, and huge efforts have been made to provide resources and training… In South Africa, teachers are explicitly trained to facilitate difficult conversations… Alan McCully, a history teacher educator in Northern Ireland, advocates for teacher training to include experiencing discomfort. “You cannot teach controversial history, difficult history, unless you have felt the discomfort of being taught that sort of history yourself,” he argues.

Korea Herald. Education Ministry earmarks W600b for ‘education recovery’: Ministry says omicron-driven virus peak at schools has passed   College students, enrolled in programs trained to be teachers, are to tutor elementary and middle school students, consulting them on learning, relationships and future prospects. 

National Center of Education and the Economy (NCEE). Getting Teachers in Classrooms Where They’re Needed Most: America’s most effective teachers are often not in the classrooms where they’re needed most. Some new research shows other countries face the same challenge.   Ideally, teachers are given rigorous preparation and then when they are placed in schools, they are provided extensive support that leverages the expertise of more experienced, senior teachers. They’re given time to work collaboratively and to intervene with struggling students to help them stay on track. When it comes to teacher assignment policies in particular, Japan, Singapore, and Shanghai offer good examples.

The Guardian. Number of male teachers in England at all-time low as pay levels drop: New research also raises alarm over lack of minority ethnic senior teaching staff    The Department for Education said: “The teaching workforce is becoming more diverse – with the latest data showing 9.3% of teachers reported being from an ethnic minority background, while 21% of postgraduate teacher trainees reported the same. This is compared with 14% of people in the general population, but we know there is further to go.

UNITED STATES

100Kin10. The 100Kin10 Project Team is seeking applicants to serve as faculty interested in implementing a re-imagined Intro to Education Course through a racial equity and social justice lens.   The team searched for introductory courses that take this approach, requested enrollment data from those courses, and created a recommended course syllabus to share with the broader community.

Chalkbeat.
1) Dyslexia bills pass Michigan Senate with bipartisan support   Key features of the bills:… The State Superintendent could no longer allow teacher preparation programs — typically colleges of education at public universities — to provide certification if they don’t offer instruction specific to dyslexia by 2023.
2) How four Philly students ended up working for their principal as teachers   All four attended Lamberton School, in the Overbrook Park section of West Philadelphia, when Travis was principal there between 2003 and 2014. And all of them were, in part, inspired by her to enter teaching, at a time when the profession is suffering a shortage nationwide, and the proportion of Black teachers in particular is on the decline.
3) Teacher prep programs can do better. Here’s how.   Teacher preparation programs should create opportunities for future teachers not only to observe classrooms but also to practice teaching throughout their preparation, in the same way that apprenticeships and medical residencies allow for intensive and sustained on-the-job training. Pre-service teachers should have opportunities to work with students and share leadership of classrooms from their freshman year of college. Mentor teachers must also be trained to support, coach, and gradually release responsibility to their student teachers. 

Courier-Journal. How abolishing useless state tests helps increase Kentucky’s pool of Black teachers    First, no studies indicate that the passing of Praxis ensures that teachers can positively impact K-12 student learning. There is little evidence that these exams predict teacher effectiveness… Second, since the reliance on teacher testing, there has been a steep decline in ethnic and racial minority candidates entering the teaching profession. This decline may be because Black, minority and poor students are more likely to fail the tests.

Deans for Impact. Fueling the fire of teaching desire: How tutoring is helping one future teacher   To ensure teacher-candidates were well-equipped to work as tutors, the district offered comprehensive training to them, including a full-day workshop on Tennessee’s new phonics program, Reading 360, which is being implemented in schools statewide. Instructional coaches from the district are also coaching the candidates throughout the process, grounding their support in the science of reading.

EdSurge. New Research Looks for Better Ways for Schools to Recruit Teachers of Color   …the Premiere 100 Program in Richland, two school districts in South Carolina, where superintendent Baron Davis has a goal to recruit a hundred black male teachers over three years. In his first year, he recruited 50. And he does it through this brotherhood. The Premiere 100 is a brotherhood. So when you join as an African American male teacher, you have a network, a very deep support network.

EdWeek. (Unlimited access to TC community via Gottesman site license)
1) Are Teacher-Prep Programs Out of Touch?   This is the first post in a three-part series…. PJ Caposey, Keisha Rembert, Stephanie Smith Budhai, Ph.D., Jasmine M. Wilhelm, and Jeffrey Wilhelm share their responses.
2) Teacher Prep Should Include Classroom-Culture Training   This is the second post in a three-part series… Andrew Sharos, Tairen McCollister, Kelsey Pycior, and Wendi Pillars continue the conversation.
3) The Rise of Tutoring and Where It Falls Short, in Charts   Research has found that paraprofessionals, college students and others, if properly trained and supported, can also be effective tutors. But few districts are going this route.
4) These 3 Latina Teachers Are Pushing the Boundaries of Computer Science Class   Standards are still being written and revised. Curricula are being developed. Teacher-training programs are slowly adjusting. But there’s plenty of excitement about the country’s diversifying computer science teaching force, which now includes a critical mass of Latina educators determined to make their mark.
5) Timeline: How Federal School Accountability Has Waxed and Waned   No Child Left Behind…which passed with overwhelming bipartisan support, on Jan. 8, 2002, replacing the previous law. The new law significantly toughens up accountability and introduces teacher-quality requirements.

Hechinger Report. Is recess a right or a privilege?: Despite evidence they shouldn’t, teachers still take away recess. Experts say it’s time to stop.
Training in better classroom management practices could also stem turnover: Many teachers say classroom management struggles are a primary reason for leaving the job.

Iowa Public Radio. English-only test for teaching license frustrates efforts by dual language schools to find teachers   Currently, a Praxis spokesperson said, the general test is only offered in English. Teachers who are studying to become world language educators are offered Praxis exams in the language they will be teaching. However, this test does not apply to dual language immersion teachers who will be educating on all subjects in a different language.

Kxii.comOklahoma removes requirement to pass OGET for future teachers   Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 3658 into effect that removes one of the testing requirements for Oklahoma teachers. Future candidates no longer have to pass the general education portion of the competency examination if they have a bachelor’s degree from an institution whose accreditation is recognized by Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education.

Los Alamos Reporter. PED Ends Requirement For Costly Tests For New Teachers    The Public Education Department is changing the way new teachers prove their fitness for the classroom, moving from a battery of expensive tests to a comprehensive portfolio students will prepare during their New Mexico’s college-based educator preparation programs… The portfolio assessment is an option, not a requirement. Praxis tests still will be available to those who prefer that pathway

NYTimes. Pre-K Is Powerful if Done Right. Here’s How.   A new study by the National Institute for Early Education Research finds that, because of the pandemic, a decade of progress was lost and the equity gap widened. “The pandemic confirmed that providing quality preschool programs that benefit children and families is not easy,” the report notes. Only five states had programs that met the institute’s list of 10 benchmarks of preschool quality, which include “college-educated teachers with specialized early childhood training, small classes that support individualization, and rigorous continuous improvement systems.”

Prism. Why New England school districts are struggling to retain diverse teachers: Teachers of color point to low wages, little institutional support, and a lack of commitment to diversity efforts   After southern schools integrated, Foster said, more than 38,000 Black teachers lost their jobs, and soon after, the idea of teacher testing came about. In the Northeast, Foster said, white teachers were often hired to teach by nearly all-white school district committees. “Those two things collided so that fewer Black people became teachers,” Foster said. “And because most of these school districts struggling to hire teachers don’t know the history, they’re asking themselves, ‘Where are the Black teachers?’—well, you fired them in the ’60s and ’70s!” 

San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD). SF Board of Education Selects Dr. Matt Wayne as SFUSD’s Finalist for Superintendent of Schools   Dr. Wayne, who is fluent in Spanish, began as an English Language Arts teacher in 1997 at The Riis Upper School at PS 126 in New York City…. Dr. Wayne earned … a Masters of Arts in English Education and a Masters of Education in Public School Administration from Teachers College, Columbia University.

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED.
1) Board of Regents May 2022 Meeting Agenda [5/16 & 17]
2) State Finalists Selected for 2022 Presidential Awards for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching incl. New York State Science Finalist (K-6) Shiela Lee, TC MA 2011

NYS Register. PROPOSED REGULATORY CHANGES: The April 27, 2022, NYS Register included proposed regulatory amendments regarding registration requirements for residency programs and revision to residency certificate requirements (see page 28 for this proposal). The public comment period is open and will expire on June 27. Submit comments to: William P. Murphy, Deputy Commissioner, NYS Education Department, Office of Higher Education, 89 Washington Avenue, Room 975 EBA, Albany, NY 12234, (518) 486-3633, email: [email protected] 

NEW YORK CITY

Chalkbeat. In a seismic shift, NYC to mandate elementary schools use phonics-based curriculum   Educators will also have more opportunities to be trained in evidence-based phonics programs, including Wilson and Orton-Gillingham… Changing a literacy curriculum is no easy process and can be challenging without buy-in from educators and solid training. 

NYTimes.
1) Kathy Boudin, Radical Imprisoned in a Fatal Robbery, Dies at 78   … she got a master’s degree in adult education and literacy from Norwich College while in prison and then, five years after her release, a doctorate from Teachers College at Columbia University. 
2) Mayor Adams Unveils Program to Address Dyslexia in N.Y.C. Schools   The mayor, who has dyslexia himself, would open two new schools, train teachers and direct schools to use phonics-based lessons as a way to address a literacy crisis in the city.

Teachers College. An Aspiring Hometown Hero for Newark Schools  Sociology & Education graduate Elijah Gardner looks to fulfilling a historic family promise to improving public education in Newark, New Jersey

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of May 2 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
AllAfrica. Ghana: Govt Committed to Quality Teacher Education   The government is committed in the promotion of quality teacher education in the country to make it more relevant and beneficial to society, Senior Presidential Advisor, Yaw Osafo Maafo, has stated. “In view of this everything possible will be done to improve infrastructure in our Colleges of Education as well as promote the welfare of teachers who are at the centre of education,” he assured.

Financial Express (India). NCTE invites applications for the four year Integrated Teacher Education Programme 2022-23   National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) under Ministry of Education (MoE) has invited online application for the four year Integrated Teacher Education Programmes (ITEP) for academic session 2023-24. Admission for ITEP will be carried out by the National Testing Agency (NTA) through the National Common Entrance Test (NCET). The four year ITEP will be available for all students who choose teaching as a profession after secondary, by choice. 

Manila Bulletin. Duterte signs Excellence in Teacher Education Act   Republic Act (RA) No. 11713, which Duterte signed on April 27, 2022, applies to teachers and school leaders in all public and private primary education institutions and all public and private technical education institutions (TEIs). The new law mandates the creation of Teacher Education Centers of Excellence (Teacher Education-COEs) in strategic places in every region of the country. These are public or private colleges, institutes, schools, or agencies that may exist by themselves or within a university or college, that are engaged in providing academic training…

The Guardian. UK faces childcare crisis as staff shortages force nurseries to close   “We used to have a lot of applicants when we advertised but nowadays we can’t attract the staff and those with the right qualifications aren’t coming through”

UNITED STATES
Chalkeat.
1) In Chicago, a new push to steer more young men of color into teaching   University of Illinois Chicago started a program for would-be male Black and Latino teachers named Call Me MISTER, which offers scholarships, mentoring and help with finding a job. In Chicago, the Thrive pilot has built on a district program called Teach Chicago Tomorrow, which supports high school students interested in education jobs more broadly. That program is among efforts the district credits for helping it increase the portion of Black and Latino new teacher hires from about 30% in 2019 to 45% last year.
2) Without state leadership, Michigan’s patchwork tutoring programs struggle to address learning loss   At least a dozen states and many large city districts have created large-scale tutoring efforts … Tennessee is spending $200 million to hire and train tutors and provide matching grants to districts. New Mexico plans to spend $62 million to train tutors and support districts in developing programs. Louisiana used COVID funds to create an extensive series of educator trainings and technical guidance on tutoring.

Education Trust. Addressing Teacher Shortages in the Short- & Long-Term   Below are some short- and long-term actions that state and district leaders can take to address these shortages and support the most underserved students and teachers to prevent deeper, persistent inequities.

Education Week.
1) The Pool of Future Teachers Is Dwindling. Can It Be Refilled?   Almost half of district leaders and principals labeled their staff shortages as “severe” or “very severe” in a fall 2021 survey by the EdWeek Research Center. AACTE data also revealed that, over the past 50 years, the number of education degrees awarded plunged from 200,000 annually in the 1970s to fewer than 90,000 in 2019. 
2) Why These Aspiring Teachers Are Eager to Enter a Beleaguered Profession   Education Week spoke to four students at NC State University’s college of education about why they’re choosing teaching, despite all the challenges and stressors. They say they are well-aware that job satisfaction among teachers has plummeted over the years, and that low teacher salaries are discouraging—but they’re still excited to pursue their dream job.

KBTX
. Could a new certification exam help Texas’ teacher shortage?   The people who want to move to the edTPA exam argue that the PPR exam is too easy to pass. While the edTPA exam may be more difficult to pass, proponents believe it could actually be the answer to the teacher shortage in Texas. Lopez explained that with the edTPA exam you “can kind of analyze what a teacher is good at, what they might be lacking in some aspects, so that way down the line, they don’t feel overwhelmed and leave the profession.”

Los Angeles Times. USC education school omitted key data for U.S. News & World Report rankings, report says    The report describes a practice that lasted for many years under Dean Karen Symms Gallagher, who oversaw the Rossier School from 2000 to 2020, and continued under Dean Pedro Noguera, who started in 2020. Both deans signed off on the misreporting, though Noguera in late 2021 alerted the school’s provost to a possible problem.

NEA News. Meet Kurt Russell, the 2022 National Teacher of the Year: The Ohio history teacher aims to bring attention and awareness to the importance of a diverse teaching force and an inclusive curriculum that empowers every student.   Russell was born and raised in Oberlin and attended the same school where he now teaches. He was inspired to become a teacher by Larry Thomas, the first Black teacher he ever had. It was a revelation, he recalled, to actually see a teacher who looked like him. Thomas regularly attended student events, always dressed well, and was respected in school and in the community—a model Russell has successfully emulated throughout his career.

Next Pittsburg. Pittsburgh-area student teachers help close pandemic learning gaps   “[PALS] doesn’t only provide help with learning loss with children, it’s also helping to support our preservice teachers to get the hours they need to become a certified teacher,” said Tanya Baronti, apprenticeship coaching coordinator in the education and liberal studies department at Carlow University. Baronti said the state eased its requirement on hours of service for student teachers during the pandemic to allow them to graduate. 

NPR. The education culture war is raging. But for most parents, it’s background noise   …when you zoom in closer, parents seem to like their own kids’ school, and they like their kids’ teachers even more… 88% of respondents agree “my child’s teacher(s) have done the best they could, given the circumstances around the pandemic.” And 82% agree “my child’s school has handled the pandemic well.”

Santa Fe New Mexican.
1) New Mexico governor announces expansion of free child care   Noble and Freeman were most excited about a seemingly smaller investment they believe will make the biggest difference: a stipend for people pursuing degrees in early childhood education at public colleges and universities in New Mexico. That program will take effect May 5. The stipends will provide $2,000 a semester and replace an existing scholarship program run through the Early Childhood Education and Care Department.
2) Public Education Department to eliminate exam requirements for teachers in training   Officials with the state Public Education Department announced Friday they are planning to overhaul the teacher licensing system, scrapping a requirement for the long and costly tests and offering instead a portfolio-based option for teachers in training to demonstrate competence… Currently, the state uses a series of exams through a company called Praxis. 

Texas Tribune. Texas moves one step closer to adopting a new, more rigorous teacher certification exam .   The 11-member State Board for Educator Certification, which oversees the preparation, certification and standards of conduct of public school educators, adopted the Educative Teacher Performance Assessment, also known as the edTPA exam, in a 8-to-1 vote… The State Board of Education must still approve the test before it’s officially adopted for new Texas teachers. The board is expected to consider the matter in June.

The74. Bipartisan Bills in Michigan Would Help Provide Dyslexia Screenings For Kids & Teacher Training    Senate Bill 381, introduced by Sen. Lana Theis (R-Brighton), would mandate teacher preparation institutions to include instruction on the characteristics of dyslexia, the consequences of dyslexia, evidence-based interventions and accommodations for students with dyslexia… Senate Bill 382, introduced by Sen. Dayna Polehanki (D-Livonia), would mandate that new teacher’s certificates only be granted to those who have received instruction on the characteristics of dyslexia, secondary consequences of dyslexia, effective interventions, accommodations for those with dyslexia…

Washington Post. A brief lesson on Roe v. Wade

NEW YORK STATE
New York State Education Dept.
1) Gale OneFile: Educator’s Reference Complete is a fantastic resource for educators and education students.
2) State Education Department Announces Fifth Class of My Brother’s Keeper Fellows   More than $18.45 million in Teacher Opportunity Corps II (TOC II) grants have been awarded to 23 colleges and universities since 2016. The TOC II statewide enrollment as of August 2021 was 647, with TOC II institutions reporting 624 graduates of the program. Eligible applicants are New York State public and independent degree-granting colleges and universities with a teacher preparation (undergraduate or graduate) program approved by NYSED.

NEW YORK CITY
Gothamist. Mayor Adams proposes $7.4 million plan for public schools to address dyslexia   Families and advocacy groups welcomed the news, but say that the city needs to commit to training all teachers across the system on strong, proven literacy strategies that benefit students with dyslexia and other reading challenges, such as training more teachers in evidence-based interventions. 

NYPost. NYC DOE falls short of preparing students with reading skills: advocates   Typically, schools stop prioritizing reading after the early elementary grades, even though many students don’t master the subject before third grade, according to the report. Advocates for Children also found a lack of consistency in reading instruction and teacher trainings across neighborhoods, schools and classrooms.

Teaching Residents at Teachers College. Induction and Beyond. May 2022 Educator Resources.  Special Announcements; Educator Grant Opportunities; Induction Highlights; more…

 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of April 25 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Concordia University of Edmonton. CUE welcomes Dr. Brent Bradford as Dean of EducationThe office of the Vice-President Academic & Provost is pleased to announce that Dr. Brent Bradford has been named as the new Dean of Education. He will assume this new role on June 1, 2022.

Humana People to People India (HPPI). Necessary Teacher Training (NeTT) Programme in Ranchi, Jharkhand   HPPI’s Necessary Teacher Training (NeTT) Program aims to develop self-motivated teachers who can adopt a children-centric pedagogy in the classrooms. The program is aligned with the vision presented in the National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education (NCFTE) 2009 and National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.

The Independent. Seychelles hunts for Ugandan teachers to revamp its education sector   The government of Seychelles is currently looking for teachers from Uganda as part of its bid to revamp the sector and remove instructors who do not possess the approved teaching qualifications. The sought after teachers in the fields of Physics, Chemistry, Biology, English, and design technology must have a minimum of a Bachelor’s Degree in Education from a recognized institution or university, a Postgraduate Certificate in Education, and a working experience of at least three years.

UNITED STATES
AACTE.
1) Deadline Extended for Nominations to AACTE Board and Advisory Committees   AACTE is extending the nomination deadline to serve on the AACTE Board of Directors or a programmatic advisory committee to May 15.
2) Perspectives of Faculty, Teacher Candidates, and Teachers on EPP Entrance Exams   The AACTE Consortium for Research-Based and Equitable Assessments (CREA) is examining how cut scores are being set for these assessments and its impact on aspiring teachers and the teacher-of-color pipeline… Four key themes emerged from the focus groups: Test Preparation; Cost of Test; Relevance of Test; Stress of Testing

Brooklyn Public Library. Books Unbanned. Brooklyn Public Library is adding our voice to those fighting for the rights of teens nationwide to read what they like, discover themselves, and form their own opinions. Inspired by the American Library Association’s Freedom to Read Statement, BPL’s Books Unbanned initiative is a response to an increasingly coordinated and effective effort to remove books tackling a wide range of topics from library shelves.

Chalkbeat.
1) Colorado refugee women earn early childhood degrees, bring special skills to the classroom   The Village Institute aims to serve refugee families from a holistic approach, providing housing, language resources, childcare, job readiness, and mental health services, all under one roof. That includes a pipeline where refugee women, including Gasimba and Harriet Kwitegetse, can go through education and certification courses to help advance their careers. In this case, the training put Gasimba and Kwitegetse directly back into serving other refugee families by leading a preschool class. 
2) What people say when they hear I’m becoming a teacher: I’m an education major. Here’s what draws me to a profession many are leaving.   In my IUPUI classes, I’ve learned about educational inequities, past and present; the importance of choosing books with diverse authors and stories; and the benefits of building strong relationships with students and their families. These lessons reinforced my decision to earn a college degree and helped me understand what it means to be an educator in the 21st century.

Education Week
.
1) 3 Counterintuitive Findings About Motivation That Teachers Can Use   At the annual American Educational Research Association conference here, global and national motivation experts from education, business, and other fields discussed what instructional approaches and student characteristics make the biggest difference in academic drive.
2) Nation’s Top Teachers Bask in White House Spotlight   Jill Biden, who teaches English at a community college in Virginia, urged people to go into teaching to make a difference. “We need more teachers,” she said, emphasizing each word. “I can’t promise that it will be an easy job—right? But I can promise that it will fill your life with meaning and purpose and joy.”

Hechinger Report.
1) ‘More than a warm body’: Schools try long-term solutions to substitute teacher shortage   … Central Falls School District in Rhode Island…  launched a teaching fellowship program to provide yearlong contracts to about 30 aspiring teachers who are placed in its six schools. They can earn a higher daily rate than traditional substitutes, or put the extra amount toward health benefits. The district also provides individual coaching for the fellows and pays them a stipend to attend after-school training… Seattle Public Schools has also tried to use substitute teaching as a way to both fill immediate needs and train future teachers… teachers-in-training take night and weekend classes at local colleges or universities to study for their certification and a guaranteed teaching placement in the city’s schools. In the meantime, they serve as substitutes…
2) The child care worker shortage is reaching crisis proportions nationally. Could Milwaukee provide the answer?   To spark interest in early childhood careers among a younger generation, the dual enrollment initiative was created as a partnership between local high schools, MATC, the state Department of Workforce Development and Next Door, a Milwaukee-based early childhood provider and nonprofit… Nationwide, apprenticeship models have become a popular route for early educators, especially as a way to get more people through training and into classrooms while earning an income.
3) What do classroom conversations about race, identity and history really look like?: Young people and educators in Alabama, Texas, Washington and Virginia talk about how they are navigating issues ensnared in the culture wars   By the time she becomes a teacher, Gloria Zelaya hopes, the furor over teaching history will have died down… Zelaya is scheduled to graduate from George Wythe in June. She’s planning to study early childhood education at a local community college with the goal of returning to the Richmond public school system. “If this is going on right now, what happens in four years when I’m a teacher?” said Zelaya of the crackdown on teaching “divisive” topics. “Will I not be able to teach what I was taught? It hits on different levels.”

JD Supra. Latest Developments from the Connecticut General Assembly: The Education Committee Has Spoken    Here is a summary of these bills (which now await action by the full General Assembly)… PRESERVICE PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT FOR TEACHER PREPARATION PROGRAMS: H.B. No. 5286 (“An Act Concerning The Development Of A New Preservice Performance Assessment For Teacher Preparation Programs”) would cease the state-wide implementation of the preservice performance assessment “edTPA” on July 1, 2024 and instead create a new state-wide preservice performance assessment for teacher preparation programs offered in our state’s institutions of higher education. 

NCTQ. In gratitude – A final message from Kate Walsh   At the end of this week, I will be stepping down as NCTQ President… Without discounting the work NCTQ has done with states’ teacher policies, much of it forged by my former colleague Sandi Jacobs, I believe our work on teacher preparation will ultimately serve as NCTQ’s greatest contribution. 

New York Times. A College Fights ‘Leftist Academics’ by Expanding Into Charter Schools: Hillsdale College is building a national charter school network. Tennessee invited the college to start 50 of them, using public funds.   …in a speech last year to Hillsdale supporters in Tennessee, Dr. Arnn outlined his vision for expansion — including plans for a new master’s program to train teachers in classical education, a home-school division, online students and education centers.

Texas Tribune.
1) Amid a teacher shortage, some Texas educators are losing their licenses for quitting during the school year: The policy sidelines educators, often for two school years, at a time when districts are already struggling to keep teachers in the classrooms.   Teachers who opt to leave in the middle of a school year can be reported to the state, and the State Board for Educator Certification can either suspend or revoke a teacher’s certification. In most cases, teachers receive a one-year suspension of their certification.
2) Facing a teacher shortage, Texas considers a more rigorous teacher certification exam: Two states have dropped the Educative Teacher Performance Assessment, and three others passed on it or want it gone.   On Friday, the 11-member State Board for Educator Certification will vote on whether to adopt the Educative Teacher Performance Assessment, also known as the edTPA exam… If approved, the move would mean ditching the old Pedagogy and Professional Responsibilities exam, a test of 100 multiple choice questions that has been in use since 2002.

Washington Post. Pandemic erased a decade of progress for public pre-K programs, report finds   …only five states — Alabama, Hawaii, Michigan, Mississippi and Rhode Island — had programs that met all 10 benchmarks for minimum quality standards to support preschool quality, including college-educated teachers with specialized early childhood training, small classes that support individualization… Florida requires little more than a high school diploma for teachers.

WWBT.  Virginia schools look to fill over a thousand teacher vacancies   Schools are filling these open positions by hiring individuals who carry provisional licenses, according to Hoffman. The licenses allow individuals to start teaching without completing teacher preparation programs, according to Hoffman. They must obtain full licensure requirements before the provisional license expires. However, these individuals have significant attrition rates, according to Hoffman. “Recruiting pools of people and making it easier for them to enter doesn’t actually solve the crisis,” Hoffman said. “I equate it to filling a leaky bucket.”

NEW YORK STATE
New York Attorney General. Attorney General James Secures Student Debt Relief for Thousands of New Yorkers  New York Attorney General Letitia James today secured student debt relief for thousands of New York borrowers whose federal loans were allegedly mismanaged by the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA)… PHEAA is required to audit thousands of accounts to identify errors that may have caused borrowers to miss out on benefits, such as income-driven repayment (IDR) plans or debt forgiveness for eligible borrowers under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. 

NYSED Office of Higher Education. Educator Preparation Newsletter April 2022.
*Board Of Regents April Items: Residency Programs and Certificate; Teacher Performance Assessment; General Education Core in Liberal Arts and Sciences Requirement
* Distance Education Flexibility
* Supporting Effective Educator Development (Seed) Program Award Application

NYS Register: Open Public Comments accepted until May 2, 2022.
Submit comments to:  Dr. William P. Murphy, Deputy Commissioner, NYS Education Department, Office of Higher Education, 89 Washington Avenue, Room 975 EBA, Albany, NY 12234, (518)473-3781, email: [email protected]
* Changes to Content Core Requirement in Registered Teacher Preparation Programs and the Individual Evaluation Pathway to Certification for Candidates Who Are Seeking an Additional Science Certificate
* Establishment of a NEW Literacy (All Grades) Certificate 

NEW YORK CITY
Teachers College. TC Provost Stephanie J. Rowley to Become Dean of University of Virginia School of Education and Human Development Rowley also reinforced the College’s commitment to teacher education with the appointment of a new Vice Dean for Teacher Education, Celia Oyler, and by cultivating strong partnerships with local and state schools.

 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of May 11 in Teacher Ed News

UNITED STATES
Chalkbeat. Why the star of ‘Abbott Elementary’ surprised this Philadelphia teacher   What do you say to people thinking about becoming a teacher? Do it. We need you. Especially our teachers of color. Especially our Black teachers of color, because our young boys need them so much. Even if you feel like you’re not the best speaker or don’t know everything — it’s okay. Just showing up shows that you care. 

LPI
. Teacher Salaries: A Key Factor in Recruitment and Retention   Recent teacher surveys highlight that in addition to the stresses of COVID-19—such as longer working hours, concerns about contracting the virus, and juggling child care responsibilities—teacher salaries also contribute to shortages. This should come as no surprise, since U.S. teachers generally earn only about 80% of what other college-educated workers earn on a weekly basis. 

NYTimes.
1) In Several States, Teachers Get Their Biggest Raise in Decades: Budget surpluses have enabled states to pass bills giving teachers a bigger paycheck, but not everyone is certain that will help improve schooling.   “There are various things a state can do to attract more people to the profession, and keep people in who are already there,” Thomas Bailey, an economist and the president of Teachers College at Columbia University, said. “Those changes are long overdue.”
2) Marion Joseph, Citizen Warrior on Reading Instruction, Dies at 95: Arguing for phonics as a learning tool and getting results, she exerted influence on educational policy in California and beyond.   Ms. Joseph had no formal training in education but immersed herself in the methodology of teaching literacy after she was invited to an open house in 1989 at the elementary school attended by her grandson, Isaac.

Philadelphia Enquirer. ‘The strongest talent is already in our schools’: Paraprofessionals get help making the leap to teacher   The Camden Education Fund has enrolled 15 paraprofessionals in the Camden school district in an accelerated program to obtain their teaching credentials.

NEW YORK STATE

Chalkbeat.
1) Newark will recruit retired teachers as staff shortages persist   The district, which is short more than 100 teachers, also applied to participate in another state program meant to ease the school-staffing crunch, according to the announcement. The new program, created by a state law passed last year, allows approved districts to hire would-be teachers who failed to meet one of the requirements for certification, such as a minimum grade point average in college or a passing score on a required test.
2) New York officials vote to scrap edTPA teacher certification exam   Prospective teachers in New York state will no longer have to take the controversial edTPA, a national assessment that some have criticized as being a barrier to diversifying and growing the teacher workforce. New York’s Board of Regents, the state’s education policymaking body, voted unanimously Tuesday to remove the multi-part exam as a requirement for earning a teaching certificate. The change goes into effect April 27.

Commission on Independent Colleges and Universities (CICU). Statement from Commission on Independent Colleges & Universities President, Lola W. Brabham, on FY 2023 Enacted State Budget

NYSED Board of Regents April meeting agenda
2022-2023 Enacted Budget Update
Higher Education
*Proposed Amendments
Relating to Establishing Registration Requirements for Residency Programs and Revising Residency Certificate Requirements
Supplementary Presentation: Proposed Residency Program Registration Requirements and Residency Certificate Changes
*Consent Agenda
Relating to the General Education Core in the Liberal Arts and Sciences Requirement for Registered Teacher Preparation Programs and the Individual Evaluation Pathway to Teacher Certification
Relating to the Requirements for the Reissuance of an Initial Certificate
Relating to the Teacher Performance Assessment Requirement for Certification and Establishing a Teacher Performance Assessment Requirement for Registered Teacher Preparation Programs

NYSED Office of Teaching Initiatives.
* edTPA Certification Requirement
* Elimination of the General Core in Liberal Arts and Sciences Requirement for Certification 
* Revised Definition of a Year of Experience   “…a minimum of 180 days in a 12-month period of full-time satisfactory experience, or its equivalent, in an educational setting acceptable to the Department.

NYS Register. Proposed Establishment of a NEW Literacy (All Grades) Certificate  The proposal was posted in the March 2 NYS Register. See pp. 11-13. The memo describing the proposal to the Regents is here. The proposed new certification would phase out the two existing literacy certificates and would allow literacy teachers to teach the full range of grade levels and give school districts more flexibility in placing teachers in the grade levels with the highest staffing needs. Submit comments to:  William P. Murphy, Deputy Commissioner, NYS Education Department, Office of Higher Education, 89 Washington Avenue, Room 975 EBA, Albany, NY 12234, (518)473-3781, email: [email protected]. Public comment is open until May 2, 2022.  

University at Buffalo. U.S. Department of Education highlights UB’s Teacher Residency Program as model for nation   Launched in 2019, the UB Teacher Residency Program enables individuals interested in a career in education to earn New York State initial teacher certification through a paid residency. The one-year program combines coursework with experience educating alongside a mentor teacher for an entire school year in Buffalo Public Schools.

NEW YORK CITY
Chalkbeat. Here are education highlights from New York’s state budget   NYC schools get $56 million less than proposed.  Unlike previous years, it was clear from the governor’s proposal in January that school districts would receive an influx of cash following commitments last year to boost Foundation Aid, which gives districts the most flexibility, including the ability to hire more teachers or create new programs.

Columbia News
. President Bollinger to Step Down in 2023   During his two-decade-long tenure, Columbia has flourished as a center of academic excellence that is redefining what it means to be a great research university in the 21st century… Board of Trustees co-chairs Lisa Carnoy and Jonathan Lavine shared their thoughts on Bollinger’s legacy: “… But at heart he is an educator, and every new building project, academic initiative, and fundraising campaign that he undertook was in service of creating a world-class environment for learning and teaching.”

New York Post. Gov. Hochul promises to extend Mayor Adams’ control of NYC schools

Teachers College Transition Announcement about Erica N. Walker.  … Professor Erica Walker has been named Dean of the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto, effective January 2023… As Clifford Brewster Upton Professor of Mathematical Education, Director of the Edmund W. Gordon Institute for Urban & Minority Education (IUME) since 2018, and immediate past Chair of the Department of Mathematics, Science & Technology (MST), Professor Walker has infused TC with an unbridled passion for collaborative, impactful research and equity in education.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of April 4 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
India.com. Teachers Who Did Not Pass TET Not Entitled To Continue in Service, Rules Madras High Court   The Madras High Court on Thursday said that teachers who did not pass the Teachers Eligibility Test (TET) cannot continue in service.

The Guardian.  Education union criticises ‘badly flawed’ evidence behind academy drive: National Education Union found ‘no compelling reason’ for all schools in England to join academy trusts    The Department for Education (DfE) roundly rejected the NEU’s criticisms. We want all schools to be part of a strong academy trust so they can benefit from the trust’s support in everything from teacher training, curriculum, financial planning and inclusivity towards children with additional needs, to excellent behaviour and attendance cultures.”

University of Toronto. ‘Preparing students to tackle world crises’: Here are the 2022 OISE Teaching Excellence Award winners   Award for Excellence in Initial Teacher Education Winner: Andrew B. Campbell, Sessional Lecturer, Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning

UNITED STATES
AERA Division K. Fireside Chat. Mentoring Within and Across Differences: Mentors Supporting Mentees and Future Graduate Student Mentors “Dr. Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz Is an Award-Winning Associate Professor at Teachers College, Columbia University. Her Research Focuses on Racial Literacy in Teacher Education…”  [San Diego, April 23, 2:30pm]

Chalkbeat.
1) Colorado needs preschool teachers. Will these incentives work?   …hundreds of students across Colorado taking advantage of a new state program that pays for two introductory early childhood courses — a stepping stone to teaching in the field. The initiative, funded with $4 million in federal COVID aid, is part of a state effort to mint more early childhood teachers before the state’s universal preschool launch in 2023, and help the industry recover from staff shortages exacerbated by the pandemic.
2) How a Grammy-nominated Chicago teacher is using music to help students heal   I was supposed to major in physics, but one month before I went off to college, I realized that I had spent my later years of high school entering people’s lives with my own piano improvisations. The music — created out of my pain and trauma — built connection and allowed healing to happen. I thought: Wouldn’t it be neat to become a teacher and teach students to heal those around them by also connecting with sound?… Here I am, 13 years in, teaching music and choir in Chicago.

EdSurge.  Our Nation’s Teachers Are Hustling to Survive: Nearly 1 in 5 American public school teachers work a second job outside of the classroom.   Americans like to think that the surest path to success runs through university campuses. That upward mobility begins in higher education and breaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty requires an entrance fee of a college degree. Many people, including aspiring teachers, internalize this and make steep sacrifices to attend college. Sometimes, that looks like a 19-year-old taking out hefty student loans and choosing a career path with a poor return-on-investment.

InsideHigherEd. Tenure Awarded at University of San Francisco: Cheryl Jones-Walker, teacher education

Learning Policy Institute. Testimony to U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee by Linda Darling-Hammond on Social and Emotional Learning and Whole Child Approaches in K–12 Education   Embedding SEL in comprehensive approaches to teacher preparation is important because it enables them to understand students well, develop productive relationships and curriculum in their classrooms, and feel competent and confident so they communicate a sense of efficacy to their students. In addition, teachers and principals who are better prepared feel more efficacious, experience less stress in their jobs, and are more likely to stay in the profession, providing students with the stability they need.

NEA News. Missing: Future Teachers in Colleges of Education In a sign that the teacher shortage may worsen, a new study shows the declining numbers of college students in fields of education.   A lot of it, frankly, has to do with money. “The fact is teachers aren’t paid adequately—and everybody knows it and everybody talks about it,” says Cameo Kendrick, chair of the NEA Aspiring Educators.

San Francisco Chronicle. California math wars get ugly: Accusations of racism and harassment ignite battle between Stanford and Cal profs   The very public feud has its roots in what has become a bitter battle over how to teach math to K-12 students in California, and specifically whether to offer Algebra 1 in middle schools… That debate boiled over Tuesday after a math teacher at San Francisco’s Lowell High School who opposes Boaler’s approach posted on Twitter a contract that seemed to show the professor made $5,000 an hour to train teachers in the Oxnard school district.

Washington Post.
1) Biden extends federal student loan payment pause through Aug. 31  The moratorium was continued for a sixth time in the past two years
2) What the student loan payment pause has meant to Black women   Student loans have shaped much of Elliott-O’Connor’s adult life. They gave her a chance at an education that her family could not afford. They kept her working as an educator with the promise of public service debt forgiveness when she was ready to strike out on her own. 

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED
1) Board of Regents April meeting agenda [Monday 4/11 Tuesday, 4/12]
Higher Education
*Proposed Amendments
Proposed… Relating to Establishing Registration Requirements for Residency Programs and Revising Residency Certificate Requirements
Supplementary Presentation: Proposed Residency Program Registration Requirements and Residency Certificate Changes
*Consent Agenda
Proposed Amendment…Relating to the General Education Core in the Liberal Arts and Sciences Requirement for Registered Teacher Preparation Programs and the Individual Evaluation Pathway to Teacher Certification
Proposed Amendment Relating to the Requirements for the Reissuance of an Initial Certificate
Proposed Amendment… Relating to the Teacher Performance Assessment Requirement for Certification and Establishing a Teacher Performance Assessment Requirement for Registered Teacher Preparation Programs
2) News and Notes. …the Board of Regents unanimously re-elected Dr. Lester W. Young, Jr. and Josephine Victoria Finn to the posts of Chancellor and Vice Chancellor, respectively… Regents Susan W. Mittler and Ruth B. Turner were re-elected to the Board of Regents. We also welcomed Regent Shino Tanikawa of Manhattan, who was elected to the Board of Regents by the New York State Legislature.
3) NYSED, NYSUT Applaud 51 Teachers Who Achieved ‘Gold Standard’ National Board CertificationFour of the 51 hold MA degrees from Teachers College: Molly Goodell Secondary Inclusive Education 2014, Yesenia Moreno Bilingual/Bicultural Education 2013, Vincent Pham TESOL (&TR@TC) 2017; Jessica VanScoy Education Policy 2018. TC Doctoral Student Jose Vilson, NBPTS Board of Directors, provided closing remarks.

Professional Standards and Practices Board for Teaching (PSPB). Meeting Minutes Thursday, February 17, 2022

NEW YORK CITY
Columbia News. The Evolution of Deaf and Hard of Hearing Education at Teachers College   According to national and state metrics, there exists a severe shortage of teachers of D/HH students, and our program’s graduates are in high demand. Our student teachers and graduates partner with culturally and linguistically diverse families to help them achieve their goals for their D/HH children, including learning to speak and/or sign the language(s) of the home.

Dance Magazine. Jody Gottfried Arnhold Has Devoted Her Career–And Philanthropy–to Bringing Dance to Everyone   “I came to New York after college to dance, and I needed a job, which led me to being a classroom teacher… I have a goal: dance for every child. And that means dance education in every public school. I started by creating the Dance Education Laboratory and that led to working with the Department of Education to educate teachers, and then there weren’t enough teachers, so Hunter College started the Masters of Dance Education. And then we needed the leadership, so the Teachers College doctoral program. I don’t know what will be next.”

Gothamist. Lawmakers postpone decision on mayoral control of NYC schools   Legislators said they have decided to separate mayoral control of the city’s public school’s from the budgetary process, and will take up the issue before the legislative session ends in June. That leaves some uncertainty around a policy that has been in place for two decades.

K-12 Dive. NYC Board of Ed to pay teachers hundreds of millions in damages for biased licensing exam   The state-mandated exam, the Liberal Arts and Sciences Test, was required for all public school teachers in the city from 1993 to 2014… Teachers who failed were still allowed in the classroom, but the BOE paid them reduced salaries and denied them benefits, plaintiffs said. Now, the agreement filed on March 14 requires the BOE to stop appealing judgments awarding approximately $660 million in damages to former Black and Latino teachers…

NYDailyNews
. Teacher diversity, compensation top list of education priorities for NYC adults: survey   The most popular policy proposal among adults for improving city schools was to “increase hiring and salaries of diverse teachers and staff.” Similarly, when asked what could be done to address school segregation and “ensure one’s background does not determine their learning outcomes,” people chose “teacher diversity” second most-frequently — right after equitably distributing resources.

Teaching Residents at Teachers College (TR@TC).  Induction and Beyond, April 2022: Educator Resources *Special Announcements *Grant Opportunities *Induction Highlights *Raising Consciousness *Curriculum Planning Tools *More…

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of March 28 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
AsiaOne. Amit Sevak Named Next President and CEO of ETS   ETS develops, administers and scores more than 50 million tests annually — including the TOEFL® and TOEIC® tests, the GRE® tests and The Praxis Series® assessments — in more than 180 countries, at over 9,000 locations worldwide.

Etorno Inteligente. Duchess Of Cambridge Lauds Shortwood Teachers’ College   Their Royal Highnesses, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have extended commendation to Shortwood Teachers’ College for its commitment to excellence in education. In their visit to the institution located in Kingston on Wednesday (March 23), The Duke and Duchess met briefly with researchers and members of the early-childhood faculty…Discussions focused on the administration of early-childhood education in Jamaica.

Reuters. Mexican armed forces knew about attack on 43 students, report says   Evidence obtained by the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI), an independent panel tasked with investigating the notorious case, revealed that Navy and Army officials kept secret that the students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College were under real-time surveillance by the state leading up to and during their abduction.

UNITED STATES
AACTE. Honoring Women Leadership in Educator Preparation   As another Women’s History Month comes to an end, AACTE wants to acknowledge the achievements of women-identified leaders in educator preparation.

Chalkbeat.
1)  Congress rejected Biden’s bid to double Title I. Now he’s asking again.   Meanwhile, the administration is calling for increases in spending on English learners, community schools, and teacher residency and grow-your-own preparation programs.
2) Hiccups and hard lessons: What it takes to bring big new tutoring programs to America’s classrooms   …Arkansas’ tutoring effort. The state has some 570 tutors in the pipeline, more than its goal, though 350 are still completing training and background checks… In New Mexico… paraprofessionals and classroom assistants want these jobs, since the fellowship offers benefits and a stipend they can use toward a degree in education… In Chicago, the district recruited tutors before it finalized which companies would train them and provide them with tutoring materials.

Chicago Tribune. Editorial: Proposed ‘culturally responsive’ teaching standards should be put on hold   Under the proposed changes, called Culturally Responsive Teaching and Leading Standards, teachers-in-training would learn more about “systems of oppression” and be expected to “understand that there are systems in our society that create and reinforce inequities, thereby creating oppressive conditions. Educators work actively against these systems in their everyday roles in educational institutions.”

Council for Exceptional Children. Webinars: Combatting Shortages of Educators Serving Students With Disabilities [Sessions begin April 14] The Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) and the CEEDAR Center have collaborated with national partners and practitioners to produce a 12-part webinar series focused on evidence-based strategies to strengthen and diversify the special education workforce.

Deans for Impact. Why tutoring programs could strengthen and diversify teacher preparation   It’s a win-win: teacher-candidates need clinically rich field experiences in order to earn licensure, and students — especially the most vulnerable — need holistic and individualized academic and social-emotional support to recover from the pandemic’s disruption. Legislation to create this type of tutoring program has earned bipartisan support at the state and federal levels.

Education Commission of the States
.
1) Governors’ Top Education Priorities in 2022 State of the State Addresses    … we summarized all of the education-related mentions and proposals in governors’ addresses, and we identified six top trends: *K-12 funding *Workforce development and CTE *Teacher staffing…
2) Webinar: Building a Strong Teacher Workforce Through Apprenticeships [April 20, 3pm EDT] The apprenticeship model, which includes teacher residencies, offers an affordable and high-quality path to teacher licensure through tailored support, experience and financial compensation. 

EducationWeek.
1) Fewer People Are Getting Teacher Degrees. Prep Programs Sound the Alarm   The American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education released its second comprehensive report of the state of teacher preparation on Tuesday afternoon, noting the many challenges facing the teaching profession—and some of the ways colleges are adapting. The report uses the most-recent federal data, which are from the 2018-19 school year, providing a benchmark on the status of teacher preparation before the disruption of the coronavirus pandemic.
2) Math Anxiety Weakens How Students Study. Here’s What Teachers Can Do   As students prepare for a math test, Beilock said it’s important for teachers to explicitly describe what makes study methods effective or not.

InsideHigherEd. Biden Seeks Big Increase for Pell   President Biden proposed a $2,175 increase in the maximum Pell Grant Monday in his budget proposal to Congress for fiscal 2023. That would bring the maximum annual Pell award to $8,670… The budget proposal would permit 6,657,000 low-income students to receive Pell Grants, in 2022-23, up from 6,133,000 this year.

NJ Spotlight News. NJ Senate OKs bill to remove this test for aspiring teachers   Opponents of the test say it duplicates assessments already in place and lengthens the time before a teacher can be certified. A similar bill is up for a vote in the Assembly.

NYTimes.
1) In Race for Tuition-Free College, New Mexico Stakes a Claim   State residents qualify unless they already benefit from another state financial aid program, such as an initiative to cover tuition for aspiring teachers.
2) Ways to Read, Write, Teach and Learn Poetry With The New York Times    Here are 30 ideas for helping your students appreciate poetry — and experiment with it themselves.

Pathways Alliance. Webinar: Increasing Access and Affordability to High Quality Teacher Pathways Through Apprenticeships [April 6 4pm] Speakers from Deans for Impact, Bank Street College’s Prepared To Teach, AACTE, Dallas College and InnovateEDU will discuss their experience with and knowledge of federally Registered Apprenticeship programs that can access funding to support aspiring teachers. 

Teachers College. TC’s Michelle Knight-Manuel Named Dean at the University of Denver Education School   “I am so proud of her achievement,” Rowley said, “and cannot wait to see all that she accomplishes in preparing our future teachers, counselors, school leaders and other vital education professionals as the terrific new dean of the Morgridge College of Education.”

The Racquet Press. Student Association meets with School of Education Dean Marcie Wycoff-Horn to address concerns raised by education students   … addressed concerns such as the timeline to graduate, transportation and placement, the iPad program, and edTPA.  Dean Wycoff-Horn said that the SOE must abide by the rules laid out by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI) in the Wisconsin Teacher Preparation law. SOE only has a fifty-mile radius to place students in K-12 classrooms, and every education student is required by law to have these field and student teaching experiences. 

U.S. Department of Education.
1) Roundtable: Strengthening Partnerships Between States, School Districts, and Higher Education to Increase the Number of Teacher Candidates Prepared to Enter the Classroom and Provide Immediate Support to Schools [April 7, 3pm EDT]  During this roundtable we will: Discuss the U.S. Department of Education’s call to action for states, institutions of higher education, and school districts to commit to using American
Rescue Plan and other federal relief funds to help address teacher shortages…
2) The U.S. Department of Education Announces Partnerships Across States, School Districts, and Colleges of Education to Meet Secretary Cardona’s Call to Action to Address the Teacher Shortage   To support the President’s call, today Secretary Cardona is calling on state policymakers, higher education leaders, and school districts to use pandemic relief and recovery funds to increase the number of teacher candidates prepared to enter the profession as early as possible. He is also calling on teacher preparation programs and school districts to work together in innovative ways to address the teacher shortage… Secretary Cardona is calling on governors, state school chiefs, and state policymakers to commit to: *Establish teaching as a Registered Apprenticeship. *Invest in evidence-based teacher residency programs. *Establish or expand loan forgiveness or service scholarship programs. *Increase teacher compensation.

Washington Post. Student loan servicer misled borrowers about relief program, CFPB says   The bureau hit the Knoxville, Tenn.-based company with $1 million in penalties, accusing it of making deceptive statements about the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, which cancels outstanding federal student debt held by public servants such as teachers or members of the military after 10 years of on-time payments.

NEW YORK STATE
NYS Board of Regents. Statement From Chancellor Lester W. Young, Jr., the Board of Regents and State Education Commissioner Betty A. Rosa on the Passing of Regent Beverly L. Ouderkirk   Regent Beverly Ouderkirk opened doors that were once closed to students countless times over in her more than 50 years in public education. The North Country educational community, and all of New York, benefitted from Regent Ouderkirk’s tenacity, drive, and passion for helping students and educators succeed.

New York State Education Department.  Office Of Higher Education, Educator Preparation Newsletter: March 2022

1) Graduate Program Admissions Requirements. The Department proposed a regulatory amendment to align the Commissioner’s regulations with recent changes to Education Law section 210-a regarding admission requirements for graduate-level teacher and educational leader programs. The changes removed the statutory requirement that candidates must have a minimum score on the graduate record examination or a substantially equivalent admission examination, as determined by an institution of higher education. In addition, the changes increased the percentage of candidates from any incoming class in a program who may be exempted from the admission requirements from 15% to 50%…
2) U.S. Department Of Education Webinar On Strengthening Partnerships To Increase The Number Of Teacher Candidates   The U.S. Department of Education (USDE) is hosting a webinar on Thursday, April 7 from 3:00-4:00 PM on “Strengthening Partnerships Between States, School Districts, and Higher Education to Increase the Number of Teacher Candidates Prepared to Enter the Classroom and Provide Immediate Support to  Schools.”…  

New York Times. New York Blew Its Budget Deadline. Here’s Why.   The April 1 deadline had seemed achievable, with ample federal funds allowing Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, to propose a record $216.3 billion in spending. Her first executive budget was aimed at jump-starting the state’s pandemic recovery through investments in education … And on Thursday afternoon, both houses adjourned until Monday, guaranteeing a late budget.

NEW YORK CITY
Gothamist. NYC Schools Chancellor says students need more phonics in order to read   Chancellor David Banks is calling for an overhaul of how children learn to read in the city’s public schools, saying the approach many schools use isn’t working. In an interview with Gothamist, Banks said he wants to move toward what experts call “the science of reading” which focuses on the rigorous teaching of phonics. 

Teachers College.
1) Teachers College Names Professor of Education Celia Oyler Vice Dean for Teacher Education   Oyler will provide strategic leadership and advocacy for teacher education practice, policy, and research at the College and oversee activities and initiatives of the Office of Teacher Education and other centers and offices which support teacher education.
2) TC NEXT and the Office of Teacher Education are proud to present their annual Career Fair.   This virtual event will begin with a Principal & Administrator panel Wed. April 6 from 4:00-5:00 PM, and then will segue into a virtual Career Fair from 5:30-7:30 PM.

 

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of March 21 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
Brisbane Times. Education Minister blames ‘dud teachers’ for declining education results.  Mr Robert said the federal government would seek to lift teacher quality by exercising control over the content of university teaching courses, which he said would be linked to government funding. He told the forum he wanted to see the Literacy and Numeracy Test for Initial Teacher Education students (LANTITE) moved forward to the first week of the first year of education degrees. 

Education International. Senegal: Unions win pay rise  At a high-level meeting with several ministers, the leaders of Senegal’s principal education unions reached agreement on several positive measures, namely a pay rise for education and training staff…

UNESCO. Supporting teachers in emergencies through crisis-sensitive policies   Teacher policies that consider the implications of crisis on the profession can contribute to a motivated, quality workforce. Such policies are key to ensure that teachers are not just supported and protected but are also prepared to provide vulnerable children with safe learning spaces and quality education, and thus protecting this fundamental right for all.

UNITED STATES
American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
1) AACTE’s National Portrait Sounds the Alarm on Declining Interest in Education Careers   …second edition of Colleges of Education: A National Portrait. In addition to updating information on colleges of education and their leaders, faculty, and students, this edition features a special analysis on the contributions of community colleges to educator preparation.
2) Webinar to Highlight Key Findings from AACTE’s Signature Report   This year, in addition to describing the work of colleges of education, the people who do that work, and the students they serve, the National Portrait includes a special analysis on the important contributions that community colleges make to educator preparation. [Monday, March 28 at 1:00 p.m. ET]

Chalkbeat. Philly superintendent finalist Watlington: Success begins with great teachers   To encourage future teachers, “we should be identifying kids as early as middle school” as strong candidates for the profession, he said. And he suggested using public and private funds to pay for these students to go to college, then have them return to teach in the Philadelphia school district for four years once they graduate. 

EdWeek. Emerging Strategies In Teaching And Learning   This report looks at key teaching strategies that educators think have staying power, including: instructional acceleration; flexible or expanded learning time; and new approaches to building student leadership and academic habits….

Illinois State Univ. Illinois State University coordinates the Illinois Tutoring Initiative in partnership with state agencies   All tutors across the state are trained via modules created by ISU faculty and staff… The College of Education at ISU is the largest preparer of teachers in the Midwest and the 4th largest preparer of teachers in the nation. One in six Illinois teachers graduated from ISU.

NJ.com. ‘On hold for an hour.’ Aspiring N.J. teachers say getting certified can be frustrating.   Earlier this month, the NJEA joined eight other organizations asking the state to remove the edTPA. The state Senate is currently considering a bill to no longer require passing the assessment to get certified… The Senate Education Committee last week voted unanimously to advance the bill (S896) — which supporters say will help districts hire more teachers.

Washington Post.
1) High school Socratic program helped turn former student into district leader: Superintendent Lamont Jackson in San Diego understands how disadvantaged students can succeed by asking many questions   One sign of its successes is the selection of veteran administrator Lamont Jackson to be the new superintendent of the 135,000-student San Diego Unified School District. Thirty-eight years ago Jackson was a student in Swanson’s AVID class… Jackson earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology and social studies from San Diego State University, and a master’s and a doctorate in educational leadership from the University of San Diego…
2) Teachers to culture warriors: Stop treating us as enemies   The statement was issued by four professional organizations for teachers — the National Council for the Social Studies, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, the National Council of Teachers of English, and the National Science Teaching Association — as well as the National Coalition Against Censorship… The truth is that teachers are uniquely important leaders who, in educating current and new generations of students, bear responsibility for this country’s future. They are trained professionals with one of the hardest and most demanding jobs, a job that requires deep commitment, but brings little financial reward.

NEW YORK STATE
InsideHigherEd. Looking for a New Accreditor: Five New York colleges are seeking accreditation from an agency outside their region—among the first to do so since the Trump administration changed the rules to allow it. Others will likely follow.   Rockefeller University, Gerstner Sloan-Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Richard Gilder Graduate School of the American Museum of Natural History [MAT Earth Science Residency] need to find a new accreditor soon, because their former accreditor, the New York State Department of Education, is leaving the business. 

Newsday. LI’s teachers are overwhelmingly white and mostly female — but resignations, retirements could change that   Solages is the sponsor of state legislation that would require transparent job postings of openings in all districts. And, she and other members of the New York State Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislative Caucus have called on Long Island-based institutions of higher education “to apply for and implement the Teacher Opportunity Corps II program at the soonest possible opportunity in order to expand diversity in teaching careers.” The Teacher Opportunity Corps is a state grant program meant to support a diverse enrollment for aspiring teachers…

New York State My Brother’s Keeper.  TOC II Spotlight: Nazareth College   Another initiative underway is a newly formed collaborative of more than 20 students, alumni, faculty, and staff participating in the Zinn Education Project’s national Teaching for Black Lives Teacher Study Group. A prime focus of the initiative is to translate concepts to action and education in a specific, local context… this project is designed to provide students with knowledge and support as they embark upon careers in teaching as agents of change.

New York Times. Child Care: New York’s Next Big-Ticket Budget Priority   Part of the reason for the three-year phase-in period, proponents say, is that there are not enough providers to meet the demand the new law would create. Lawmakers hope that with training programs and drastically increased reimbursement rates, the industry will begin to recover and attract new labor.

Spectrum News/NY1.
1) Expansion of Tuition Assistance Program could help CUNY and SUNY students   As budget negotiations continue ahead of the April 1 deadline, Gov. Kathy Hochul is proposing expanding the Tuition Assistance Program to include part-time CUNY and SUNY students. That could be a game changer for New York residents who aren’t taking classes full-time.
2) State Education Department aims to ease teacher certification requirements, as shortages continue   NYSED says the proposed amendment is expected to be presented to the Board of Regents for adoption at their April 2022 meeting. If the board adopts the proposal, New York State-registered teacher preparation programs would have until September 1, 2023 to integrate a teacher performance assessment into teacher candidates’ student teaching or similar clinical experience.

NEW YORK CITY
New York Post. Schools of Rock: Punk-rock Councilman demands music classes for all   Brooklyn punk-turned-pol Justin Brannan, a member of two world-touring bands and a former special assistant to the schools chancellor, introduced a resolution earlier this month calling on DOE to guarantee kindergarten- to fifth-graders are adequately educated in art and music… notes that only 46% of city public elementary schools have a full-time certified music teacher, and only 43% have a full-time certified arts teacher.

Teachers College.
1) 2022 Training: September 26-October 31 A Sex Education Initiative: Providing Teachers and Youth Educators With Essential Training, Materials, And Community. [Applications Now Open]  This fully-funded professional development program from Teachers College, Columbia University trains teachers to update and innovate their current approach to Sexual & Reproductive Health (SRH) education
2) Teachers College Names Professor of Education Celia Oyler Vice Dean for Teacher Education  Oyler will provide strategic leadership and advocacy for teacher education practice, policy, and research at the College and oversee activities and initiatives of the Office of Teacher Education and other centers and offices which support teacher education. The appointment presents an opportunity for Oyler to expand on established partnerships that advance inquiry, research, curriculum-making, inclusive instruction and culturally-sustainable learning to support education equity in schools across New York City and, indeed, the nation.

Categories
Teacher Education

Week of March 14 in Teacher Ed News

GLOBAL
OECD. Mending the Education Divide: Getting Strong Teachers to the Schools That Need Them Most   …countries and economies with uneven distributions of experienced teachers also obtained lower average scores in the PISA 2018 reading assessment. A similar observation is made of education systems in which teachers with thorough training as well as teachers who are skilled at optimising class time are unevenly allocated, and in all three cases, especially for disadvantaged students.

Sydney Morning Herald. Adapting teacher education to the future needs of Australia   New teachers need to be equipped with welfare and mental health support strategies to have the confidence to manage this… La Trobe University’s Nexus program, for example, is government-funded and enables student teachers to complete a master’s program with paid employment in schools. It aligns with the recent release of the Quality Initial Teacher Education Review recommendations, which acknowledge that prior learning of well-qualified, suitable, mid-career changers with skills in areas of high demand should be better recognised.

TES (UK). How should ITT evolve to meet global needs?   …numerous reports have warned of a teacher shortage in the coming years, saying that we need to start producing more teachers than ever before – 69 million more, according to a United Nations report from 2016…These are just some of the questions that a forthcoming session at the online World Education Summit from 21-24 March will address…

The Statesman. AAP Govt to develop Delhi as center of world-class teacher education   Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said the aim of this University established by the Delhi Government is to create a world-class institution in the field of teacher education as good as premium institutes like IIT-IIM… He said the teaching profession has become the last career resort for everyone today. The Delhi Teachers University will change this perspective, encourage the youth towards the teaching profession and produce hundreds of excellent teachers in every session. 

UNITED STATES
AACTE.
1) Grant Benefits UTEP’s Teacher Preparation Candidates   Ten graduate students in The University of Texas at El Paso’s teacher preparation program earned $10,000 scholarships to help finance their education and teacher certification, thanks to a $108,000 grant from the Charles Butt Foundation.
2) UNG College of Education Launches Residency   The University of North Georgia’s (UNG) College of Education is launching its teacher candidate residency program in fall 2022, in partnership with the Gainesville City and Hall County school districts. The program allows preservice teachers enrolled in a UNG teacher preparation program to be hired by school districts to be full-time teachers during their senior year. The program is meant to replace traditional student teaching, and these students are paid half the standard teaching salary, which amounts to about $23,000 annually.

Chalkbeat.
1) Here are the Indiana education bills that passed in 2022   HB 1251 allows school corporations to issue permits for full- or part-time adjunct teachers who have at least four years of experience in a school subject and pass a background check. Those teachers need not have a degree in education.
2) U.S. schools are flush with cash, but struggling to spend it on schedule   In Selma, Williams has run into the same problem. She wanted to hire 12 new part-time teachers to help students who are behind in reading; the district only found one. 

Education Week.
1) Violence, Threats, and Harassment Are Taking a Toll on Teachers, Survey Shows   Schools—and teacher-preparation programs—should offer more training and support for educators that focuses on social-emotional learning, trauma-informed practices, cultural sensitivity, de-escalating tense situations, and crisis response training, the APA task force recommends. 
2) Virtual Career Fair for Teachers and K-12 Staff  This two-day virtual event allows you to chat directly with 100 districts and companies across the country. [March 23 & 24]

Hechinger Report. What might the future of universal pre-K look like? As researchers, we have some concerns: Access is critical, but so is giving young children classrooms full of warmth, support and meaningful activities   Unfortunately, Harvard researchers found that teacher talk often takes up 60 percent or more of pre-K classroom time. Helping children engage in meaningful conversations is a skill, and one that takes training. In this area too, the science is clear: Teachers can be trained to be better conversation starters and supporters.

Indiana Gazette. Pennsylvania has standardized testing, failing teacher pipeline woes   “It’s a challenge to pull in more educators into the profession,” Ortega said. “We have some ideas that we put in place, programs to recruit and promote the profession.” Loan forgiveness could boost the number of teachers, Ortega said, as well as “work with the General Assembly to remove some obstacles as they relate to people going into the profession.” Over-assessing teachers and unnecessary requirements to get a teaching license can deter potential educators…

KUOW/NPR. Teachers without licenses taught at Seattle-area charter schools, audits find   The Washington State Auditor’s Office made the discovery in the course of routine 2019-2020 school year accountability audits of the three schools … As privately run, publicly funded institutions, charter schools are allowed to operate independently, but teachers must either possess or be in the process of obtaining Washington teaching licenses. While teaching licenses lapse occasionally, or are delayed, McCarthy said that was not the case for most of the Summit teachers in question.

New York Times. Teaching Resources to Help Students Make Sense of the War in Ukraine: Articles, maps, photos, videos, podcasts and more, as well as suggestions for using them in your classroom.

Washington Post. What most worries the 2022 Superintendent of the Year   Staff shortages have hobbled the operations of many schools this school year. In some places teachers are so scarce that parents and other non-educators have been asked to fill in…  Tactics have included bringing back retired educators and paying out thousands of dollars in bonuses or significant pay hikes as incentives for recruitment and retention.  Some are hiring students in teacher-preparation programs before they graduate — and even students have been asked to help tutor their peers.

NEW YORK STATE
NYSED. Sunshine Week: Open government is good government.  Aspiring journalists and educators can get involved with Sunshine Week by participating in Sunshine Week events, creating their own Sunshine Week activities or by simply taking time to learn about open government and its importance to democracy. [Mar. 13-19]

Board of Regents March meetings
Board of Regents Unanimously Re-Elects Dr. Lester W. Young, Jr. To Serve as Chancellor and Josephine V. Finn as Vice Chancellor

HIGHER EDUCATION PROPOSALS:
Proposed Amendment… Relating to the Admission Requirements for Graduate-level Teacher and Educational Leadership Programs  The proposed amendment is necessary to align the Commissioner’s regulations with recent changes to section 210-a of the Education Law regarding admission requirements for graduate-level teacher and educational leader programs… Following the 60-day public comment period required under the State Administrative Procedure Act, it is anticipated that the proposed amendment will be presented to the Board of Regents for adoption at the July 2022 meeting.
HIGHER EDUCATION ACTION ITEMS:
1) Proposed Amendment…Relating to the Assessment Requirements for School District Leader (SDL) and School District Business Leader (SDBL) Program Completion, the Institutional Recommendation for Professional SDL and SDBL Certification, and the Institutional   …continue to exempt candidates enrolled in school district leader (SDL) and school district business leader (SDBL) programs from taking and passing the SDL and SDBL assessment, respectively, for program completion and the institutional recommendation for Professional certification and to exempt candidates enrolled in a Transitional D program from taking and passing the SDL assessment for the institutional recommendation for Transitional D certification, to provide continuity for SDL, SDBL, and Transitional D candidates until the proposed rule can be permanently adopted and to ensure that the emergency action taken at the January 2022 meeting remains continuously in effect… the emergency rule will become effective April 11, 2022. It is anticipated that the proposed rule will be presented to the Board of Regents for permanent adoption at the May 2022 Regents meeting… 2) Proposed Amendment… Relating to the Definition of a Year of Experience for Permanent or Professional Certification  …the Department is proposing to revise the definition to provide a single definition of a year of experience for Permanent or Professional certification, which would be defined as: *a minimum of 180 days in a 12-month period of full-time satisfactory experience, or its equivalent, in an educational setting acceptable to the Department… the proposed amendment will become effective on March 30, 2022.
3) Proposed Amendment… Relating to the Requirements for the Reissuance of an Initial Certificate  The Department is therefore proposing to remove the requirement that these candidates complete 50 clock hours of CTLE and/or professional learning to obtain a reissuance of their Initial certificate… adopted as an emergency rule at the March 2022 Regents meeting, the proposed rule will become effective April 11, 2022. It is anticipated that the proposed rule will be presented to the Board of Regents for permanent adoption at the April 2022 Regents meeting

NEW YORK CITY
Columbia Law School’s Suspension Representation Project (SRP). Panel Discussion: A Conversation on the State and Future of NYC Public Schools [Mon. March 21, 2022 7:00-8:00pm ET]

Teachers College Annual Tisch Lecture. Dr. Bettina L. Love: Abolitionist Teaching for Education Justice [Wednesday, March 23, 2022 5:00-6:30 pm EST]

Teaching Residents at Teachers College.
1) 2012 – 2022 Production Report. 20 peer-reviewed publications, 57 global conference presentations and counting…
2) TR@TC Information Session [5:30-6:30 Wed. March 30th]