While the corporate ed reformers give lip service to the importance of great teachers, they are working overtime to replace professionally-trained teachers with temporary missionaries armed with Doug Lemov's bible who learn to teach on poor people's children before moving on to their real careers.
Below are the Seven Principles of the Coalition on Teacher Quality, along with the list of 84 organizations that have endorsed these principals. Click here to view a briefing sponsored by Senator Sanders and the 84 organizations of the Coalition on Teaching Quality.
Principles to
Ensure Student Access to Fully Prepared and Effective Teachers Under ESEA and
HEA Title II
Research indicates that teacher quality is the most
important school factor impacting student achievement. Yet, students in
low-income and minority schools are far less likely to have access to
well-prepared and effective teachers, as are students with disabilities and
English learners. In many communities, students experience a revolving door of
untrained and under-supported novice teachers who cannot sustain a high-quality
education.
To promote and
support the creation of a stable supply of qualified, effective educators for
all communities, we put forward the following principles for ESEA and HEA Title
II reauthorization.
FULLY
PREPARED AND EFFECTIVE TEACHERS FOR ALL STUDENTS
1. All
students are entitled to teachers who are qualified (fully prepared and fully certified),
as well as effective. The requirement
that qualified teachers should be assigned to all students – and that states
and districts make progress to ensuring that all of their teachers are
qualified --should be continued.
To meet the “qualified” standard, teachers must have completed a full
preparation program and have met full state certification standards in the
field they teach.
2. Teachers
in training, if assigned as teacher of record, must be accurately identified,
equitably distributed, and adequately supervised. Where fully prepared teachers are not available, teacher
trainees may be hired. In these
cases, parents must be informed that their child’s teacher has not completed
preparation and has not yet fully met state certification standards, and states
and districts must report on the distribution of such teachers, by teaching
field and school, and be required to distribute these teachers equitably. In addition, districts must ensure that
such teachers and their students are closely overseen by a fully qualified and
experienced Supervising Teacher who coaches and observes regularly in the
classroom, reviews and signs off on lesson plans and assessment practices,
tracks the progress of students, and ensures that the needs of all students, including
students with disabilities and English learners, are being adequately met. The
Supervising Teacher must be identified to parents and provided with release
time and training to serve in this role.
3. Teacher
effectiveness should be evaluated based on valid measures of teacher
performance. For Entering
teachers (whose classroom performance cannot be fully evaluated for
some time), we recommend that, in addition to full preparation, effectiveness
be evaluated by passing a robust, field-specific teacher performance assessment
that validly and reliably measures whether a teacher can successfully teach
diverse students in the classroom.
Experienced
teachers should be evaluated by
trained assessors on the basis of professional teaching standards, their joint
efforts to improve learning within the school, and appropriate and
multi-faceted evidence of their contributions to student learning. The results of these multi-faceted
evaluations should be used to guide professional development and personnel
decisions: Teachers who do not meet standards of effectiveness should be
offered the support necessary to improve, and those who do not improve should
be removed.
4. Any
determinations made about the status of an individual teacher (e.g. qualified,
effective) should be based on that individual teacher’s demonstrated skill,
knowledge and ability. An individual’s
status should not be based on the preparation program or pathway he/she is
enrolled in or previously attended.
EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF PREPARED AND EFFECTIVE
TEACHERS
5. ESEA
comparability provisions should be strengthened and enforced in order to ensure equitable resources and equally
qualified teachers across schools serving different populations of
students. ESEA should strengthen
and enforce comparability requirements to ensure that poor and minority
students, and students with disabilities, do not experience disproportionate
numbers of uncertified, inexperienced, or out-of-field
teachers. In addition, teachers identified as “trainees” (i.e., less
than fully prepared teachers) or “not effective” should not be
disproportionately concentrated in poor and minority schools.
POLICIES
TO DEVELOP EFFECTIVE TEACHING
6. Preparation programs should be held to common, high
standards. Credentialing programs
should provide general and special education teachers with the content and
pedagogical knowledge, skills and expertise needed to support learning for all
students. Traditional and
alternative route certification programs should be held accountable for both
program quality and multiple indicators of graduates’ ability to teach
successfully. Programs that do not meet standards should have an opportunity to
improve, and if no improvement is shown over a reasonable period of time, they
should be closed.
7. 7. Investments
should be made in proven methods to recruit, prepare, develop and retain fully
prepared and effective teachers in shortage fields and hard to staff schools.
Coalition for Teaching Quality
National Organizations
Alliance
for Multilingual Multicultural Education
American
Council on Education
American
Association of Colleges for Teacher Education
American
Association of People with Disabilities
American
Association of State Colleges and Universities
American Council for School Social Work
Association of University Centers on Disabilities
ASPIRA Association
Autistic Self Advocacy Network
Autism National Committee
Center for Teaching Quality
Citizens for Effective Schools
Communities for Excellent Public Schools
Council for Exceptional Children
Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates
Disability Policy Collaboration, A Partnership of The
Arc and UCP Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, Inc
Easter Seals
Education Law Center
FairTest, The National Center for Fair & Open Testing
First Focus Campaign for Children
Gamaliel Foundation
Helen Keller National Center
Higher Education Consortium for Special Education
Knowledge Alliance
Latino Elected and Appointed Officials
National Taskforce on Education
Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
Learning Disabilities Association of America
Movement Strategy Center
NAACP
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.
National Alliance of Black School Educators
National Association of School Psychologists
National Association of State Directors of Special
Education
National Center for Learning Disabilities
National Consortium on Deaf-Blindness
National Council for Educating Black Children
National Council of Teachers of English
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics
National Disability Rights Network
National Down Syndrome Congress
National Down Syndrome Society
National Education Association
National Indian Education Association
National Latino Education Research & Policy Project
National PTA
National Urban League
League of United Latin American Citizens
Parents Across America
Public Advocates Inc.
Public Education Network
Rural School and Community Trust
School Social Work Association of America
South East Asia Resource Action Center
TASH - Equity, Opportunity, and Inclusion for People with Disabilities
Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional
Children
United Church of Christ Justice & Witness Ministries
State and Local Organizations
Action
Now – Illinois
Action
Now– North Carolina
ACTION
United
Alliance
of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE)
Arkansas
Community Organizations
Bay Area
Parent Leadership Action Network
Brighton
Park Neighborhood Council – Chicago
California
Association for Bilingual Education
Californians
for Justice
Californians
Together
California
Latino School Boards Association
Campaign
for Quality Education
Center
for the Future of Teaching and Learning
Coalition
for Educational Justice
Delawareans
for Social and Economic Justice
Grow Your
Own Illinois
Inner
City Struggle
Justice
Matters
Legal
Advocates for Children and Youth
Philadelphia
Student Union
Parent-U-Turn
Parents
for Unity
RYSE
Center
San
Francisco Teacher Residency
Texas
Association of Chicanos in Higher Education
Youth On
Board – Somerville, MA
Youth
Together
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