Posted on 08/31/2003 8:05:03 PM PDT by Calpernia
WASHINGTON - After more than 25 years giving science tests to her middle-school students, Rebecca Pringle may have to pass one herself to prove she's qualified to teach the subject.
Pringle has bachelor's and master's degrees in education, but that's not enough under federal education law. Because she doesn't have a science degree, she'll have to take a test showing her mastery of the topic or pass a state evaluation that could include a test.
"I'm still in a state of anger and resistance," said Pringle, an eighth-grade teacher at Susquehanna Township Middle School in Harrisburg, Pa. "It's not fair to change the rules in the middle of the game. ... I have prided myself in staying current and being active in the field. For all that to be reduced to a multiple-choice test is an insult."
Around the country, public school teachers are going through a quality check. By the end of the 2005-06 school year, federal education law says, every teacher of core subjects from English to the arts must be highly qualified.
The premise of the law is widely embraced: Quality teaching leads to higher student achievement, and poor and minority students, in particular, deserve a greater supply of teachers who are well versed in their subjects.
Of 3 million teachers, it is not clear how many meet the mark. By Monday, states must report their share of highly qualified teachers and how quickly the number will rise over three years.
"Highly qualified" means teachers who have a bachelor's degree, a state license or certification and clear knowledge of the topic they teach.
It's the way the law is playing out that has many teachers unsettled.
Beverly Ingle, a sixth-grade teacher at Laredo Middle School in Aurora, Colo., is starting her 25th year teaching. She may not be highly qualified because of the way the law handles different grades.
Middle school teachers must have a college major in each subject they teach in her case, social studies and reading or pass a rigorous test in those subjects. If Ingle taught sixth grade at an elementary school, she would only have to show mastery over a basic elementary curriculum.
It's not yet clear if she'll satisfy the third option, her state's evaluation.
"It's really unfair, but what am I going to do about it?" Ingle said. "I'll suck it up, like we always do as teachers, and I'll take more classes."
States are figuring out how teachers can show mastery of their subjects without taking tests that some consider demeaning. Among the proposals: strong job evaluations, service on curriculum committees, published articles and leadership. Under the law, states may consider how long a teacher has taught a subject but, significantly, may not base their standard on that.
The law isn't meant to punish, said Eugene Hickok, the undersecretary of education.
The Education Department is working with states to address common concerns, such as: How can someone who teaches several subjects to disabled students reasonably demonstrate mastery of all those topics? What about a rural teacher who handles several grades?
At the same time, Hickok said, the law intends to make sure that longtime teachers are in class because of skills and knowledge, not because of seniority. "It's not unusual, sadly, to have 12- or 15-year career professionals in place who really aren't the kind of professionals we need," he said.
Meanwhile, the law encourages new routes to the classroom. The American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence requires teachers to pass tests in subjects and instruction ability but demands no classroom experience or traditional education coursework. Mentoring comes on the job.
"The marketplace for teachers is so much broader than we allow today," said Lisa Graham Keegan, a leader of the organization. "We just have to go get them."
The National Education Association, the country's largest teachers union, says the law should be changed to close loopholes for teachers in charter schools and those earning an alternative certification. The NEA also says states deserve more flexibility, such as with special-education teachers who handle multiple subjects.
In some cases, teachers face no extra steps. Jamie Sawatzky, a fourth-year history teacher at Rocky Run Middle School in Chantilly, Va., qualifies with a degree in his subject. But he worries the law will prevent school administrators from hiring people who have intangible qualities to be brilliant teachers.
In New Orleans, new superintendent Anthony Amato must turn around a school system that, as he puts it, is most noted for failing test scores and leadership troubles. The teacher quality assignment is another huge task, as 40 percent of his teachers are not certified to teach their subjects or not certified at all, he said.
He has added literacy and math training for teachers and worked with local universities to coordinate teacher certification programs, among other steps.
"I feel the sense of urgency from the federal government, and I don't mind at all. That's how I work anyway," Amato said. "If we can make it work here, it can be a real message to urban systems nationwide: Don't back down."
The law may prompt some veterans to retire early and may discourage people from becoming teachers, said Charlene Christopher, a special-education specialist at Norfolk Public Schools in Virginia. But some won't be fazed, she said the ones "who will be there until they roll us out."
And if states fall short of the teacher mandate? Greater pressure from parents could be in store, as states, districts and schools must publicize information about how many teachers miss the mark.
Ultimately, the hammer may be money. Federal officials may withhold aid that many schools rely upon, as Hickok acknowledged, although he said states are showing good faith.
"If a serious effort is being made to accomplish the purposes of No Child Left Behind, even if you fall short, that's different than a statement that says, 'We really don't care,'" Hickok said.
"Our goal is to find ways to accomplish this as a nation."
Dittos from another public school teacher.
IMO it would be an improvement if the testing & NCLB finally put a stake through the heart of the "middle school concept". Put the 6th graders back in elementary school, put the 9th graders back in junior high, and have teachers certified in each subject (not in "middle grades education") teaching the junior high students.
To junior high school, grades 7-9.
The other option would be having elementary school as K-8, and high school 9-12.
Okay, now I'm having trouble understanding you.
Would the students whose parents don't pay property taxes (or pay low amounts of property taxes) not be able to go to school, if their parents couldn't afford the tuition?
I live in a rural state with many bush schools. The feds are currently working with my state to provide a general test for long time teachers rather than specialized certification. Future teachers will require certifications in specific areas. Doesn't surprise me though, making changes already; all the politics corrupting the system.
We just had a family bring all their kids back into the school system. They didn't pass the benchmarks. I see many homeschoolers abusing the system, unlike the dedicated people on FR. That is why I believe eventually there will be certifications required for everyone. I'm sure you know and have witnessed what I'm talking about.
In my state we have many small similar communities.
In towns where there are 300-400 K-12, will not be a problem with certification. Math teachers don't teach history, science, everything.
Probably hard to imagine a community such as mine, but they exist and are quite great places to raise families.
Teachers SHOULD know the content of what they are teaching, but these tests are questionable. Will they be base on KNOWING 7th grade math, or though Calculus?
Texas did something like this about 20 years ago. Our 'life-time' certificates were no longer for life. Evaluation processes were put in place. The true level of knowledge has not been impacted.
The 'test' was and is a joke - it is too generic. The evaluations are a joke - too subjective.
The quality of life is much better in smaller towns, especially for raising your family. My children did go to a larger school, tho - about 1000 kids K-12.
"I'm still in a state of anger and resistance," said Pringle, an eighth-grade teacher at Susquehanna Township Middle School in Harrisburg, Pa. "It's not fair to change the rules in the middle of the game. ... I have prided myself in staying current and being active in the field. For all that to be reduced to a multiple-choice test is an insult." ***
YES! YES! YES!
Just imagine this person standing in front of the room "teaching" your child.
They're all good at this bs. If they know the subject matter, why fight demonstrating their proficiency in it? The hell with their self esteem, THIS test is "for the children." This test is a very small measure of their fitness to be paid, to be tenured, to be called a teacher.
At the heart of the discrepancy may well be a reluctance on the part of educators to report campus crime fully. A survey by the National Association of School Resource Officers found that 89 percent of school police believe crime is already underreported. "It's the scarlet letter in education today," says Mr. Trump. "Administrators have said to me privately that they would rather be academically failing than be a dangerous school." ***
MOVED: Veteran Edison High School teachers, from left, Ta Shina Nelloms, Rebecca Calvert, Shawn DeNight, Terry Lewis, Meghan Hauptli and Kathy Rosenthal Humphrey have been involuntarily transferred to other schools. JOSHUA PREZANT/FOR THE HERALD
3 F's, they're out: Edison sees teacher shake-up***While the district does not have access to the standardized test scores of individual teachers' students, it can review results by subject and grade, she said. Since reading scores fell at Edison -- only 3 percent of freshmen and 4 percent of seniors were classified at least proficient in 2003 -- they decided to shake up the English department.***
There's nothing dumber than an "ed major" except, of course, a "journalism" major.
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