Our National Review of Teacher Prep is well under way. We’ve been
working hard to coordinate with colleges, universities, and other
state-based stakeholders to advance the review. In spite of this
outreach, myths and misrepresentations about our standards, methodology
and motivations persist. Here we will be setting the record straight—
beginning with institutions’ concerns about possibly getting a lower
rating only because they are complying with a state law or reg that runs
counter to our standards.
For the record: Institutions will NOT
be penalized in the review for complying with any state laws or regs
that may conflict with our standards. We understand that institutions
are required to comply with these state parameters.
Here’s an
example: Connecticut law states that school principals and not teacher
preparation programs must have full authority over selecting the
cooperating teacher for student teachers. One of NCTQ’s indicators on
the student teacher standard requires that the program plays an active
role in selecting cooperating teachers.
How do we reconcile these
conflicting statements? In an institution’s rating, we would note that
Connecticut institutions do not have the final say in the selection of
their cooperating teacher BUT we will also make it clear that the source
of the problem is the state, not the institution. In Connecticut, we
would not factor performance against that standard in the institution’s
overall grade.
Does that mean we’re giving the state of
Connecticut a pass for this policy? Absolutely not. Our annually
published State Teacher Policy Yearbook identifies where states have
gone in the wrong direction. But institutions themselves won’t be
punished for a policy that is out of their hands.
Another example
comes from our Ed School Essentials: a Review of Illinois Teacher
Preparation. One of the standards in that review was based on
institutions’ collection and use of output data, including graduates’
feedback or principals’ assessment of an institution’s graduates.
Although we rated institutions on their data collection policy, we did
not factor their low performance in any of the final scores.
Bottom line: We do not penalize institutions for policies that come from the statehouse or department of education.