Reading Licensure Test: Alabama

Elementary Reading Policy

Goal

Licensure tests provide a scalable and reliable measure that, with other evidence, can determine whether teachers are well prepared in the science of reading. While this is an area ripe for further research, the available evidence suggests that various measures of teachers' knowledge of scientifically based reading instruction correlate with their students' reading achievement gains.<sup><a href="javascript:scrollToAnchor('footnote1');">1</a></sup> States with strong licensure tests can help verify that people who earn a teaching license truly do understand the science of reading. A weak test fails to do so and costs candidates time and money for an assessment that doesn't tell them, their prep programs, or their hiring districts whether or not they have the knowledge to successfully teach children to read. States should publish institution- and program-level pass rate data on these tests, including pass rates for the first time that candidates take the test as well as their pass rates after multiple attempts (also known as “best-attempt pass rates”). This data can help identify programs with strong instruction in the science of reading, as well as missed opportunities to send more teachers into the classroom well prepared to teach reading.

not graded
Suggested Citation:
National Council on Teacher Quality. (2024). Reading Licensure Test: Alabama results. State Teacher Policy Database. [Data set].
Retrieved from: https://www.nctq.org/yearbook/state/AL-Reading-Licensure-Test-99