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Accelerated Certification of Teachers: The Good, The Bad,

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Title: Accelerated Certification of Teachers: The Good, The Bad,


1
Accelerated Certification of Teachers The Good,
The Bad, The UglyWhat we thought we knew, what
we learned, and what really works.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Education ACT
    Program
  • NCAC
  • February 9, 2006
  • San Diego, CA

2
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

3
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
  • 1.8 million children in our public schools
  • 501 districts, 3000 schools
  • 255,000 children currently diagnosed with special
    learning needs
  • Largest RURAL population in the country
  • Home to the FIFTH largest school district in the
    country (Philadelphia)
  • 95 colleges and universities offer Teacher
    Preparation programs in the Commonwealth

4
TQE Grant gtgtgt ACT Grant Program in Pennsylvania
  • The Accelerated Certification for Teachers
    Program is a well-designed program that addresses
    the professional preparation needs of a growing
    population of individuals who already have at
    least a bachelor's degree, considerable subject
    knowledge, and want to become teachers.

5
Goals of ACT Program
  • Provide accelerated certification programs for
    highly qualified professionals seeking a career
    in the Pennsylvania education system.
  • Rise to the challenges of NCLB and IDEIA.
  • Assist high-need school districts in providing
    Highly Qualified educators.

6
More specifically, the purpose of the ACT Grant
program is
  • To convert teachers currently working via an
    Emergency 01 Permit to high quality, Highly
    Qualified Instructional I subject area
    certificate holders
  • To recruit minority candidates to serve as role
    models in high need content areas and districts
  • To implement technology via Distance Education
    models

7
The Accelerated Certification for Teachers
Program is designed to provide certification to
highly qualified candidates to meet the needs of
primarily five sponsoring school districts, in 5
high need content areas
  • Allentown
  • Harrisburg
  • Philadelphia
  • Reading
  • York City
  • Math
  • The Sciences
  • ESL
  • Spanish
  • Special Education

8
Justification of ACT Program
  • For the 04-05 school year, PDE granted in
    excess of 2,600 Emergency (Type 01) Permits
    within the 5 participating school districts.
  • Type 01 Permit Long Term Vacancy and does NOT
    qualify for HQ status

9
Who can participate in the ACT Program?
  • A qualified candidate for participation in the
    ACT Grant is one who
  • is currently teaching on an Emergency 01 permit
    OR has procured a teaching position or temporary
    certification in appropriate academic content in
    one of the following school districts
  • Harrisburg Philadelphia
  • Reading York City
  • Allentown
  • AND
  • possesses a Bachelors degree in the content area
    in which the candidate is seeking certification.

10
Participating Colleges Universities
  • Currently, there are 4 participating institutions
    of higher education who have partnered with both
    PDE and local school districts to provide
    accelerated teaching certification to interested
    candidates
  • Cheyney University
  • Chestnut Hill College
  • Eastern University
  • Holy Family University
  • The grants were awarded for three years
  • September 2003-September 2006

11
How Does it Work?
  • The various institutions of higher education, the
    school districts, and PDE worked together to
    develop a series of courses which would be
    required for each certification and moved to
    deliver the courses using flexible and innovative
    practices.
  • Some programs are delivered on-site in the
    various school districts using qualified
    community resources (such as retirees) as
    instructors.
  • Grant funds are used to cover the cost of
    tuition for all qualified participants.

12
How Does it Work?
  • Candidates enroll in the accelerated program and
    complete a series of courses that range from
    12-24 months, depending upon certification.
  • Most coursework is completed while the candidate
    is working full time in a high need school
    district.

13
Consideration
  • In order to ensure that Special Education
    program candidates are HQ, many of these
    participants are pursuing DUAL certification by
    either enrolling in additional courses to receive
    EL ED certification, or are attempting to pass
    the content area Praxis in the field of their
    content knowledge expertise.

14
Program Status
  • Number of Active Program Participants 109
  • Number of Minority Candidates 28 (27)
  • Number of Certified Program Completers 93
  • Percentage of Program Completers still in
    District 90

15
Program Status
  • Program Completers Certified by Subject as of
    02/01/06
  • Special Education 66
  • Spanish/ ESL 14
  • Math 8
  • Science / Biology / Chemistry 5

16
Program Status
  • LEAs Employing ACT Grant HQ Program
    Completers
  • Philadelphia 58
  • Harrisburg 13
  • Allentown 8
  • Reading 6
  • York City 8

17
(No Transcript)
18
Benefits for participating IHEs include
  • better rapport with the involved school
    districts,
  • closer cooperation among the participating
    colleges,
  • utilization of locally available resources and
    faculty,
  • and better knowledge of what partnering school
    districts need.

19
Benefits to the candidates include
  • flexible course schedules,
  • ability to be certified in a 12-18 month
    timeframe,
  • reimbursement for PASSED Praxis tests,
  • tuition remission,
  • and enhanced mentoring by the institutions of
    higher education and the school districts.

20
Benefits to the participating LEAs include
  • HQ status of employees on Emergency 01 Permits,
  • certification of candidates usually within 12
    months,
  • inclusion of school district input into the
    curriculum,
  • tuition remission,
  • and school district personnel teaching some of
    the college courses.

21
Lessons Learned
  • The Good
  • The Bad
  • The Ugly.

22
YEAR 1Question How hard can this be?
  • Answer Ignorance is bliss.

23
First, the GOOD
  • Commitment to alternative certification models.
  • Participants valued tuition reimbursement, the
    customized and accelerated coursework, and the
    convenience of the times and locations of the
    courses.
  • Conversion of uncertified teachers into high
    quality, Highly Qualified educators.

24
Now the BAD
  • Enrollment process with IHEs is complicated and
    involves last minute paperwork.
  • For the Reading, York, and Harrisburg candidates,
    courses offered via Eastern University were
    located at some distance, complicating
    communication.
  • Lack of core competencies and structured course
    rotations.

25
And the UGLY
  • Thinning the Herd
  • Participating Districts Lancaster
  • Program Participants
  • Partnering IHEs Gwynedd-Mercy, University of
    Pittsburgh

26
More UGLY
  • Learning the difference between a warm body
  • and a good candidate.

27
Solutions, or How we cleaned up our ACT
  • Lesson 1 On the IHE level, grant administration
    proved too much work for one person.
  • Hiring a student advisor
  • 1.) enables candidates to have a single point of
    contact
  • 2.) allows directors to focus on curriculum
  • 3.) greatly improves communications between IHE,
    LEA, and SEA

28
Cleaning up our ACT, cont.
  • Lesson 2 Creating a common set of course
    competencies and rotations
  • Consistent programming
  • 1.) improves communication among candidates,
    IHEs, and LEAs
  • 2.) ensures high quality program graduates
  • 3.) provides a standardized model for program
    implementation statewide

29
Recommended Course Content Math, Science,
Spanish FINAL
30
MATH/ SCIENCE Curriculum Instruction,
Assessment Pedagogy MOD/ SAT / 3 CR
Long-range and short-range planning of
instruction, done independently and in
collaboration with other educators, based
upon          mathematics subject matter,
         students and the community,         
Pennsylvania Academic Standards, content analysis
with specific objectives,          instructional
methods, including materials and
activities,          results of student
assessments   II.A. Selecting, adapting and
implementing a variety of instructional
strategies ranging from computational exercises
to complex problem solving to essay-style
homework, class assignments, projects, and
utilizing traditional tools as well as modern
technologies   II.B. Selecting, analyzing, and
modifying instructional materials to meet the
needs of diverse learners   II.C. Assessing and
evaluating students conceptual understanding of
content through a variety of contextual settings,
providing formative feedback to align
instructional strategies assist to individual
student needs
31
Cleaning up our ACT, cont.
  • Lesson 3 Failing Grade Addendum
  • The use of a Failing Grade Addendum
  • 1.) clarifies the financial responsibilities of
    the candidate
  • 2.) enables the USDOE to seek tuition repayment
    from participants who drop/fail out

32
          ACCELERATED CERTIFICATION OF TEACHERS
(ACT)   ADDENDUM TO THE SCHOLARSHIP TERMS
CONDITIONS     As a participant in the ACT grant
program, I will be responsible for repayment of
any tuition funds given to me by the ACT grant
if I do not pass a course due to a failing grade
(C, D, or F).  If I receive two failing grades,
then I will be responsible to repay the tuition
for both courses, as well as be dismissed from
the program entirely.     _______________________
_________ Name of Scholarship Recipient (PRINT
PLEASE)       ________________________________ __
________________________ Scholarship Recipients
Signature Date       __________________________
________ __________________________ Authorized
Institutional Official Signature Date       ____
______________________________ ___________________
_______ Name of Official (PLEASE PRINT) Title
ACT GRANT
 
33
Cleaning up our ACT, cont.
  • Lesson 4 Recruitment is Integral to
    Programmatic Success
  • Partner with The New Teacher Project
  • rigorous interview process ensures candidate
    dedication
  • assists candidates in selecting a compatible IHE
  • aids districts in identifying high quality
    employees

34
YEAR 2
  • Hitting Our Stride

35
First, the GOOD
  • At 3 of the 4 participating universities, there
    are more students interested in ACT slots than
    are available for them, indicating that the
    program is meeting a need for HQ teachers. The
    need continues to be most substantial in
    Harrisburg and Philadelphia. Further, very few
    participants dropped out of the program for
    reasons other than failure to pass the Praxis
    exams.

36
First, the GOOD
  • 90 participants (38 of those ever enrolled) had
    completed the program by the end of Year Two, and
    most of those had received certification. If we
    do not count dropouts- most of whom were dropped
    because of the Praxis- more than half of the Year
    One and Year Two participants had completed the
    program by the end of Year Two.

37
First, the GOOD
  • Relationships between the IHEs and LEAs,
    particularly the school district of Philadelphia,
    continue to be positive, as reported in the Year
    Two Evaluation Report.
  • Each of the universities have plans to provide
    ACT courses in a Distance Education format for
    Year Three.

38
First, the GOOD
  • A new course competency and sequence was hammered
    out by the IHEs with guidance from PDE. One
    significant difference between the ACT course
    sequence and the traditional teacher prep
    sequence is an emphasis on classroom survival
    skills, such as Classroom Behavior Management.

39
First, the GOOD
  • Student teaching has also been divided into TWO 3
    credit courses, with the first occurring during
    the candidates first semester of teaching, as
    opposed to being the capstone experience. This
    ungraded course assists candidates in immediate
    and constructive feedback.

40
First, the GOOD
  • In most cases, ACT candidates were pleased with
    the quality of their coursework and the amount of
    attention they received from faculty and staff.
    Students at universities that had consistent
    student advisors- Chestnut Hill and Eastern- were
    most pleased with the amount of support they
    received in negotiating administrative
    challenges.

41
Now, the Bad
  • Each of the universities has begun to offer
    distance learning courses however, with the
    exception of Chestnut Hill, which offered hybrid
    courses from the beginning quite successfully,
    the universities have struggled with a lack of
    infrastructure and knowledge about how best to
    offer online and distance learning programs.

42
And yes, the Ugly
  • The requirements that a Special Education teacher
    must meet in order to be HQ increased during Year
    Two. All of Eastern Universitys ACT Special
    Education graduates leave dually certified (with
    ELEM ED) and they can complete this course
    sequence in 16 months. At the other universities,
    dual certification can take considerably longer.
    Struggling to provide HQ candidates in our area
    of greatest need is proving a considerable
    challenge.

43
YEAR 3GOALS
  • 1.) Continue to produce high quality, HQ teachers
  • 2.) Provide a model to IHEs for replication
    statewide to assist LEAs in meeting NCLB
    requirements
  • 3.) Implement distance education coursework at
    all participating IHEs

44
YEAR 3PROVEN RESULTS
  • Eastern University will continue to partner with
    the Harrisburg and Philadelphia School Districts
    to provide accelerated certification to desirable
    candidates.
  • TNTP will continue to work with Eastern
    University in recruiting qualified candidates for
    the accelerated certification program.

45
YEAR 3PROVEN RESULTS
  • The ACT Grant Partnership presented program at US
    DOE TQE Conference, December, 2005.
  • A series of presentations with IHEs and LEAs will
    be scheduled throughout the Commonwealth in 2006
    in an attempt to generate interest and assist in
    the implementation of the accelerated models at
    interested districts and colleges universities.

46
Accelerated Certification of Teachers The Good,
The Bad, The UglyWhat we thought we knew, what
we learned, and what really works.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Education ACT
    Program
  • NCAC
  • February 9, 2006
  • San Diego, CA

47
Presentation prepared by thePennsylvania
Department of EducationBureau of Teacher
Certification and Preparation
  • For more information on the ACT Grant, contact
  • Catherine Cormany
  • Higher Education Associate II
  • Pennsylvania Department of Education
  • Bureau of Teacher Certification Preparation
  • 333 Market Street
  • Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17126-0333
  • (717) 772-3569
  • ccormany_at_state.pa.us
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