Becoming
Accountable for the Impact of Graduates
on
Students and Schools:
Making
Operational the Shift From Teaching to Learning
A
Concept Paper for Discussion
prepared
by:
Roger
Pankratz
Western
Kentucky University
for
a symposium
at
the Annual Meeting of
The
American Association of Colleges
for
Teacher Education
Washington,
DC
February
24-27, 1999
Becoming
Accountable for the Impact of Graduates
on
Students and Schools:
Making
Operational the Shift from Teaching to Learning
The
Challenge to Focus on Teacher Performance and Student Learning
Not
long ago, I watched a group of faculty present a plan for a school-university
partnership program to their provost prior to submitting the proposal to a
foundation for support. The
designers of the plan described the rich field experiences for teacher
candidates, the faculty mentoring program, electronic portfolios, increased
interactions between practioners and professors, and the potential for
professional publications. After
reviewing the plan, the provost looked up from the proposal document and said,
“This looks very interesting, but what does the new partnership program have
to do with student learning? Suppose
three years from now when the program is fully operational and a reporter from
CNN or ABC comes to see what you have achieved. You show her the many fine features of your program and then she turns
to you and says, ‘What evidence do you have that all children are learning
at high levels?’ What will you
tell her?’ ” A response from one faculty member was that it should be
obvious from all the learning activities in which students are engaged.
While
student involvement and activity may have been a recognized indicator of
learning a decade ago, it falls far short of acceptability in Kentucky today
with nine years of statewide performance assessment and school accountability.
A recent report from the Council of Chief State School Officers
indicated that 48 states have adopted some type of statewide testing program.
Thirty-six states issue a “report card” to parents and the public
on the performance of schools; and in 16 states, schools whose students
perform poorly are taken over.
The
provost of every teacher preparation institution in Kentucky is interested in
student learning because they are being asked to provide evidence that their
graduates are prepared to facilitate learning at high levels for all students,
not just those who are the most academically able. The business community, citizen groups, and policy makers in Kentucky
want to know why large numbers of students and schools are not keeping pace
with the high standards set by the state and the extent to which teachers are
being prepared for high performing schools. Also, provosts of teacher preparation institutions in Kentucky are
interested in student learning because school administrators want to know that
the new teachers they hire will be able to contribute positively to the
performance of the students they teach. Like athletic coaches, school
principals want evidence that new teachers they employ are team players who
have a track record of high performance and can facilitate learning in all
students.
Another
reason provosts in teacher preparation institutions in Kentucky and across the
nation are interested in teacher performance related to student learning is
because new standards have been adopted for NCATE 2000. Under these new standards, the following guidelines apply to all
institutions planning continuing accreditation.
“Institutions
will use available measures that show candidates’ performance in relation to
the standards (e.g., state licensure tests, essays, or projects in subject
matter mastery) and will develop measures in other areas (e.g., demonstrating
teaching proficiency during the clinical education experience and showing
ability to have a positive effect on student learning). This information will be summarized for each program with examples of
assessment tasks, scoring rubrics, and candidates’ work.”1
Those
responsible for teacher preparation programs know that the documentation of
inputs and processes that have been the foundation for unit and program
accreditation in the past will be insufficient to meet the new performance
standards, and evidence of teacher performance related to student learning
will be required for continuing accreditation.
In November of 1997, representatives of the Renaissance Group2 institutions considered alternative program initiatives that would most likely encourage member institutions to examine their programs and develop strategies to demonstrate accountability for the performance of their graduates. It was agreed that a focus on teacher performance that positively impacts student learning would best promote that system of accountability. As a result, a number of member institutions have agreed to examine and implement programs to collect and publish data on the impact of their graduates on students and schools and to strengthen their program to ensure higher teacher performance. It is this quest for evidence of impact of graduates on students and schools that is the focus of this discussion paper.
The
Paradigm Shift From Teaching to Learning
Need for a Change in Focus
According
to Barr and Tagg3, the fundamental problem with the focus on
instruction rather than learning is “that our dominant paradigm mistakes a
means for an end.” To hold the belief that the purpose of colleges or schools is
to provide instruction is like saying that General Motors’ primary business
is to operate assembly lines. The
primary problem resulting from focusing on instruction rather than learning is
that it is incompatible with standards-based teaching and learning. Accepting accountability for the learning of all students requires
attending to a complex set of processes and conditions associated with
teaching and learning, not just instruction. Focusing mainly on instruction works only for the spectrum of learners
that can most profit from the instruction that happens to be offered but may
have less than the desired impact on the rest of the intended learners. A learning paradigm accepts responsibility for positively impacting all
students.
A second reason why the instruction paradigm is inadequate for our teacher preparation programs or our P-12 schools is that with this focus, it is impossible to increase outcomes without increasing resources. More instruction requires more resources. More learning invites the reconfiguration of resources. Over the past decade, business and industry have faced the reality of becoming more efficient or losing out to the competition. Teacher education and P-12 education are facing the same dilemma. Only if we approach educating our future populations from a learning perspective will we be able to become efficient and afford our national dreams of a better life for all.
A
third reason that continuing to focus on instruction rather than learning
fails to support standards-based teaching and learning is that primary
attention is given to only one aspect of the teaching/learning process, “the
means.” On the other hand, a
focus on learning, or the product, encourages both the teacher and the learner
to try out and adjust various aspects of the learning process to achieve the
best results. Thus, the learning
paradigm is much more concerned with the whole of a learning system than only
one aspect, instruction. It forces us to look at all the factors that affect learning,
including the student’s abilities, background, and prior knowledge; the
context of schooling; the complexity of the learning task; and the learning
resources available.
Fundamental
Differences in Two Approaches
Barr
and Tagg4 have
described the key differences in the instruction vs. learning paradigm for
undergraduate education in college. These
differences are described under the categories of “mission and purposes,”
“critical for success,” and “teaching and learning structures.” Schalock and Myton5 described many of these same differences
when they presented contrasting factors that characterize traditional
schooling and “standards-based teaching and learning.” They report fundamental shifts in how schools are organized, the nature
of instruction, and in assessment, record keeping, and reporting. Common to both of these descriptions are the following differences in
the two approaches to teaching and learning.
|
Defining
Attribute |
Focus of
Instruction |
Focus on
Learning |
|
•
mission or purpose |
offer
instruction |
produce
learning |
|
•
expectations |
different
for different students |
high
standards for all |
|
•
progress in the system |
grade
to grade accumulation of course completions |
performance
related to defined standards |
|
•
nature of the learning environment |
the
class |
varies
based on the learner, learning target, and learning context |
|
•
nature of instruction |
same
for all |
varies
based on the learner, learning target, and learning context |
|
•
time for teaching and learning |
same
for all |
flexible |
|
•
nature of assessment |
-local -single
form -teacher’s
objectives |
-public -multiple
forms -state
or national standards |
|
•
program evaluation |
end
of course evaluation |
comprehensive
assessment of all components of the system |
Implications
for Teacher Preparation Programs
Based
on the contrast of the two approaches described above relative to key
attributes, it is obvious that fundamental differences in beliefs, structures,
processes, and behaviors on the part of university and school leaders and
practitioners will be required to make the proposed shift to a focus on
learning. However, some beliefs
and processes, because of their importance and difficulty to change, will
become the greatest challenge for leaders of reform in teacher preparation
programs. Six of these challenges
are presented below.
Accepting Accountability for Student Performance. The focus on instruction has often absolved the teacher of responsibility for student learning. Public school teachers and university faculty are quick to blame low performance on students, their parents, and colleagues who are former teachers of their students. Accepting the responsibility to positively impact learning empowers the teacher to alter and improve the learning environment for the learner. However, this stance is often very threatening to teachers who believe that most factors related to low performance of students are beyond their control.
Focusing
on Learning Standards. College professors traditionally have experienced a lot of autonomy and
academic freedom about what they taught. The concept of state or nationally defined standards and being told
what is the most important for students to learn is often difficult for
college professors and teachers to accept. Both have enjoyed the freedom to teach their favorite topics using
their favorite strategies without regard for the needs of students. College professors and school practitioners need to be shown
that defining content standards does not take away their freedom to design
instruction.
Placing
More Emphasis on Assessment of Learning Progress. Standards-based teaching and learning requires frequent assessment,
diagnosis, and communication of learning progress. Also, teachers need multiple tools of formal and informal assessments
to assure continuous progress of all children. Interviews with more than 20,000 new teachers in Kentucky show that
more than four out of ten beginning teachers say they were poorly prepared for
standards-based alternative assessments6. Also, a review of teacher education programs in ten Renaissance Group
institutions showed a lack of emphasis on assessment of student learning in
teacher and administrator preparation programs7.
Engaging Students and Teachers in In-depth Learning Tasks. The practice of covering a broad set of topics in a superficial manner is a common practice in P-12 education. Focusing on a few key concepts in depth is the exception rather than the rule in America, as shown by the Third International Mathematics and Science Study8. In Kentucky, less than two percent of middle school students are “proficient” in science that requires students to write open response questions about relationships and science inquiry processes. Getting university faculty to model the learning environments we need in P-12 schools is highly essential if we expect standards-based teaching and learning at high levels for all students. This challenge will be especially difficult in university environments where academic lectures have been the established way of life.
Collaborating
with Colleagues, Parents, and Community Resources. Standards-based learning does not assume that all or even most learning
takes place in the classroom or under the direct instruction of the teacher.
Believing that this can be the case and developing meaningful
relationships with parents and other school and community resources is foreign
to many school practitioners and most college faculty. Yet, these collaborative relationships must be developed and new
teachers trained in how to utilize a much wider repertoire of learning
resources.
Reflecting
on and Learning From Experience. Teachers who have gone through the National Board Certification process
often talk about it as a life changing experience because they are required to
analyze and evaluate their teaching. This
gives them a life-long tool to improve on their teaching performance. Standards-based teaching and learning provide regular feedback to the
student on their performance and feedback to preparation programs on their
effectiveness. National Board
Certified teachers report their experience was unlike anything they ever
experienced in their preparation or professional development programs. In standards-based programs, reflection and evaluation must become an
integral part of professional life both on campus and in schools.
Strategies
for Measuring and Collecting Information
on
Teachers’ Positive Effects on Student Learning
Standards-based
teaching and learning, as in instruction-based systems, requires teacher
candidates to show high performance levels in the knowledge of the content
they teach and pedagogy. However,
a standards-based program also requires evidence that graduates can positively
impact student learning. The
Program Standards for Elementary Teacher Preparation document recently
developed by NCATE describes four major attributes for performance-based
teacher preparation9.
Teacher candidate
knowledge
Teaching performances
(methodology)
Teacher dispositions
(values and commitments)
Positive effects on
student learning
It
is the fourth attribute that has been omitted from instruction-based systems
and is of major concern to the Renaissance Group institutions. Assessment coordinators from member Renaissance Group institutions have
formed a task force to develop and test strategies for determining the extent
to which their graduates are having positive effects on the K-12 students they
teach. Renaissance Group
institutions agree that all members must adopt multiple measures for assessing
teacher candidate performance that include all four attributes described in
the NCATE Program Standards. However, they realize that the fourth attribute, effects on student
learning, has not been addressed in the past and should be a developmental
priority.
Assessment coordinators at several member institutions have conducted focus groups with their teacher graduates and with teacher education faculty regarding ideas and strategies for determining the impact of graduates on students and schools. Also, the assessment coordinators have explored various practices under development and being implemented across the nation that attempt to measure teacher impact on students. A repertoire of promising and potential strategies for assessing student impact has been assembled for the consideration of member institutions as they each develop their own performance evaluation program of graduates.
The
strategies and/or ideas collected that are related to assessing teacher impact
on student learning have been organized into five categories for further
discussion and consideration by the Renaissance Group assessment coordinators:
surveys, student work samples, teacher work samples, student achievement data,
and teacher performance links to achievement data. Each of these five categories is described below.
Surveys
About Teacher Impact
A
review of surveys that have been conducted by member Renaissance Group
institutions confirms that most surveys are mail-out instruments to graduates
with very general questions about the graduate’s satisfaction with their
preparation program. The return
rate is usually low (less than 30%) and overall satisfaction with programs
quite high.
In
1996 and 1997, the Kentucky Institute for Education Research conducted
telephone random sampled interviews with 2200 first, second, and third year
teachers in Kentucky about their initial teacher preparation. With some variation among responses of graduates from different
institutions, six of ten said they were extremely well prepared, and less than
one in ten said they were poorly prepared. However, when new teachers were asked more specifically about their
preparation for specific performance areas such as design of instruction, use
of technology for instruction, or strategies for assessing student learning,
they reported being less prepared and showed more variation among
institutions. When asked about
preparation for specific program initiatives mandated in all schools by
Kentucky’s Education Reform Act of 1990, such as the use of alternative
assessments, less than half said they were well prepared10.
The
lessons to be learned from the two-year statewide surveys in Kentucky were
that the more specific and focused questions yielded more discriminating and
useful information. Also, random stratified telephone interviews yielded quite
different information than mail-out surveys with low return rates.
While
surveys are not the most desirable method to obtain information about
teachers’ impact on students, they are very likely to continue to be used by
teacher preparation institutions due to the lower cost and ease of conducting
surveys. Therefore, the
Renaissance Group coordinators are including surveys and interviews about
teachers’ impact on students as one possible source of data. However, consideration should be given to multiple sources of data
beyond the self report of the graduate to include perceptions of school
administrators, other teachers, parents, and the students of the graduate.
Also, questions about impact on specific learning targets and random
sampling of respondents should be considered.
Student
Work Samples and Feedback on Student Work
Teacher
exhibits required for National Board and for INTASC assessments require
progressive examples of student work over time and the feedback provided to
the students to help them improve their performances. Portfolios
in most student teaching and teacher intern programs require exhibits of
student work. Student work
samples and teacher feedback exhibits can be useful sources of information
about a candidate’s ability to facilitate student learning. They provide evidence of how teachers are able to support learning for
individual students, but not the whole class. National Board and INTASC assessments direct the teacher to select
different types of students for their exhibits; however, the choice is up to
the teacher. Thus, students who
may have the most difficult time learning may not be selected for student work
samples. For student work samples
to provide meaningful information across teacher candidates, well designed
common scoring guides and instructions for collecting student work are
essential.
Teacher
Work Sampling11
Teacher
work sampling, as the name implies, focuses on a sample of teacher work but
also collects samples of pupil work. According
to its authors and developers, “Work sampling resembles what teacher
educators typically require of student teachers as they assume full
responsibility in the classroom. It
represents a strategy that directly connects teacher performance in a
meaningful way.” The process for this methodology was developed over the past
decade at the University of Western Oregon and has been adopted by the Oregon
Teacher Standards and Practices Commission as the primary means for teacher
candidates to provide evidence that they have met Oregon’s teacher
performance standards for licensure12.
While
there are some variations across institutions, Western Oregon University’s
program requires teacher candidates to complete ten teaching tasks, each
having a required product that has a performance measure. The ten teaching tasks include:
Describing
a unit of study
Mapping
the classroom context
Identifying
learning outcomes
Developing
assessments for outcomes
Administering
pre-instruction assessments
Developing
a design for instruction and assessment for all pupils
Implementing
the instructional plan
Administering
the post-instructional assessment
Summarizing,
interpreting, and reporting the growth of each pupil and selected groups
of pupils in the class
Reflecting
and evaluating the teaching and learning process for the instructional
unit
At
Western Oregon, a foundation for the knowledge, skills, and processes required
for the ten tasks is provided in the early years of the program. The set of ten tasks is completed for two separate units of two to five
weeks of instruction during their student teaching experience. The work sample methodology provides direct evidence of a
teacher candidate’s effect on student learning in a relatively short time
period and clearly connects the elements of standards-based teaching and
learning.
Critics of the work sample methodology question what teacher candidates can be expected to accomplish with students in two to five weeks at the student teaching level. The developers of the Oregon Teacher Work Sample Model have worked hard over the past five years to respond to their critics and strengthen the weaker components of their program. The authors do not advocate that the data from the teacher work samples should be the only indicators of teacher performance. However, the Oregon program represents the nation’s most fully developed model for providing evidence of a teacher candidate’s effects on student learning.
The
Oregon Teacher Work Sampling Methodology is being studied by NCATE, AACTE, and
the Renaissance Group as a model that holds promise for providing evidence of
teacher impact on student learning.
Collecting
and Attributing Standardized Student
Test
Scores to the Effects of Teacher Graduates on Learning
In
the summer of 1998, The Teachers College at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln13,
in honor if its 90th anniversary, made a pact with the state of
Nebraska that it would implement a plan to be accountable for how well their
graduates teach and how well their teachers’ students learn. While the Teachers College announced it would collect data from
multiple sources and at different points in their teacher graduates’
preparation programs and beginning years of teaching, in the second year of
their teaching career, Teachers College graduates will be graded by their
schools on the success of their K-12 students. Data for the evaluation of teacher effectiveness will come from
standardized tests already in place in those schools.
Although
the detailed processes for attributing student test scores to the ability of
specific graduates to produce learning have not been worked out, the Teachers
College pact represents a significant “first” institutional initiative
that accepts responsibility for student learning in public schools.
Because
48 states now have some type of required testing programs in schools, other
teacher preparation institutions will attempt to follow the University of
Nebraska’s lead to collect achievement data on the students of their
graduates. This strategy has its
challenges in attributing a student’s scores to a specific teacher when it
is not a one-teacher, self-contained classroom. Also, since not all grades or disciplines are tested, some type of
sampling design will need to be considered.
Linking
Indicators of Teacher Performance
To
Student Achievement Results
In
states that have a history of statewide testing of K-12 students and have
adopted some type of teacher evaluation program, educators or policy makers
may want to investigate the relationship between indicators of teacher
performance measured by teacher assessment instruments and student achievement
scores. Establishing
relationships between teacher performance indicators and student achievement
scores provides an indirect method of showing that teacher graduates are
having a positive impact on student learning. For example, in the state of Connecticut, the Connecticut Mastery Test14
has been administered to students in grades 4, 6, and 8 since 1986 to assess
reading, writing, and math skills statewide. In addition, this state has developed the Connecticut Competency
Instrument to teachers in their first year of teaching and a formal,
portfolio-based assessment process during year two for a newly appointed
teacher. The Connecticut
Department of Education has already established relationships between teacher
participation in the state’s Beginning Educators Support and Training (BEST)
Program15 and student achievement measured by the Connecticut
Mastery Test16. Now,
the Department of Education is looking to link teacher scores on their Teacher
Competency Instrument and the portfolio-based assessment process with student
achievement. Again, the
challenges of this strategy to linking teacher performance with student
achievement includes the limited testing of 4th, 6th,
and 8th grades and only reading, writing, and math skills.
In
Alabama, the State Board of Education has established policies and procedures
requiring the development of a professional education personnel evaluation
system. School systems may
develop their own or use a system developed by the state which, through
observation and documentation, evaluates teachers in five performance areas17.
The state of Alabama also has a statewide testing program for all
public schools. Researchers at
the University of Alabama, Birmingham, are investigating the relationship
between teacher performance factors on the state’s personnel evaluation
instrument and student achievement as one method of linking teacher
performance to student learning in Alabama.
A
major challenge with this strategy for collecting data on teacher impact on
student learning is how to interpret results when some performance factors
show positive relationships and other factors show no relationship, or even
negative relationships, to student achievement. Also, it is highly likely that teacher performance factors may be
related to student learning differently in one subject area compared to
another.
The
next section of this paper presents some of the general challenges that must
be addressed with all strategies that may be considered for gathering data on
teacher impact on student learning.
Issues
and Challenges to Programs that Attempt to Link Teacher
Performance
with Student Learning
Every
non-traditional program has its set of critics and challenges to its validity,
and performance-based teaching and learning is no exception. The attempt to link teacher performance to student learning is not new.
However, claiming that it can be done or might be done in high-stakes settings
or on a statewide scale was unheard of a decade ago. Any practitioner or research group that plans to have its work accepted
by the professional community needs to consider the issues and challenges
being directed at performance-based teaching and learning friends and foe.
Following
are six issues and/or challenges that have been debated by critics and
supporters of performance-based teaching and learning. The six questions are raised to inform and promote further discussion
on each issue.
Issue
1. What are reasonable
expectations for student teachers, first-year interns, or new teacher
graduates with respect to impact on student learning?
The
state of Oregon requires that teacher candidates show they can produce student
learning before they can be licensed to teach. Several other states (e.g., Connecticut, Alabama, Washington, Nebraska)
are attempting to link new teacher performance with student achievement.
A number of researchers and teacher educators have expressed skepticism
that beginning teachers cannot be expected to have the skills and experience
to produce real measurable gains in student achievement. How convincing is the data to support or refute the claims on
both sides of this issue?
Issue
2. How much time is needed for
teachers to show real progress in student achievement in a high stakes system?
In
the Oregon system, through pre-post assessments, student teachers are expected
to show positive gains in learning within a five-week period. On the other hand, teachers in Kentucky are given two years to show
significant gains on statewide test scores. The University of Nebraska at Lincoln is planning to look at data after
the second year of teaching. What
can be expected in a given time period? Are
the conditions different for short-term progress than for long-term gains?
Can short-term gains be a valid measure of teacher performance?
Issue
3. To what extent do student
teachers and even beginning teachers have enough control of contextual factors
in the school to affect student achievement?
There
has always been skepticism among the professional community that while
teachers facilitate learning, many factors that affect student learning are
beyond the teacher’s control; and individual teachers cannot be held
directly accountable for student gains. In
Kentucky, the schools, not individual teachers, are held accountable for
student learning. Others in the
professional community have strong beliefs that teachers, like athletic
coaches, as professionals should be able to work with contextual factors and
any students to show improvement of performance. The concept of no exceptions and no excuses had gained
support especially with some policy makers and members of the business
community. The Oregon program
expects student teachers who use another teacher’s students and classroom to
show evidence of learning with students assigned to them. Is it fair to expect student growth in all classrooms?
Under what conditions can student teachers and beginning
teachers be expected to be accountable for student learning?
Issue
4. Under what conditions can
student achievement be attributed to the performance of a student teacher or
beginning teacher?
One
teacher is usually not the only contributor to student learning. In team teaching situations, this is especially true.
Students in middle and high school are influenced by as many
as five or six teachers each day. Some
students receive more help from their parents and tutors than others. How does one attribute a given teacher’s influence on the learning of
students in situations that are not one-teacher, self -contained classrooms?
How valid are the strategies being advanced that compute the
contribution of several different teachers to a student’s academic growth?18
Issue
5. How does one set standards of
teacher performance related to student learning under conditions where
different schools have different standards and use different tests?
In
the Oregon Work Sample Methodology, guidelines have been developed over the
years to insure that student teachers use teaching outcomes and assessment
processes that meet prescribed standards and are somewhat equivalent. In many states, there are common standards in the basic discipline
areas and statewide tests that provide some common measure of student
achievement. However, if
institutions across the nation were to attempt to assess the impact of their
graduates on student learning, they would find their graduates in schools with
quite different standards and different testing systems. Given different standards and different assessments, what strategies
and techniques are available or being used to gather data and make judgments
about the impact of graduates on student learning?
Issue
6. How much of any teacher’s
performance related to student achievement can be attributed to the
teacher’s preparation program?
The
University of Nebraska is planning to collect achievement data on second-year
graduates. In Kentucky, consideration is being given to look at student
data of graduates over three years. But
even if institutions can show that their graduates are having a positive
impact on student learning, how much of a teacher’s success can be
attributed to their preparation program; how much can be attributed to innate
academic and professional abilities, and how much can be attributed to
professional development after graduation? Can teacher preparation programs of the future be judged by the
performance of students of graduates?
Benefits
of a Standards-Based Approach to Teaching
and
Learning for Teacher Preparation Programs
Given
the above issues and challenges to linking teacher performance to student
learning, one might ask, “What are the benefits of this approach to teacher
preparation programs with all of the obstacles to overcome?” Three major values to the focus on student learning are presented
below.
A
Standards-Based Model provides a framework to focus on the knowledge, skills,
and performances that connect teaching and learning.
With
the instruction-based model, teacher education programs have focused mostly on
teaching strategies and have short changed assessment of student learning and
meaningful feedback to students. Also,
not enough attention has been given to the alignment of learning targets,
curriculum, and assessment and the teacher performances needed to make the
connection across the complex set of teaching processes for this alignment.
The focus on learning forces the teacher candidate and the teacher
educator to look more broadly at all aspects of the teaching/learning process.
A
Standards-Based Model provides a framework for improving student learning,
teacher performance, and teacher preparation programs.
Placing
the learning of all students at high levels as the central focus requires
practitioners and teacher educators to examine and evaluate all factors and
processes that contribute to student learning. This broader view is more likely to provide teachers with clues to how
student learning can be improved and teacher educators with how the
performance of teacher candidates can be improved. Teachers who have experienced the National Boards and the INTASC
assessment process almost without exception report that the greatest benefit
to them is the requirement to reflect and evaluate their own teaching
processes. This is a powerful
tool for continuous improvement.
A
Standards-Based approach provides an accountability model that can be
attractive to both educators and the public.
Making
P-12 student learning a central focus in teacher preparation programs is not
only educationally sound, but it has the potential to gain back the support of
schools and the public for teacher preparation programs that has been eroded
in the 90's decade of school reform. In
the October 1998 AACTE Briefs, David Imig described the
“disconnect” between schools, colleges, and departments of education and
the real-world of schooling as viewed by practitioners, policy makers, and the
public. Serious attention to a
standards-based approach to teaching and learning provides an excellent
opportunity for institutions that prepare teachers to convince school
practitioners and the public that we all have one common objective--to
facilitate the learning of all students at high levels of performance.
End
Notes
National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education.
(1999). NCATE 2000:
Continuing accreditation and beyond. Some
questions and answers.
The Renaissance Group is a consortium of 18 colleges and universities
committed to excellence in teacher education with offices at the University
of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls. William
Callahan, Executive Director.
Barr, R. B., &
Tagg, J. (1995,
November/December). From
teaching to learning–A new paradigm for undergraduate education. Change. Pp. 13-25.
Ibid, p. 16.
Schalock, D., &
Myton, D. (In
press). Connecting Teaching and
Learning: An Introduction to Teacher Work Sampling. In, A handbook for the preparation and licensing of teachers.
G. Girod (Ed.). Washington, DC: American Association of Colleges for Teacher
Education.
Wilkerson and Associates.
(1998). The preparation of new teachers for Kentucky schools: A summary
report. Frankfort, KY: The
Kentucky Institute for Education Research.
An unpublished survey of ten Renaissance Group institutions by Roger
Pankratz, Western Kentucky University, 1998.
Stigler, J., &
Hiebert, J. (1997,
September). Understanding and
improving mathematics instruction. An
overview of the TIMSS video study. Phi
Delta Kappan, 7,9(1), 14-21.
National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education.
(1998). Program
Standards for Elementary Teacher Preparation. Washington, DC. (Author).
Wilkerson and Associates.
(1998). The preparation of new teachers for Kentucky schools: A summary
report. Frankfort, KY: The
Kentucky Institute for Education Research.
Schalock, D., & Myton, D.
(In
press). Connecting Teaching and
Learning: An Introduction to Teacher Work Sampling. In, A handbook for the preparation and licensing of teachers.
G. Girod (Ed.). Washington, DC: American Association of Colleges for Teacher
Education.
The Oregon Teacher Standards and Practices Commission.
(1998). Division 17
Standards for Program Approval. (1-15).
Underferth, D.
(1998). Nebraska Teachers College Makes Pact With State. AACTE Briefs, November 16, 1998.
Vol. 19, No. 11.
Connecticut State Department of Education.
(1988). Division of
Teaching and Learning. Bureau
of Curriculum and Teacher Standards.
Ibid.
Ibid.
The Alabama Department of Education.
Http://www.alsde.edu/pepe/pepe:htlm