There is a group of deans and directors of teacher
education, RIACTE. We have met twice, trying to find our way into a more
engaged relationship with the State agencies in general, and RIDE in
particular. That we want a seat at the table, and contribute to solving the
State’s education problems, is a given. It is a little more difficult to figure
out what is it we – meaning all teacher preparation programs - really want from
the State. From my point of view, we don’t want too much:
1.
A sensible and less burdensome state approval
process. What we have right now is an outdated, excessive bureaucratic exercise
spelled out in an 83
page document. It consists mainly in providing a host of different charts,
almost entirely on inputs. If we at least could use our national accreditation
(which can also use some streamlining, no doubt) for the purposes of state
approval, it would give us a gift of productive time. It is not that we don’t want
to be regulated; not at all. We just do not want to produce mountains of
useless paperwork, that’s it. Something closer to the audit model would work
much better. Come and see what we do – talk to graduates, read our internal
documentation, our reports, our data, and make an informed judgment on the
integrity of our programs. Instead, we are asked to produce things we do not
normally use for our operations, and things that are unlikely to improve the
way we work. This encourages cynicism and discourages professional
responsibility. As we prepare to submit
all of the needed information electronically, it becomes less and less clear
why RIDE wants to send 20 people to review us, and why do they insist in
staying in Providence hotels. Why not review all materials online and just send
2-3 people to talk to faculty, partner schools, and to our candidates.
2.
We need a support system to follow up on our
graduates. Teacher preparation should be a system for long-term professional
training, which integrates pre-service training with meaningful induction and
professional development. Right now, there is no meaningful state-wide
induction system, and no professional development system. It is very difficult
for us to conduct any follow-up activities, not just because no funding exists
to support it, but mainly because there is no system to tap into. (We cannot even get information on how many
our graduates were hired, and where they work. Eventually, we are supposed to
get data on student performance linked to teacher identifiers, which in turn should
be linked to their teacher preparation program. That would be a very
interesting research data, but I doubt it can be readily used to evaluate
quality of our programs.)
3.
The State is planning to revise its teacher
certification, which is probably a good thing. We would like an opportunity to
discuss some clear distinction between initial licensure and added
endorsements, mobility between types of licensure, etc. In general, an
opportunity to provide input in policy decisions would be welcome.
Policy-making is a messy business, and often leads to unintended consequences. Teacher
certification changes may lead to revisions in multiple programs, which is very
costly, and tend to distract us from program improvement. A simple opportunity
to provide input into the process is quite vital to our work.
There are probably other things we need and want. In the
end, we want to be useful, and treated as a partner and as resource rather than
as an obstacle and a passive object of regulations.
No comments:
Post a Comment