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How Illinois districts are inducting their new teachers. Dr. Patricia Brady, Research Coordinator Dr. Mary Elin Barnish, Program Coordinator Illinois New Teacher Collaborative at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Introductions Predictions. Session agenda.
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How Illinois districts are inducting their new teachers Dr. Patricia Brady, Research Coordinator Dr. Mary Elin Barnish, Program Coordinator Illinois New Teacher Collaborative at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Introductions Predictions
Session agenda • Introduction of Illinois landscape • Study methodology and findings • Conclusions and discussion • The present and the future
Illinois District Context 871 school districts Illinois ranks 49th in funding disparities Number of schools: 1 – 613 Average teacher salary: $28,000 - $103,000 Average teacher experience: 3.4 years – 24 years
ISBE Funded Programs at a Glance = funded program = districts served by a consortium
Survey Overviews Funded programs survey: fall 2010 Unfunded districts survey: January 2011 • Online surveys • Sent to superintendent or program coordinator • Questions: • supports provided to new teachers • mentor training and selection • induction program organization, leadership, and funding
New teachers attend a special orientation or workshop before school begins. % of districts indicating “required”
Mentor activity requirements • Large districts have more requirements for mentors’ activities and their frequency • Meet with mentee • Observe mentee teach • Attend mentor training or workshops • Submit a record of mentoring activities
There is a vast discrepancy between what beginning teachers receive in certain districts (small, rural, high-poverty) compared with others (large, urban or suburban, well-resourced).
The unfunded districts which offer the most new teacher supports (large, suburban) still provide less than the average grant-funded induction program—even though the funded programs include small and rural districts in proportion with the state average.
Questions for discussion • How do these research findings compare with your own experience? • In a time of tight budgets, what advice do you have for: Small districts? Rural districts? ISBE? • Can you imagine a low-cost statewide induction program that small/rural districts could tap into—perhaps with shared regional mentors and professional development, online components, and some local services?
Questions for discussion • What do you need to keep your program functioning well? • What do you need to develop and grow your program? • How can INTC be of assistance to you in your program?
Illinois: present and future Budget Cuts and Repercussions: • Changes in mentor training and support • Fewer new teacher initiatives (lesson study) • Need for local funding support • Fewer opportunities for instructional mentoring • Less contact time for mentors and new teachers
New Challenges • Online professional development • Support for programs statewide • Regional networks • Expanded research • Program evaluation and revision • Illinois State Board of Education expectations • Link with student achievement • Systematic and systemic induction and mentoring Illinois New Teacher Collaborative
The Future or I & M • Continue with current service provider (NTC, CEC, ICE21, etc.) • Use local (district or ROE) funds for training and workshops • Maintain local programs with trained mentors • Work with independent consultants
The Future of I & M • Link induction and mentoring to student achievement • Online mentoring • Work with INTC regional specialists
Induction and Mentoring Priorities • Trained mentor for each new teacher • Instructional mentoring • Observations • Analyzing student work • Collaborative conversations • Training for administrators
Induction and Mentoring Priorities • Information to the community, parents, board of education • Training of trainers to maintain the program internally • Training for new teachers (HR, C&I, “Hot Topics”) • Research
Discussion Questions
Contact Information Patricia Brady, Ph.D., Research Coordinator pbrady@illinois.edu 217.244.7376 Mary Elin Barnish, Ed.D., Program Coordinator mbarnish@illinois.edu 630.569.9556