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Welcome! Day with GaPSC. West Georgia RESA February 7, 2013. Coming Soon! Tiered Certification . Landmark Rule Changes. Performance-based Educational Leadership – 2008 Certificate Upgrade Rule – 2010 Coming Soon, Tiered Certification January 2014 is target date.
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Welcome! Day with GaPSC WestGeorgia RESA February 7, 2013
Coming Soon! Tiered Certification
Landmark Rule Changes • Performance-based Educational Leadership – 2008 • Certificate Upgrade Rule – 2010 • Coming Soon, Tiered Certification • January 2014 is target date
Why Tiered Certification? • Georgia – one of only 10 states using a single tier system • 21 states use a two-tier system – include initial & professional (clear renewable) • Other states use system with three or more tiers
Why Tiered Certification? • Addresses the need to focus attention and resources on early career teachers About 40% leave the profession within five years at a tremendous cost to taxpayers
Why Tiered Certification? • Assures advancement in the profession is based on teaching effectiveness, rather than just hanging on We currently have no defense against criticisms about teacher quality from politicians & the media
Why Tiered Certification? • Provides a way of recognizing the accomplishments of excellent teachers Upper tiers recognize and use the skills of excellent teachers – a good fit with motivation theory
Why Tiered Certification? • Creates a pathway for teachers to advance in the profession while remaining in the classroom Currently, education is a “flat” profession – no where to grow
Why Tiered Certification? • Equips educators with skills to work collaboratively to improve teaching and learning. Advancement to higher tiers equips teachers with skills that support learning communities & improved teaching & learning
Tiered Cert Task Force • PSC Staff • Superintendent • Public IHE • Governor’s Office • Principal and Assistant Principal • PAGE/GAE • Curriculum Director • DOE Staff • USG Staff • Private IHE • RESA • HR Director • Teachers • Professional Learning Director
Tiered Cert Task Force • Task force work began in December • Anticipate finishing the work next August or September • Currently plan for rule initiation in October with an effective date of January 2014
Tiered Cert Task Force • Task force meetings • Presentations like this • Focus group & sub-committee work • Getting input from Georgia educators is very important to assuring a rule that provides opportunities for educator growth and improves teaching & learning
Tiered Certification • This presentation represents some initial ideas about tiered certification; it provides a starting point for the task force work • Some questions that may assist in guiding our discussion (see HO) • We value your input on these questions; this will provide the task force with your very helpful ideas & concerns
Tiered Certification • What we are presenting is some initial thinking about tiered certification • These ideas are to get the conversation started • The task force will make recommendations that culminate in a new rule next fall • The initial concept includes five tiers
Tier 1: Pre-service Certificate • Advantages • Consistent method for criminal history checks • Under the Code of Ethics • This certificate becomes a platform to improve preparation programs and as a way to make pre-service teachers more valuable to schools/districts
Tier 1 to Tier 2 • Content-specific Performance Assessment – Minimum score to successfully exit the program. Useful for candidate evaluation, program evaluation, & induction roadmap • Program provider sign off on readiness to take appropriate GACE assessment • Achieve “passing” score on appropriate GACE assessment • Many school-based experiences culminating with a year long pre-service experience.
Tier 2 Induction Certificate • Advantages • Recognizes that novice teachers need to grow in a safe environment supported by teacher leaders, administrators, and others • Creates a statewide system for quality induction • Links to the teacher induction guidance document developed by a DOE/PSC – led task force. Induction programs are being piloted by RTTT districts.
Tier 2: Induction Certificate • Advantages (continued): • The results of a nationally validated performance assessment used to differentiate induction services for individual teachers • 3 year Non-Renewable Certificate – meet professional teaching standards to get clear renewable (Possible waiver for 4th year at the request of the employing district)
Tier 2 to Tier 3 • Employing districts sign off on induction completion • Educator must meet measurable standards before moving to a clear renewable certificate (will not be TEM – not ready – value added, surveys, student learning objectives, state-wide evaluation instruments, maybe later, but not now) • May use the content-specific performance assessment administered during student teaching as the measurement
Tier 2 to Tier 3 (continued) • Professional learning focused on areas of need defined in the pre-service performance assessment and/or state-wide eval. instrument • Revisit use of TEM in 2 to 3 years • Program providers could possibly having a role in decisions about induction teachers moving to next tier • If funding/logistics could be worked out, a peer review component would be powerful (by teacher leaders)
Tier 3: Professional Certificate • Advantages: • Teacher demonstrates effectiveness to qualify for the professional (clear renewable) certificate • Good for five years; only renewed if performance continues to meet or exceed standards
Renewing the Professional Cert • Meet requirements for professional learning/impact on student performance • Will consider a requirement that a measurable standard be met prior to renewal • TEM score will not be used – same reasons, but will revisit use in 2-3 years • If unsatisfactory evaluation(s) – a new definition of unsatisfactory under the new state evaluation system - in the 5 year period, must demonstrate successful remediation to peer review team.
Tiers 4 & 5 • Teacher Leader (or Advanced & Teacher Leader) • Supports the RTTT Career Ladder work • Overarching purpose of Career Ladder: establish a pathway for growth & advancement for expert teachers desiring to remain in the classroom • Uses the experience and expertise of highly effective teachers in defined roles to • help build a strong educator workforce and • increase student learning • Additionally, this effort should also improve our ability to retain our most skilled and effective teachers.
Tier 4: Teacher Leader I • Links to Career Ladder in RTTT: a Teacher Leader I or Advanced is an expert teacher who teaches full-time, but is paid for specific instructional leadership opportunities they assume • Contingent on funding • Demonstrated performance • No ethics sanctions above a reprimand
Tier 5: Teacher Leader II • Links to Career Ladder in RTTT: a Teacher Leader II continues to maintain some classroom teaching responsibilities; is also granted release time for specific instructional leadership responsibilities for which they are paid. • Contingent on funding – release time and salary upgrade • The task force will build on the work of the career ladder task force in determining standards for achieving this certification tier & for certificate renewal.
Tier 5: Teacher Leader II • Within two years of receiving this certificate the educator must either: • Hold a Coaching Endorsement • Hold a Teacher Leadership Endorsement • Earn a degree in Teacher Leadership • National Board Certification • Other equivalent preparation • No ethics sanctions above a reprimand
Tiered Certification • Tier 1 – Pre-service certificate • Tier 2 – Induction certificate • Tier 3 – Professional certificate • Tier 4 – Teacher Leader I certificate • Tier 5 – Teacher Leader II certificate
Tiered Certification Questions?
Contact Information • Kelly Henson, Executive Secretary – kelly.henson@gapsc.com • David Hill, Division Director for Educator Preparation & Certification – david.hill@gapsc.com