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Educator Quality and Quantity. a CEAAC Project w ith Partners NEA Alaska and Cook Inlet Tribal Council, Inc. Charles Wohlforth director@ceaac.net Jerry Covey jscc@gci.net Barbara Adams badams.ak@gmail.com. EQQ Context.
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Educator Quality and Quantity a CEAAC Project with Partners NEA Alaska and Cook Inlet Tribal Council, Inc. Charles Wohlforth director@ceaac.net Jerry Covey jscc@gci.net Barbara Adams badams.ak@gmail.com
EQQ Context • 2004: CEAAC Board files the constitutional Moore suit to address low performance in rural schools. • 2009: Judge Gleason orders teacher and principal training to meet state’s constitutional obligation. • 2012, January: CEAAC settles Moore suit without a specific teacher preparation component. • 2012, April: CEAAC Board adopts a three-year plan, taking on teacher quality and quantity beginning in 2014. • 2014, April: CEAAC Board retains Jerry Covey and Dr. Barbara Adams to study and make recommendations. • Today: Covey/Adams Report to CEAAC
EQQ Project Goals Identify statewide issues that negatively impact Alaska’s certificated education workforce. Identify effective practices in educator recruitment, development, and retention. Engage stakeholder groups in a collaborative effort to prioritize improvements that will strengthen Alaska’s certificated workforce. Secure policy, regulatory, and statutory changes to improve the quality of Alaska’s certificated education workforce.
Issues & Impetus • From 2008-2012 an average of 64% of teachers were hired from outside(ISER, 2013). • District teacher turnover ranged from 7-52% in 2012 (ISER, 2013). • Turnover rate for teachers prepared outside is double that of teachers prepared in Alaska, regardless of years of experience. For example, 23% vs. 12% turnover of early career teachers 0-3 years (ISER, 2013). • Half of Alaska students are minority but 90% of teachers are white (ISER, 2013). • Only about 40% of Alaska’s high school graduates attended postsecondary institutions in 2012 (ACPE, 2013). • 49% of first-time UA freshman required remedial courses in 2013. Of that group 81% of them required remedial math and 50% required remedial English (ACPE, 2014).
Systemic Approach Strengthen K-12 Certificated Workforce DevelopandKeepthe Workforce Expandthe Alaska grown Workforce Train 60% of new hires in state by 2020 Develop 90% to proficiency level by 2020 Preparation& Recruitment Prof Development &Retention Measurable Outcomes
Preparation • Raise standards for entry into and exit from educator preparation program in state • Increase university capacity for teacher education by 66% • Increase and strengthen pre-service field experience • Provide a systemic process for improving teacher preparation using stakeholder and outcome feedback • Increase and strengthen bridge programs to attract minority groups into education careers • Establish laboratory schools in urban and rural hub communities STRATEGIES TO SUPPORT ACHIEVING GOAL #1: TRAIN 60% OF NEW HIRES IN STATE BY 2020
Recruitment • FEA program in every school district, aim for 5% of high school student population for a total of 2,000 students • Increase and strengthen bridge programs to attract minority groups into education careers • Loan forgiveness for Alaskans who are trained outside and return to teach • Incentivize hard to fill jobs • Revisit salary and benefits package STRATEGIES TO SUPPORT ACHIEVING GOAL #1: TRAIN 60% OF NEW HIRES IN STATE BY 2020
Professional Development • Add 10 professional development days • Add 5 days to school year • Add 5 days to quality in-service allocation • Select two curricular programs for major content areas – if districts voluntarily choose to use them, state will purchase them and EED will provide on-going staff development • Fully fund and implement Alaska Statewide Mentor Project STRATEGIES TO SUPPORT ACHIEVING GOAL #2: DEVELOP 90% TO PROFICIENCY LEVEL BY 2020
Retention • Incentivize hard to fill jobs • Revisit salary and benefits package • Continue teacher retention grants to districts • Establish laboratory schools in urban and rural hub communities • Note: this systemic approach should support increased retention as a whole STRATEGIES TO SUPPORT ACHIEVING GOAL #2: DEVELOP 90% TO PROFICIENCY LEVEL BY 2020
Next Steps • Request consensus from CEACC board • Present Alaska EQQ Plan to stakeholder groups • Convene stakeholder group to begin developing recommendations • Present plan to school boards, local governments, statewide civic, community, and business groups • Present policy recommendations to legislature and education agencies • Advocate for change
Methodology & Methods • Approach • Long-term issue • Make change • Leaders from range of stakeholders • Grounded Theory • Data Collection • Interviews (16) • Two interviewers • Individual mostly and some group • Structured protocol • Document review
Interview Data Collection • Alaska Dept. of Education & Early Development • Alaska Staff Development Network • Alaska Teacher Placement • Anchorage School District • Association of Alaska School Administrators • Association of Alaska School Boards • Education Matters • Fairbanks North Star Borough School District • Future Educators of Alaska • Institute for Social and Economic Research • NEA Alaska • UA Rural Campus Leaders • UA Schools of Education • UA Statewide Administration
Research Reports/Documents • Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED) Documents • Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) • Education Matters, Inc. • Flexner Report on Teacher Preparation (Brookings Institution) • Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER) Reports • Interstate Teacher Assessment and Support Standards (inTASC) • National Board of Professional Teaching Standards • National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) 2013 State Teacher Policy Yearbook • Shaping Alaska's Future (University of Alaska) • Stanford Social Innovation Review • TCC Interior Education Summit Draft Report • UA SOE Draft Plan for Revitalizing Teacher Education in Alaska
Coding & Analysis Process Iterative Process: open coding, axial coding, selective coding Analysis: frequency, co-occurrence, quotes open coding selective coding Preparation Recruitment Retention Professional development • Quality • Compensation • Mentoring • Perception axial coding • Issues • Solutions • Changes
Results for Issues Issue: ideas suggested as problems, bottlenecks, difficulties.
Results for Solutions Solution: ideas suggested that address an issue or suggest change in a specific and actionable manner.
Results for Changes Change: ideas suggested for modification without providing a solution.