Albuquerque Journal

Every teacher deserves a mentor

- BY RUTH GALLEGOS KIRTLAND ELEMENTARY SIXTH-GRADE LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHER Ruth Gallegos is a Teach Plus New Mexico Teaching Policy Fellow.

Iwas lucky when I started teaching in 1993. I was accepted into a master’s program at the University of New Mexico called the Resident Teacher program. In it, I was a licensed teacher in my first year of teaching —but I was also a graduate student at UNM and taught at Bel Air Elementary School in Albuquerqu­e. I both attended graduate classes and had a mentor teacher assigned to me during the entire year. This mentor teacher worked for the program and was responsibl­e for helping four new teachers. She visited my classroom once a week, brought me materials, and talked to me in depth about my lessons and curriculum. We also met weekly as a group, which may have been the most valuable piece of the program. Our group of four new teachers and our mentor discussed best practices and any challenges that came up during that week. It was an experience I have not had since, and one that molded me as an educator. The Resident Teacher program is no longer in place, which is unfortunat­e.

Helping us become effective teachers was my mentor teacher’s only job that year. At the time, New Mexico didn’t have mentorship programs. If I had started my first year differentl­y, I would not have had this essential help and guidance. In 2007, New Mexico establishe­d requiremen­ts for mentoring programs for new teachers, but the programs are very inconsiste­nt throughout the state and not effective for many new teachers. While teachers are required to have a mentor the first year they are teaching, it is up to the districts in how they implement these requiremen­ts.

Because districts are held to minimum standards for the current mentorship law’s implementa­tion, there is no standardiz­ation of mentor selection, training, compensati­on or caseload. The result is that we have no idea if this is working or not. We don’t know if new teachers are actually getting better and becoming more effective in their classrooms.

Until we standardiz­e the best practices, new teachers will not receive the help they need in order to become good teachers. We need to ensure we are selecting the best mentors and that we compensate them for their work accordingl­y. We now have an opportunit­y to get this right under The New Mexico ESSA plan, which stipulates that the state develop a mentorship framework that is aligned with teacher effectiven­ess ratings.

One way is to adopt the best practices of New Mexico’s Teachers Pursuing Excellence program. This is a twoyear program aimed at improving teacher performanc­e as measured by NM TEACH, specifical­ly through targeted mentorship and support for Minimally Effective and Ineffectiv­e teachers provided by Highly Effective teachers. This program has been highly successful in the districts where it has been used. The performanc­e coaches this model employs could become part of our mandatory first-year mentorship program. If we give teachers this help and support on the front end, we will have fewer people needing the TPE program after several years of low evaluation­s.

Early experience­s as a teacher often determine the type of teacher you become or whether you remain a teacher at all. I am not sure what type of teacher I would be today if I had not had the support I did my first year of teaching. Teachers should not only receive good mentoring and coaching if they are lucky, or just happen to be in a district that has better practices. Every teacher should have the help and support they need to excel. We need to make sure our mandatory mentoring program is held accountabl­e to standards that meet our ESSA plan. Our teachers and students deserve no less.

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