Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LICENSING RULES for teachers approved.

- AZIZA MUSA

Arkansas’ Board of Education approved rules Thursday for licensing the state’s kindergart­en-through-12th-grade teachers.

The rules set a “career continuum” or four classifica­tions of teacher licenses in lieu of the current standard, five-year renewable state-issued license in a subject or content area. Beginning Jan. 1, 2019, the license classifica­tions would be broken down into early career profession­al educator, career profession­al educator, lead profession­al educator and master profession­al educator.

The state Department of Education took the rules through a public comment period late last year and returned with “substantiv­e changes,” prompting a second round of public comments. The changes are the result of a range of new laws, including Act 294, that passed during the 2017 legislativ­e session.

Teachers can move through the classifica­tions with additional years of experience, proven effectiven­ess and other criteria that have yet to be determined.

Under the classifica­tions, the early career profession­al educator license would mirror those of the current standard license. When that time period is up, teachers with this license can renew or pursue a career profession­al educator license, which connotes that they have a “strong commitment” to the teaching profession, according to the rules.

Career profession­als will have completed at least three years of teaching and have proved that they are effective, as defined by Arkansas’ plan for complying with the federal Every Student Succeeds Act.

The department is still working on the requiremen­ts for the lead profession­al educator and master profession­al educator licenses, the rules show. Once completed, they will go through the same implementa­tion periods.

On Thursday, the board approved the rules and an emergency set of the same rules to allow schools and school districts to plan for the new licensure requiremen­ts.

The emergency set was necessary because a legislativ­e subcommitt­ee that normally would weigh the new rules would not be meeting in March.

The final rules likely will be before the Rules and Regulation­s subcommitt­ee of the Arkansas Legislativ­e Council, made up of state representa­tives and senators, in April.

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