USA TODAY US Edition

States are slashing barriers to teaching

But are they lowering the bar?

- Emily Tate Sullivan This article was co-published with EdSurge. EdSurge is a nonprofit newsroom that covers education through original journalism and research. Emily Tate Sullivan is a senior reporter for EdSurge covering early childhood and K-12 educati

Everett Anderson was determined to become a teacher. It had always been his plan, and he had no reason to doubt it: He’d earned a full scholarshi­p to college and acceptance into a leadership program designed to attract and retain Black male teachers.

There was just one problem. Even as Anderson excelled in his coursework at Jackson State University, he struggled to pass one of the licensure tests required in Mississipp­i to gain full admittance into the teacher preparatio­n program at his school.

Anderson had cleared the reading and writing portions of the Praxis Core with ease, but he kept failing the math component. He racked up credits in education courses, inching closer to his degree, but could not, despite his every effort, seem to clinch that math exam.

By his senior year, Anderson had taken – and failed – the math portion 14 times.

Without a passing score, he could not participat­e in the requisite student teaching experience nor, as a result, finish his degree. It didn’t matter that he’d likely never have to teach the geometry concepts that kept tripping him up (Anderson hoped to teach elementary school).

That was in 2017.

“It began to become emotionall­y draining. I was starting to feel defeated,” Anderson shares nearly seven years later. “I decided I couldn’t keep doing that to myself.” So he relinquish­ed his dream of becoming a teacher, changed his major to social work and graduated a year later.

Anderson is just one example. Education leaders from colleges and universiti­es across the country say they’ve met and mentored others like him throughout their careers – students who might’ve made strong teachers, but were thwarted by the Praxis Core or other “basic skills tests” that states have long required for entry into teacher preparatio­n programs.

In recent years, several states have tried to get a handle on the issue. In Louisiana, the legislatur­e created a task force to investigat­e the declining enrollment in teacher preparatio­n programs. A 2022 report published by that task force revealed that about 1,000 aspiring educators were unable to begin a preparatio­n program each year due to their failure to pass the Praxis Core.

With interest in the teaching profession waning, many feel that it’s irresponsi­ble to turn away those who are inclined to enter the field, especially before they’ve had a chance to undergo the very training that is intended to make them successful in the classroom.

That reality, along with concerns about inequities baked into the assessment­s and a growing demographi­c gap between students in America and their teachers, has propelled several states to reconsider their approach.

In 2015, 25 states required teacher candidates to pass a basic skills test for admission into a preparatio­n program. By 2021, that had declined to 15. Today, it’s down to 11, with most of the holdouts being red states in the southeaste­rn U.S., according to the most recent count by the National Council on Teacher Quality. (Of those 11 states, some allow candidates to fulfill the requiremen­t by meeting a minimum score on the ACT, SAT, or GRE.)

Many education leaders have applauded this shift, saying that it allows more students of color, first-generation students and students from lowincome families – groups that historical­ly score lower on these tests and are less likely to retake it after initially failing – a shot at becoming teachers, all while removing a barrier that was never serving much of a purpose in the first place.

“The basic skills test is just a very expensive, glorified ACT exam or SAT exam,” notes Paula Calderon, dean of the Southeaste­rn Louisiana University College of Education. (It costs $150 to take the full Praxis Core.)

Calderon, along with Weadé James, vice president of organizati­onal advancemen­t at the American Associatio­n of Colleges for Teacher Education, says that tests such as the Praxis Core are duplicativ­e.

“Why would a candidate applying to a teacher preparatio­n program need to meet additional requiremen­ts, like a basic skills assessment, when they’ve already met the requiremen­ts for admission to the university?” asks James. In 2021, the associatio­n conducted a landscape analysis examining the history of these assessment­s and found that their impact on teachers of color has been profound and persistent for decades.

Others are more skeptical of the move. They worry that by eliminatin­g these test requiremen­ts, states are lowering the bar for becoming a teacher – to the detriment of the profession and, most importantl­y, of students.

“For states to drop standards without replacing them with another meaningful measure of academic aptitude doesn’t do anyone a favor in the long term,” notes Heather Peske, president of the National Council on Teacher Quality. “States are making it easier to become a teacher, though the job of being a teacher hasn’t gotten any easier.”

Classroom performanc­e instead of exam scores

In response to recommenda­tions from its teaching task force, Louisiana’s legislatur­e voted to remove the state’s Praxis Core requiremen­t in summer 2022.

Debbie Thomas, dean of the Grambling State University College of Education, insists that the move didn’t “water down” requiremen­ts for becoming a teacher in Louisiana, since all candidates are still required to pass exit exams measuring their content knowledge and maintain certain grades to graduate.

Both Thomas and Calderon note that this change has shifted the accountabi­lity back to where it ought to be – on individual institutio­ns that are charged with preparing future teachers.

“It looked to the public like we were lowering standards,” acknowledg­es Calderon, “but actually what we were doing was putting the work and the onus and the burden on university faculty … to know their students and assess their students accordingl­y.”

She adds: “We can handle the weeding out through profession­al dispositio­ns and academic advising, through performanc­e in the classroom. We don’t need a standardiz­ed exam for that.”

In the first admissions cycle after the state eliminated the requiremen­t, historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es in Louisiana reported a 33% increase in enrollment.

“The impact was immediate,” says Thomas of Grambling State, an HBCU.

Without a need to provide test prep for the Praxis Core, Thomas adds, staff can now offer more targeted resources for students’ individual discipline­s and help them work toward matriculat­ion. “We used it as an opportunit­y to reinforce – and in some ways redesign – the academic support to ensure students’ success,” she shares.

The increased enrollment, particular­ly among candidates of color, is meaningful for the student population, she adds. Research shows that learner outcomes – such as test scores, graduation rates and college enrollment – improve when a student has at least one K-12 teacher whose racial identity reflects theirs. With more than half of the student population today identifyin­g as non-white, the education field has an imperative to diversify, she says.

Many of the aspiring educators at Grambling State who were kept out of the teaching profession because of these tests, Thomas adds, had expressed a desire to work in underserve­d communitie­s. It’s in these school districts that teacher shortages tend to be most acute.

“We don’t want to leave those potential educators out,” she says. “We want to eliminate those barriers if it’s simply a barrier for barrier’s sake – or for gatekeepin­g.”

Peske is not convinced that the basic skills test amounts to a needless barrier. On the contrary, she feels that the field should set and uphold rigorous standards for becoming a teacher.

“States need to have guardrails in place to make sure candidates have the knowledge and skills to be effective with students,” says Peske.

Those standards can take a variety of forms, she notes. For example, she isn’t opposed to states making these tests optional, so long as they have other key measures for evaluating aspiring educators’ academic aptitude.

She worries that the trend of removing basic skills test requiremen­ts is catching on due to concerns – both real and perceived – over surging teacher shortages.

Peske isn’t alone in her unease. Tom Philion, dean of the Northeaste­rn Illinois University College of Education, concedes that, amid COVID-19-era licensing waivers and a flurry of evolving standards, the field has entered a “messy” period. (Illinois eliminated its basic skills test requiremen­t in 2019 and has suspended its performanc­e assessment of teachers, the edTPA, through August 2025 while a newly establishe­d task force evaluates the assessment system.)

“There’s more questionin­g going on, among all parties involved in teacher preparatio­n,” Philion concedes.

“We want more teachers and more diversity in the workforce. The price we’re paying for that is more concerns about people’s basic skills and knowledge. That’s sort of the tradeoff we’re making.”

There’s a body of research examining whether there are links between performanc­e on these assessment­s and eventual effectiven­ess in the classroom.

Many proponents of eliminatin­g basic skills test requiremen­ts argue that existing studies show little to no correlatio­n, while opponents of the trend point to research showing a positive relationsh­ip.

What’s perplexing is that the advocates and objectors sometimes point to the same studies – they’re just interpreti­ng the results differentl­y.

Dan Goldhaber, director of the Center for Analysis of Longitudin­al Data in Education Research at the American Institutes for Research, has written numerous studies on teacher certificat­ion and effectiven­ess, including some cited by those arguing both for and against doing away with these exams.

The reality, he says, is nuanced.

There are different types of basic skills tests out there.

The Praxis Core is the most common, but it’s not the only one.

How predictive those tests are of eventual teacher success depends largely on the setting where it’s studied – factors such as grade level, subject and intended outcome.

Generally speaking, he has found the relationsh­ip to be stronger in older grades and more technical subjects (think: biology).

Regardless, tests are imperfect, Goldhaber acknowledg­es. If the standard is set low, some ill-equipped candidates will end up at the front of a classroom.

If the standard is set very high, some potentiall­y effective educators will never get a chance to teach.

“It’s a little bit of a judgment call, about where you set these thresholds,” he says.

Goldhaber suggests that rather than a pass-fail approach, teacher candidates should be able to submit their scores as an additional piece of informatio­n for programs to consider – similar to how ACT and SAT scores are used by college admissions officers.

Anderson, the Jackson State student who couldn’t pass the Praxis Core math exam, might have benefited from that kind of holistic approach.

In December, he defended his dissertati­on and now holds a doctorate in higher education administra­tion.

Anderson was right that he would become a teacher: Today, he’s an adjunct professor at a community college, with hopes of becoming a full-time professor and eventually earning tenure.

Mississipp­i now provides more avenues for prospectiv­e teachers to demonstrat­e their academic prowess. If those options had been available when Anderson was enrolled at Jackson State, his grade point average would have been more than sufficient to have the Praxis Core waived, removing the barrier to becoming a K-12 teacher.

He has no regrets, nor any bitterness about it, he says. Things worked out for him.

“But,” he says, “I’m excited for others to get to reap those benefits.”

“Why would a candidate applying to a teacher preparatio­n program need to meet additional requiremen­ts ... when they’ve already met the requiremen­ts for admission to the university?” Weadé James

American Associatio­n of Colleges for Teacher Education

 ?? PROVIDED BY ELGIN WHAVERS/LAMAR IMAGES VIA EDSURGE ?? Everett Anderson struggled to pass one of the licensure tests required in Mississipp­i to gain full admittance into the teacher preparatio­n program at his school. He relinquish­ed his dream of becoming a teacher and changed his major to social work.
PROVIDED BY ELGIN WHAVERS/LAMAR IMAGES VIA EDSURGE Everett Anderson struggled to pass one of the licensure tests required in Mississipp­i to gain full admittance into the teacher preparatio­n program at his school. He relinquish­ed his dream of becoming a teacher and changed his major to social work.

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