The National - News

Education ministry lines up more than 5,000 teachers for new certificat­ion programme

- ROBERTA PENNINGTON

Thousands of teachers in public and private high schools will be the first to undergo a new system to profession­ally license educators in the UAE.

The Ministry of Education said it identified 5,076 government school teachers who will be required to register for the first phase of the profession­al teacher certificat­ion scheme that launched in Abu Dhabi yesterday.

The Teachers Licensing System, formerly known as the Teacher and Educationa­l Leadership Standards and Licensing programme, has been in the works since 2013.

The first phase of registrati­on applies only to public high school teachers who teach Arabic, English, mathematic­s, physics, chemistry and biology, but by 2020, all principals, vice principals, cluster managers and teachers working in all public and private schools in the UAE will have to hold a UAE teacher’s licence to legally work in the country.

“The teachers’ licence system will contribute to achieving a set of objectives aiming to raise the level of students’ education in terms of modern and global best practices and focus on the continuous developmen­t of the teacher,” said Minister of State for General Education Jameela Al Muhairi.

Teachers who pass both tests will be issued a UAE teaching licence, which will be valid for between one and three years, depending on the teacher’s qualificat­ions, experience and test performanc­e.

More than 5,000 public and private high school teachers will be the first to register for the new system to obtain profession­al licences in the UAE.

The Ministry of Education said it had identified 5,076 government teachers working in Grades 10, 11 and 12 who would be required to sign up for the first phase of the scheme launched yesterday in Abu Dhabi.

This phase only applies to public high school teachers who teach Arabic, English, mathematic­s, physics, chemistry and biology.

The ministry said it was gathering data on teachers in private schools that teach the ministry curriculum to determine which ones should join the first phase of licensing.

The new system has been in the works since 2013, when the Cabinet authorised a resolution establishi­ng a committee to profession­alise teaching.

The move is part of the UAE Vision 2021 National Agenda, which seeks to increase the number of highly skilled teachers, principals, vice principals and cluster managers, raise the high school graduation rate and place the Emirates among the top performing nations in the internatio­nal assessment­s, Pisa and Timss.

The UAE employed about 22,325 teachers and staff across 659 public schools during the 2016-2017 academic year. The 567 private schools employed 42,345 education staff during the same time period, the ministry said.

By the end of 2020, all public and private school teaching staff will be required to hold a ministry licence.

“The teachers licence system will contribute to achieving a set of objectives aiming to raise the level of students’ education in the light of modern and global best practices and focus on the continuous developmen­t of the teachers,” said Jameela Al Muhairi, Minister of State for Public Education.

The ministry said the teachers who would take part in the first phase would receive an email directing them to a ministry website, where they should register and submit their credential­s.

When the registrati­on is completed, the applicants will receive a second email detailing

the time and place in which they must sit the first of two exams they must pass to attain a licence.

The first exam, which will be next month, will assess their knowledge of the subject they have been hired to teach.

In September, they will sit the second test, which measures their knowledge of teaching methods in one of four standards – ethical conduct, or profession­al knowledge, practice or growth.

The tests take on average about two and a half hours to complete, said Rawdha Al Marar, the ministry’s director of profession­al licensing.

Teachers who pass both tests will be issued a licence, which will be valid for between one and three years, depending on the teacher’s qualificat­ions, experience and test performanc­e.

Those who fail will be given two chances to resit after completing ministry-approved training programmes tailored to their needs. “Failing doesn’t mean that they failed explicitly. It means that they require training in

certain areas, areas that we would like them to be more developed in before we license them,” Ms Al Marar said.

The ministry said that for now there would be no charges for registerin­g, assessing or training teachers during this first phase.

No nationalit­ies will be exempt from sitting the exams, although the ministry is working on establishi­ng equivalenc­ies for teachers who hold profession­al licences in other countries, Ms Al Marar said. “What we want to do at the beginning is we would like all of the teachers to undergo this examinatio­n because we would like to measure the UAE against other educationa­l systems,” she said.

“We are developing the system of equivalenc­y with many institutes and we are trying to cover different countries. “But we wouldn’t announce the countries until we have a full list.

“Again, we don’t want anyone panicking about this. The goal is to license everyone and it’s a matter of developing our educationa­l system.”

 ?? Vidhyaa for The National ?? Hussain Al Hammadi, the Minister of Education, and Dr Mohammed Al Mualla, the ministry’s undersecre­tary, announce the first phase of the teacher licensing scheme
Vidhyaa for The National Hussain Al Hammadi, the Minister of Education, and Dr Mohammed Al Mualla, the ministry’s undersecre­tary, announce the first phase of the teacher licensing scheme

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