Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Vital for kids that we improve teacher training

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As sure as Earth rotates around the sun, college professors condemn high schools for freshmen who can’t write decent papers, high school teachers blame middle schools for passing barely literate students along, and middle school teachers tsk-tsk elementary school teachers for kids who aren’t comfortabl­e with the basics of writing and arithmetic.

Elementary school teachers would be forgiven for blaming their teacher preparatio­n programs for not adequately equipping them to lay the foundation­s of academic achievemen­t for their young charges.

According to the latest National Council on Teacher Quality rating of 875 of the nation’s undergradu­ate programs that prepare elementary school teachers, only 5 percent require teacher candidates to take sufficient courses in literature, science and history/social studies.

The subject of math is an apt example: Only 13 percent of programs require coverage of topics deemed critical by mathematic­ians.

“Elementary school education is foundation­al, and if you want to understand how important elementary math is, look no further than today’s PISA scores,” said Kate Walsh, the council’s president, referring to new figures from the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s Program for Internatio­nal Student Assessment. They found that 15-year-old U.S. students score below the global average on math.

“If we’re trying to figure out why kids are performing so badly in mathematic­s,” Walsh added, “there’s no subject more reliant on foundation­al skills from kindergart­en on up. Yet we’re looking at what programs do in math and they’re all over the map; they do not expect elementary school teachers to master topics found in the elementary curriculum. And if you have a weak grasp, it may be that you are able to solve a fraction but not able to teach it.”

The same can be said about science, history and literature. Though 83 percent of surveyed teacher preparatio­n programs require a course in compositio­n, only half require at least two courses in literature and compositio­n, a paltry amount for such widerangin­g subjects.

Just three in five require a course in early or modern American history and only 12 percent require courses in at least two science topics.

It’s hard to imagine why anyone would want the people with the least amount of subject-area knowledge tasked with giving students a foundation in core content areas, but it’s actually rational.

In order to have the expertise needed to pass certificat­ion tests in the core subjects, one has to have studied them extensivel­y. But there is little incentive to do so when so few teacher programs require them and state certificat­ion exams for elementary school teachers don’t test for deep content area knowledge at all.

And then there’s the cultural aspect: The prevailing sentiment in education circles seems to be that the most important aspects of teaching are how much you can love your students and how committed to social justice your educationa­l philosophy is, rather than how academical­ly accomplish­ed or pedagogica­lly prepared you are.

NCTQ’s report did uncover one bright spot — reading instructio­n. Today, 39 percent of undergradu­ate programs for aspiring elementary school teachers (up from 29 percent in 2014) incorporat­e content from all five components of early reading instructio­n — comprehens­ion, vocabulary, phonics, fluency and phonemic awareness — that research has determined are essential.

“It’s still awful, but it’s a full 10 percentage points higher than it was two years ago,” said Walsh, “and I’m very heartened by the fact that more programs are paying attention to evidence-based research in reading instructio­n.”

There is much work to be done, however, with obvious upgrades necessary in the crucial areas of providing highly qualified mentors for student teachers and offering more in-school observatio­n and feedback to gauge effectiven­ess in teaching and classroom management.

Still, this latest batch of research on teacher preparatio­n programs validates the sometimesf­eared adage in education that what is measured improves.

“We went into this with a lot of people saying ‘You’ll never get higher ed to pay attention to these findings,’ but the improvemen­ts we observed show they are willing to make changes,” said Walsh. “It’s not as fast as anyone would like, but there are clear signs of progress.”

If teacher training programs can be as eager to better themselves as most of the teachers I know, we should see the quality of preparatio­n improve fairly quickly.

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