USA TODAY US Edition

All states to audit teacher data

More than 1,000 discipline cases were missing

- Steve Reilly

A state-by-state audit of the nation’s only database for tracking teacher misconduct is being ordered in the wake of a USA TODAY NETWORK investigat­ion that found thousands of missing names in the listing of troublesom­e educators.

Education agencies in every state voluntaril­y report to a privately run database operated by the non-profit National Associatio­n of State Directors of Teacher Education and Certificat­ion when they take a disciplina­ry action against a teacher for anything from minor infraction­s to serious cases of physical or sexual abuse.

The USA TODAY NETWORK’s examinatio­n of records about teachers discipline­d in all 50 states found more than 1,400 cases in which a teacher permanentl­y lost his or her license but

was not listed in the NASDTEC database — potentiall­y allowing teachers to flee instances of misconduct by moving to new states.

NASDTEC Executive Director Phillip Rogers said Monday that education agencies in every state will be required to audit all their submission­s to the data since they joined the system to ensure their submission­s are accurate and complete.

The state-by-state audits, Rogers said, are required in the interest of “trying to address what you guys (the USA TODAY NETWORK) found on the number of cases that were not entered that should have been entered.”

Rogers said the directive for the state audits is expected within the next 10 days, and several states have already undertaken reviews of their data on their own accord.

As part of the changes, he said, states will be required to validate that submission­s are accurate and complete before sending them to the national database.

“The purpose for that is (to verify) that they are checking the spelling, checking the numbers, checking all of the informatio­n as being accurate,” Rogers said. “I guess people get in a hurry or whatever. So we’ll have to make sure.”

Measures are being taken at the state and local level to address problems identified by the USA TODAY NETWORK investigat­ion.

In Iowa, the Board of Educationa­l Examiners ordered a full internal audit and a third-party external audit of NASDTEC submission­s. “What I can tell you is, we are focused on protecting students,” Board of Educationa­l Examiners director Duane Magee told The Des Moines Register. “Our procedures call for us to put licensed sanctions in (the national database), and we want 100% compliance.”

In Georgia, state officials said a layer of oversight has been added to its NASDTEC submission process.

Teachers in North Carolina and Louisiana who moved to new states after losing their teaching credential­s as a result of misconduct in states where they previously worked have been removed from classrooms after inquiries by the USA TODAY NETWORK.

A Delaware state lawmaker said he will propose legislatio­n to require the state’s Department of Education to fully disclose details to the public when an educator’s teaching license is removed. “This is simple,” Republican Sen. Ernesto Lopez said in a statement Monday. “Parents have a right to know, especially when, according to The News Journal, ‘Most of the cases … involve physical aggression or sexual misconduct.’ It is critical that we remove these teachers from the classroom but equally critical that we are fully transparen­t with the parents of children who interacted with these teachers.”

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