THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents |
FROM: |
Johanna Duncan-Poitier
|
COMMITTEE: |
Higher Education and Professional Practice |
TITLE OF
ITEM: |
Proposed Amendment to the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education relating to the Duration of the Initial Teaching Certificate and Requirements concerning the Faculty of Teacher Preparation Programs |
DATE OF
SUBMISSION: |
December 23, 2004 |
PROPOSED
HANDLING: |
Approval |
RATIONALE FOR
ITEM: |
To Implement Policy |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 2 and 3 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
SUMMARY:
Attached for approval is a proposed amendment to §§80-3.3(a)(1) and 52.21(b)(2)(i)(h) of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education, relating to the duration of the Initial teaching certificate and requirements concerning the faculty of teacher preparation programs. An “Assessment of Issues Raised by Public Comment” is also attached. Supporting materials for the proposed amendment are available upon request from the Secretary to the Board of Regents.
The proposed amendment extends the life of Initial teaching certificates to give teachers more time to complete the master’s degree requirements for professional certification and to provide greater flexibility in staffing to teacher preparation programs that meet articulated standards of institutional accountability.
The new certification requirements, effective February 2, 2004, changed the duration of the first level teaching certificate (now known as an Initial certificate) from five years to three years (or four years with an extension under certain prescribed circumstances). The proposed amendment would return to the previous requirement that teachers holding the Initial certificate complete the master's degree in five years.
Increasing the duration of the Initial certificate to five years has strong support in the field. In a survey conducted by the Office of Higher Education of the presidents of all colleges and universities with teacher preparation programs, 83 percent of the responding presidents indicated the need to extend the duration of the Initial certificate to five years.
Many teaching candidates, teacher preparation programs and school districts from around the State have reported that the three-year Initial certificate is too short to provide new teachers with sufficient time to complete the master's degree program required for a Professional certificate. Typically these newly certified teachers work full-time and pursue the master's degree on a part-time basis during evenings and on summer breaks. Educators have advised the Department that new teachers often benefit from teaching in the classroom before progressing too far into the master’s degree program. With this teaching experience, they are better able to integrate pedagogical theory and practice. The Department is also concerned that the impact of the short duration of the Initial certificate could worsen the teacher shortage problem by discouraging individuals from entering the teaching field and in some cases causing teachers to lose certification simply because their certificate has expired. For these reasons, the Department proposes extending the duration of the Initial certificate to five years.
This proposal would also amend §52.21(b)(2)(i)(h) of the Commissioner’s regulations to provide greater flexibility in staffing teacher preparation programs that meet articulated standards of institutional accountability. Under the current regulation, institutions of higher education with registered teacher preparation programs are mandated to provide sufficient numbers of qualified full-time faculty to ensure that the majority of credit-bearing courses in the program are offered by full-time faculty. In addition, the regulation specifies fixed faculty workload requirements for teacher preparation programs: faculty teaching assignments may not exceed 12 semester hours per semester for undergraduate courses or 9 semester hours for graduate courses, or 21 semester hours per academic year for faculty who teach a combination of graduate and undergraduate courses. The regulation also specifies that individual faculty may not supervise more than 18 student teachers per semester.
The Regents Teaching Policy commits to
ongoing monitoring of the implementation and impact of the Policy and a plan to
consider adjustments and modifications as necessary. In numerous communications and
activities, including the Department’s survey, the leaders at colleges and
universities with teacher education programs agreed that maintaining a
significant proportion of full-time faculty and faculty workload limitations are
important standards for ensuring program quality. At the same time, they are requesting
more flexibility to develop staffing plans that are consistent with the changing
needs of their teacher education programs (e.g., enrollment fluctuations and the
need to offer specific courses to meet the demands for teachers in certain
subject areas, etc.) as other academic programs are able to do. Presidents of institutions with teacher
education programs, as well as some deans, program chairs, faculty, and
representatives of higher education organizations have
described a
number of unintended consequences from the requirement for a fixed percentage of
full-time faculty. For example,
some institutions reported
having to reduce, rather than expand, the number of programs and courses they
offer. Others have reported having
to increase class size and faculty/student ratios. A number of
institutions have reported a diminishing pool of high quality, full-time teacher
education faculty candidates in subject shortage areas.
While
the majority of college and university leadership strongly support this
modification, some full-time faculty members, their labor unions and the
Professional Standards and Practices Board (PSPB) have expressed opposition
citing that the current regulatory mandate is necessary to ensure an adequate
balance of full-time/part-time faculty in teacher education programs and to
maintain quality.
No other academic programs leading to
professional licensure in professions registered by the Department are required
to maintain a specified percentage of full-time faculty by either the Department
or their accrediting body. Colleges
and universities offering licensure-qualifying programs in medicine, nursing,
architecture, engineering, public accountancy, dentistry, and other professions
maintain high standards of quality while exercising discretion to establish
staffing plans in those program areas.
Likewise, no teacher education-accrediting agency identifies a fixed
percentage of required full-time faculty.
Rather, all accrediting bodies assess the overall financial and
human resources supporting a program to determine whether the program is able to
operate effectively and meet its academic mission.
The Department is proposing that the Regents consider moving toward a performance-based system that continues to require high standards of quality while giving the leadership of colleges and universities with demonstrated records of performance more discretion and flexibility to develop staffing plans that are consistent with their program designs. The proposed amendment eliminates the fixed percentage requirement for full-time faculty and the workload requirements for those teacher preparation programs that demonstrate program quality through program accreditation by the Board of Regents, the Teacher Education Accreditation Council (TEAC) or the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE), and that meet or exceed the established institutional pass rate of 80 percent on all required teacher certification examinations. These performance standards apply to all teacher education programs, including alternative certification programs. The regulations will continue to require all institutions that offer teacher preparation programs to provide sufficient numbers of qualified, full-time faculty to foster and maintain continuity and stability in these programs and ensure the proper discharge of instructional and all other faculty responsibilities. The regulations will also continue to require all teacher preparation programs to meet the requirements for faculty that are applicable to all registered college programs.
The proposed amendment was discussed at the November 2004 meeting of the Board of Regents. A Notice of Proposed Rule Making concerning the proposed amendment was published in the State Register on October 27, 2004.
I recommend that the Board of Regents take the following action:
VOTED: That paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of section 80-3.3 and clause (h) of subparagraph (i) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of section 52.21 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education be amended, as submitted, effective February 3, 2005.
Attachment
AMENDMENT TO THE REGULATIONS OF THE
COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to sections 207, 210, 215, 305, 3001, 3004, and 3006 of the
Education Law.
1. Paragraph (1) of subdivision
(a) of section 80-3.3 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education is
amended, effective February 3, 2005, as
follows:
(1) Duration. The initial certificate shall be valid
for [three] five years from its effective date. [A candidate may be granted an extension
of the time validity of the initial certificate for a period not to exceed one
additional year for the purpose of completing a master’s or higher degree
program needed to fulfill the education requirement for a professional
certificate, pursuant to section 80-3.4 of this Subpart, provided that the
candidate completes at least 24 semester hours of such study by the end of the
three-year period of the initial certificate. The application for the one-year
extension of the validity of the initial certificate shall be accompanied by
documentation satisfactory to the commissioner demonstrating the candidate’s
progress to date in the graduate program and the compelling need for additional
time to complete such program. At
the expiration of the additional one-year period, the time validity of an
initial certificate shall not be extended again for the same
purpose.]
2. Clause (h) of subparagraph (i) of
paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of section 52.21 of the Regulations of the
Commissioner of Education is amended, effective February 3, 2005, as
follows:
(h)
Faculty.
(1) Institutions shall provide sufficient
numbers of qualified, full-time faculty in order to [:] foster and maintain
continuity and stability in teacher education programs and policies [; ensure
that the majority of credit-bearing courses in the program are offered by
full-time teaching faculty;] and ensure the proper discharge of instructional
and all other faculty responsibilities. Institutions shall meet the
requirements for faculty set forth in section 52.2 of this Part.
(2) Staffing
requirements.
(i) Except as provided in item (ii) of this
subclause, institutions shall meet the following staffing requirements: Institutions shall ensure that the
majority of credit-bearing courses in the program are offered by full-time
teaching faculty.
Faculty teaching assignments shall not exceed 12 semester hours per
semester for undergraduate courses, or 9 semester hours per semester for
graduate courses, or 21 semester hours per academic year for faculty who teach a
combination of graduate and undergraduate courses, while still providing
sufficient course offerings to allow students to complete their programs in the
minimum time required for earning the degree. Individual faculty members shall not
supervise more than 18 student teachers per semester. Supervision of field experiences,
practica, and student teaching shall be considered by the institution in
determining faculty load, and institutions shall demonstrate how such
supervision is considered in determining faculty load.
(ii) Waiver and
exception.
(a) Waiver.
The commissioner may grant a waiver from one or more requirements of
[this clause] item (i) of this subclause upon a showing of good cause
satisfactory to the commissioner, including but not limited to a showing that
the institution cannot meet the requirement because of the nature of the
program, which otherwise meets the requirements of this
Part.
(b) Exception. Institutions that meet the standard for
student performance on the New York State teacher certification examinations set
forth in section 52.21(b)(2)(iv)(b) of this Part and are accredited in
accordance with section 52.21 (b)(2)(iv)(c) of this Part shall not be required
to meet the staffing requirements prescribed in item (i) of this subclause.
(iii) For institutions subject to
registration review for failing to meet the standard for student performance on
the New York State teacher certification examinations set forth in section
52.21(b)(2)(iv)(b) of this Part, the department may impose a time frame for the
institution to conform to the staffing requirements set forth in item (i) of
this subclause as part of the institution’s corrective action plan.
PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO SECTIONS 80-3.3(a)(1)
AND 52.21(b)(2)(i)(h) OF THE REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 207, 210, 215, 305, 3001, 3004, AND 3006 OF THE EDUCATION
LAW RELATING TO THE PERIOD OF VALIDITY OF THE INITIAL TEACHING CERTIFICATE AND
FLEXIBILITY IN THE STAFFING OF TEACHER PREPARATION
PROGRAMS
ASSESSMENT OF ISSUES RAISED BY PUBLIC
COMMENT
The proposed rule was published in the State
Register on October 27, 2004.
Below is a summary of written comments received by the State Education
Department concerning the proposed rule making and the Department’s
response.
COMMENT: We support extending the duration of the
initial certificate to five years.
Our reflective experience over the past several years continues to affirm
the necessity of having a longer time frame in which to meet the requirements
for the professional certificate.
This will positively impact the recruitment, retention, and quality of
new teachers as well as benefit those who are currently enrolled in teacher
preparation programs.
RESPONSE: Increasing the duration of the
initial certificate to five years has strong support in the field. In a survey of the presidents of all
colleges and universities with teacher preparation programs, conducted by the
Department's Office of Higher Education, 83 percent of the responding presidents
indicated the need to extend the duration of the initial certificate to five
years. Many teaching candidates,
teacher preparation programs and school districts from around the State have
reported that the duration of the initial certificate (three years) is currently
too short to provide new teachers with sufficient time to complete the master's
degree program required for a professional certificate.
After carefully considering
extensive commentary from teacher preparation programs, teacher candidates and
school districts from around the State, the Department concurs that it is
necessary and appropriate to extend the duration of the initial teaching
certificate from three to five years to facilitate the ability of new teachers
to complete the study necessary to earn a master's degree for the professional
certificate.
COMMENT: If the duration period of the initial
certificate is extended from three to five years, the benefit of this extension
should be provided to all initial certificate recipients since the
implementation of the new initial certificate on February 2, 2004.
RESPONSE: The Department agrees and
plans to administratively extend the duration of all initial certificates issued
since February 2, 2004.
COMMENT: We ask the Regents to
approve the regulations that replace fixed regulatory input standards for
faculty workloads in teacher education programs and require that a majority of
teacher education courses be taught by full-time faculty, with outcome measures
establishing program quality.
In the independent sector where the quality of programs is not only an
academic hallmark, but also a key economic indicator, given that quality
determines reputation in the marketplace, these quantitative requirements
represent an intrusion on many of our campuses. As long as institutions maintain a high
level of quality as measured by teacher education program accreditation and the
pass rate, responsibility for allocation of resources within the institutions
should reside within their own internal governance
structures.
RESPONSE: The proposed
regulation moves
toward a performance-based
system – a system that continues to require high standards of quality while
giving the leadership of colleges and universities with demonstrated records of
performance more discretion and flexibility to develop staffing plans that are
consistent with their program designs. The proposed amendment eliminates the
percentage requirement for full-time faculty and the fixed workload requirements
for those teacher preparation programs that demonstrate program quality by being
accredited by the Regents or an acceptable professional education accrediting
association and that meet or exceed the established institutional pass rate of
80 percent on teacher certification examinations. This approach ensures the quality of
teacher education offerings, while permitting colleges and universities greater
flexibility to manage their staffing needs consistent with program design.
COMMENT: The proposed change of the current
requirement that a majority of courses in registered teacher preparation
programs must be taught by full-time faculty will undermine recent progress made
by institutions of higher education to improve the quality and capacity of their
teacher preparation programs.
RESPONSE: The Department does not believe the
current proposal will undermine the recent quality/capacity gains of teacher
preparation programs. The current
proposal continues to explicitly recognize the criticality of maintaining
sufficient full-time faculty to ensure the integrity of registered teacher
preparation programs. The
regulation would only permit flexibility in the percentage requirement for
full-time faculty when institutions of higher education meet two critical
accountability measures. First, the
teacher preparation program must be accredited and maintain such
accreditation. Second, at least 80
percent of the teacher candidates from the institution’s teacher preparation
program must pass the NYS teacher certification examinations. Together, these measures will
provide reasonable assurances of the teacher preparation program’s continuing
quality.
COMMENT: The change in the
requirement that a majority of the courses in registered teacher preparation
programs must be taught by full-time faculty is premature to the extent that the
first cohort of teachers trained under the more rigorous teacher preparation
standards associated with the new classroom teaching certificates graduated in
May 2004. A change at this time is
not warranted since data is not yet available verifying the relationship between
full-time faculty and quantitative output
measures.
RESPONSE: The Department does not believe that the
proposed change is premature. The
amendment gives hiring flexibility to institutions of higher education whose
teacher preparation programs meet defined standards of accountability. The Department will carefully evaluate
the impact of providing this hiring flexibility on the performance of teacher
certification candidates and the quality of teacher preparation programs and
will reconsider this policy if objective evidence demonstrates a negative impact
on them.
COMMENT: Full-time faculty perform many functions
that part-time adjuncts, by the limited nature of their appointments, cannot
perform. Full-time faculty are, for
example, more available to work with students on the academic training necessary
to become a teacher, to coordinate a teaching candidate’s field work, to work
with necessary faculty partners across the institution to improve the
preparation of teacher candidates and to provide continuity in the quality of
teacher preparation programs.
RESPONSE: The Department continues to recognize
and value the vital role of full-time faculty, and the regulations will continue
to require all institutions that offer teacher preparation programs to provide
sufficient numbers of qualified, full-time faculty to foster and maintain
continuity and stability in these programs and ensure the proper discharge of
instructional and all other faculty responsibilities. The regulations will also continue to
require all teacher preparation programs to meet the requirements for faculty
that are applicable to all registered college programs, which include additional
standards to ensure the quality of the faculty. The proposal would only extend staffing
flexibility to those teacher preparation programs that meet the articulated
accountability standards that demonstrate the quality of the programs.
COMMENT: The change is unnecessary because the
current regulation permits institutions of higher education to request a waiver
from the Department of the percentage requirement for full-time
faculty.
RESPONSE: The amendment is needed to
move towards a performance-based system. The amendment eliminates the percentage
requirement for full-time faculty and the fixed workload requirements for those
teacher preparation programs that demonstrate program quality by being
accredited by the Regents or an acceptable professional education accrediting
association and that meet or exceed the established institutional pass rate of
80 percent on teacher certification examinations. The regulation would also continue
the opportunity for a waiver request from the staffing standards for good cause,
such as inability to hire sufficient numbers of full-time faculty in a new
program.
COMMENT: Teacher preparation is far too important
to argue that since no other programs that prepare professionals have a
percentage requirement for full-time faculty, teacher preparation programs
should not either. This reasoning
undercuts the importance of quality
standards.
RESPONSE: It is instructive to
note that no other academic programs leading to professional licensure in
professions registered by the Department are required to maintain a specified
percentage of full-time faculty by either the Department or their accrediting
body. Colleges and universities
offering licensure-qualifying programs in medicine, nursing, architecture,
engineering, public accountancy, dentistry, and other professions maintain high
standards of quality while exercising discretion to establish staffing plans in
those program areas. Likewise, no
teacher education-accrediting agency identifies a fixed percentage of required
full-time faculty. Rather, all accrediting bodies assess the
overall financial and human resources supporting a program to determine whether
the program is able to operate effectively and meet its academic mission. The Department does not believe it
necessary to retain the percentage requirement for teacher preparation programs
that demonstrate program quality by being accredited by the Regents or an
acceptable professional education accrediting association and that meet or
exceed the established institutional pass rate of 80 percent on teacher
certification examinations.
COMMENT: Since the average statewide pass rates
on the certification exams is close to 90 percent, allowing variance from the
requirement that a majority of courses be taught by full-time faculty if 80
percent of a teacher preparation program’s completers pass the certification
exams could be viewed as lowering of the State’s quality standards.
RESPONSE: The Department does not believe
providing additional hiring flexibility to accredited teacher education
institutions whose program completers consistently pass the certification exams
at rates of 80 percent or above diminishes the State’s quality standard.
COMMENT: The proposals in the regulation to
extend the duration period of the initial certificate, in order to provide
additional time for new teachers to earn a master's degree, and to provide
additional hiring flexibility to institutions of higher education with teacher
preparation programs that achieve articulated quality standards should be
separated because they are unrelated.
RESPONSE: The Department consistently amends at
the same time several provisions of the Regulations of the Commissioner of
Education relating to common subject areas. In this instance, both provisions
relate to teacher certification and the Department's ongoing efforts to provide
additional flexibility in regulatory requirements to facilitate production of
additional certified teachers.
COMMENT: The Department appears to be advancing
the proposal to remove the percentage requirement for full-time faculty in
teacher preparation programs in an effort to accommodate the economic/management
desires of some institutions of higher education rather than data demonstrating
the need for a policy change.
RESPONSE: The Regents Teaching Policy
includes a commitment to ongoing monitoring of the implementation and impact of
the Policy and a plan to consider adjustments and modifications as necessary to
advance the Policy in today’s educational environment. In numerous communications and
activities, including the above-referenced survey of college presidents, the
leaders at colleges and universities with teacher preparation programs, while
agreeing that maintaining a significant proportion of full-time faculty and
faculty workload limitations are important standards for ensuring program
quality, have requested more flexibility to develop staffing plans that are
consistent with the changing needs of their programs (e.g., enrollment
fluctuations and the need to offer specific courses to meet the demands for
teachers in certain subject areas, etc.).
Presidents of institutions with teacher preparation programs, as well as
some deans, program chairs, faculty, and representatives of higher education
organizations have described a
number of unintended consequences from the requirement for a fixed percentage of
full-time faculty. For example,
some institutions reported
having to reduce, rather than expand, the number of programs and courses they
offer. Others have reported having
to increase class size and faculty/student ratios. A number of
institutions have reported a diminishing pool of high quality, full-time teacher
education faculty candidates in subject shortage areas.
The Department believes that elimination of
the percentage requirement for full-time faculty for those teacher preparation
programs that demonstrate program quality by being accredited and meeting or
exceeding the established pass rate of 80 percent on teacher certification
examinations is reasonable. It will
provide institutions that have demonstrated quality additional flexibility to
meet their staffing needs. The
Department will carefully monitor the effects of the new policy to ensure that
it does not result in a reduction in the quality of teacher preparation
programs.