Title: Certification 101
1Certification 101
- Professional Education and Certification, OSPI
2Presenters
- Connie Reichel, Program Specialist
- Larry Lashway, Program Specialist
3(No Transcript)
4Professional Education and Certification
5What We Do
Higher Education
P-12 Schools
We Implement the Mission by Bridging the Gap to
Help Improve Student Learning
6What We Do
- Prepare WAC regulations for PESB consideration to
implement legislation and fulfill Board and
agency goals - Provide technical assistance to 67 educator
preparation programs at 22 IHEs - Interface with advisory groups and IHEs to ensure
guidance, contribution, and feedback for IHE
programs to meet state goals and EALRs - Evaluate educator preparation programs for
approval to ensure quality standards and state
goals and EALRs/GLEs are met - Bring contributions to Washington from national
educator preparation programs
- Evaluate, issue, print, mail over 30,000
certificates or certificate changes annually - Serving over 60,000 employed educators, updating
certificates - Maintain records on 420,000 individuals who have
been certified - Add 12,000 new first-time certificates annually
- Interface with IHEs and ESDs in certificate
actions.
7Teacher Assistance Program
- TAP provides funds for mentoring, training, and
release time for observations for first year
educators - Mentoring Strand at Summer Institutes-See program
- Mentor Academies
- June 26-30 Seattle, Seattle Pacific University
- July 31-August 4 Seattle, SPU
8Troops to Teachers
- Federally funded program
- Recruit military personnel and spouses to the
teaching profession
9Endorsement Changes
- Competency Based System
- Content Testing (WEST-E/Praxis II)
- New Options for Adding an Endorsement
- Pathway 1 Test Only
- Pathway 2 Test and Pedagogy Assessment
- Pathway 3 Traditional full program
10Continuing Education Requirement
- Continuing and Professional Certificates must be
maintained with 150 clock hours every five years - New Options for Earning Clock Hours
- Professional Growth Team Member-up to 20/year
- Intern Supervisor- up to 20/year
- Professional Growth Planning
- Certification 201 after lunch
- National Board (NBPTS) Certification
- Can apply directly for Professional Certificate
- Renewal and Maintenance of Professional or
Continuing - Can earn 45 clock hours for completing assessment
process and an additional 45 for certifying
11Professional Certification for Teachers
- Residency Reissuance
- Common Sequence
- Pre-Assessment
- Core
- Culminating
- 17 approved programs
- Certification 102, next session
12Professional Certification for Administrators
13Guiding principles
- Student learning the measure of success
- Job-embedded professional development
- Partnership Higher education, AWSP, WASA, OSPI,
districts - Support
14Certification timeline
5-year certificate
Undated certificate
End of 2nd year
Residency certification
Pro Cert Program (1-3 years)
Hiring
15Certificate requirements
- Completion of approved professional certificate
program - Satisfactory evaluations while serving as
principal or assistant principal - 3 contracted years employment as a principal or
assistant principal
16What it would look like
17Entry Seminar
- Assess professional needs
- Review existing evidence
- Formulate Professional Growth Plan
18Review Existing Evidence
- 360 assessment (How does my perception of my
leadership skills compare to the perceptions of
others?) - Job evaluations (What strengths and needs has my
supervisor identified?) - SIP (What does the school improvement plan tell
me I should be focusing on?) - Other Any other evidence that shows my impact on
student learning and well-being. E.g., a
discipline plan that has reduced suspensions
implementation of a new math curriculum that has
resulted in improved student learning
development of an after-school tutoring program
etc.
19360 Assessment
- Survey developed by AWSP in collaboration with
the Center for Educational Effectiveness - Provides feedback aligned with ISLLC standards
- Completed by the candidate, the candidates
supervisor, and a number of teachers selected by
the candidate - Candidate results can be compared with aggregate
results of all other leaders who have taken the
assessment
20360 Assessment
- Designed to be used as a formative professional
development tool, not as a summative evaluation - The candidate chooses the teachers to whom the
survey is administered - Results are owned by the candidate they are
typically shared with the university advisor, but
not the candidates supervisor (unless the
candidate wishes to share and discuss with the
supervisor)
21Assess Professional Needs
- 1. What has happened since I did my draft PGP in
the residency program? Have I strengthened the
areas I wanted to focus on? Have I identified new
needs? - 2. What are the key questions, issues, and
dilemmas I need to resolve in order to improve
student learning in my school?
22Formulate Professional Growth Plan
- In what areas do I already have evidence that I
meet the benchmarks? - In what areas do I probably meet the benchmarks
but need more evidence? - In what areas do I need to concentrate my efforts
to achieve the standards? - What can I do within my plan that will be most
beneficial to the students in my school?
23Implementing the PGP (Core)
- Depending on the plan, may involve any of the
following, as appropriate - Targeted professional development
- AWSP/WASA conferences
- OSPI conferences
- Similar opportunities
- College/university courses
- Action research
- Seminars/collaborative work groups focused on
specific issues - Professional reading
- Other
24Presenting the evidence (panel)
- Panel consists of university instructors and
practicing administrators (including PEAB
members) - Candidates can sign up for a panel whenever they
have completed their PGP
25Scenario
- Scenario 2 Anne Evanoff is in her 3rd year as
principal of a K-6 elementary school in a
small/medium-sized district that has one other
K-6 school, a 7-8 middle school, and a high
school. The first two years have gone without
major incident the school appears to be
operating smoothly, and she has received good
performance evaluations. She has been
particularly pleased with the results of an
anti-bullying program she developed in
collaboration with the school counselor
disciplinary referrals are down, and a number of
teachers have commented on the reduced conflict
among students. -
26- Nonetheless, she has struggled with a number of
issues. Most notably, the district faces a need
to adopt a new math curriculum textbook series
in the next year. Although the faculty seems to
recognize that student achievement on the math
WASL is not satisfactory, there is little
consensus on what should be done and a great deal
of negativity surrounding the issue. Teachers
have not formed hard-core factions, but readily
find fault with any suggestions that are put
forward, so progress has been slow. Some teachers
have expressed cynicism, saying, The board will
just do what they want anywayjust like last
time, or Eastside the other K-6 school always
gets what they want, so why spend a lot of time
talking about it? In her conversations with
teachers, she senses that a number of them seem
insecure about their own understanding of math.
27- The situation has a few additional
complicating factors - The decision must be made collaboratively with
the other elementary school, where faculty
already seem to have reached consensus on the
choice. - A small but vocal group in the community has been
lobbying for adoption of Saxon math they have at
least one ally on the school board. - The superintendent is willing to support the
recommendation of the two schools, as long as it
represents a strong staff consensus that it will
improve student math performance. - The faculty is congenial and cooperative, but
does not have a history of deep collaboration. -
28Looking at the standards
- The entry seminar began by reviewing the
benchmarks for the Professional Certificate and
discussing the kinds of evidence that could be
used to show the benchmarks had been achieved. -
- Participants in the seminar then engaged in a
self-assessment based on the benchmarks, using a
variety of evidence, including the 360
assessment, job performance evaluations, and
other evidence. -
-
29Entry seminar
- Working with the university facilitator and her
peers, Evanoff found that she already had some
evidence to support some of the benchmarks. For
example, she decided that her success with the
anti-bullying program provided good evidence
about the benchmark, Ensuring efficient and
effective management of the organization. -
- However, her analysis also identified a number
of benchmarks as areas to concentrate on,
including several that seem especially pertinent
to her dilemma with the math adoption - Standard 1, Strand 1 Creating a Vision for
learning While a district/school vision is in
place, the principal realizes there is no real
vision for math instruction. - Standard 2, Strand 1 Advocating, nurturing, and
sustaining a school culture. The existing
culture clearly does not facilitate major
decisions such as the math curriculum. - Standard 2, Strand 3 Advocating, nurturing, and
sustaining Professional Development If teachers
are not secure about their own capacity with
math, professional development will be a key part
of the solution. -
30Developing strategies
- The remainder of the entry seminar was spent in
developing strategies to meet the benchmarks.
This was done in consultation with her advisor
(as well as collaboration with peers), but the
final menu of activities was her choice. -
- Because of her concern over the math issue, she
organized much of her work around the goal of
helping her faculty reach an informed consensus
on the choice of math materials. - To help achieve this goal, she found a number of
strategies and resources that proved helpful
31PGP implementation
-
- Workshops offered by AWSP Project Leadership
provided focused guidance on - Use of WASL data to drive instructional decisions
- Professional reading on using data to drive
instructional decisions - OSPI conference
- Math Helping Corps Various ways to involve
parents and community members in Student Learning - From Compliance to Commitment A report on
effective school districts in the state - Teachers Teaching Teacher The Power of Staff
Development from within (focus mathematics) - Book study on developing and communicating vision
and collaborating with stakeholders - Seeking advice from experienced principals or
other Pro Cert candidates grappling with the
similar issues (via the OSPI-maintained
discussion forum or through contacts established
by the university)
32PGP implementation
- After reviewing her growth plan, and
considering her work schedule, Evanoff estimated
that she could complete it in about a year (some
of her peers chose shorter or longer timelines).
During this phase of the program, she
participated in a seminar that involved periodic
meetings with her university advisor and peers.
The sessions sometimes focused on common topics
of concern, but also allowed time for her to
raise individual issues she was encountering as
she pursued her growth plan, and to engage in
collaborative problem-solving with other
candidates.
33What about assistant principals?
- Assistant principals go through the same process
and meet the same standards as principals.
However, in some cases the nature of their work
environment may require special reflection and
strategizing.
34Challenges.
35Designing meaningful work
- Identifying real-world tasks that exemplify ISLLC
standards - Determining what will count as evidence that
benchmarks have been met - Balancing commonality and flexibility
- Meeting the needs of all candidates (does this
process work equally well for those serving as
assistant principals?)
36(What we dont want.)
37 Assuring capacity support
- What resources are needed for all partners to
carry out their roles? - What support will be provided to candidates?
- How do we sustain the partnership?
38 Program delivery and access
39Feedback needed
- What do you see as the major strengths of this
approach? - What are the major concerns you have about it?
- What are the unanswered questions that you have?
40Professional Certification for ESAs
41ESA Roles
- School Nurse
- School Occupational Therapist
- School Physical Therapist
- School Speech Language Pathologist or Audiologist
- Initial/Continuing
- No changes made
42ESA Roles
- School Counselors
- School Psychologists
- School Social Workers
- Initial
- Issued until 8/31/05
- Continuing
- Issued as long as Initial certificate is valid
- Residency
- Issued beginning 9/1/05
- Professional
- Currently under development
43Residency ESACounselor, Psychologist, Social
Worker
- Masters Degree
- State Approved Preparation Program
- Valid until completion of two years of contracted
service in the ESA role in a Washington School
District - Reissued with as five-year expiration date
- Enroll in a Professional ESA program within the
five-year validity period
44Professional ESA Program
- Purpose of program
- Complete program through an in-state
college/university with approved program - Program consists of three parts
- Pre-Assessment Seminar (including a professional
growth plan) - Core
- Culminating Seminar
45MAIN AREAS OF PROGRAM FOCUS
- Evidence of Professional certificate-level
knowledge, skill, and performance - Positive Impact on Student Learning
- Specification of areas for continuing education
and development
46Intended Outcomes for Participants
- Ability to self-evaluate
- Opportunity to reflect
- Challenge to move to the next level
- Documentation of application to the context
- Opportunity for collaboration
47Questions