Title: National Professional Standards for Teachers
1National Professional Standards for Teachers
Policy or Reality?Lawrence IngvarsonACER
- Australian College of Educators/Flinders
University Meeting - March 18, 2011
2Current context The COAG National Agreement on
Quality Teaching
- Priority areas for reform
- Developing and enhancing the skills and knowledge
of teachers and school leaders throughout their
careers -
- Retaining and rewarding quality teachers and
school leaders - Improved mobility of the Australian teaching
workforce and equitable distribution of quality
teachers across schools
39th of February 2011 Minister welcomes the
release of new National Professional Standards
for Teachers
- Mr Garrett said the Standards will drive future
reform in the areas of national accreditation of
teacher education programs, nationally consistent
teacher registration, and the certification of
highly accomplished teachers.
4At the launch of the new National Standards, Tony
Mackay, the Chair of AITSL, announced that
- AITSL will be working in partnership with the
various regulatory authorities, teacher unions,
and all school sectors, to implement the
standards in all jurisdictions. This work will
include explaining and elaborating on the
standards, providing support materials, providing
the processes, and deciding on how judgements are
made. -
5AITSLs challenge
- Developing and implementing a nationally
consistent and credible voluntary system for the
certification of highly accomplished teachers -
what might be involved and how might this be
achieved? - AITSLs challenge is also a challenge for the
teaching profession
6 7Teaching standards and professional
certification Where have we been?
- Sir James Darling 1959 Address to Inaugural
meeting of ACE - Despite its importance, the teaching profession
as a whole has never yet had a voice with which
to speak. There are innumerable professional
associations, at different levels and of
different degrees of specialised interest, but
there is no organisation to speak for education
as a whole in matters of principle, which concern
the whole body of those who teach. - There are acknowledged leaders in specialized
fields, but no leaders of the profession as a
whole. There are higher degrees for those with
expert knowledge of the techniques of teaching,
but there are no ways in which the profession as
a whole can be recognised. - Thus on the one hand, individuals are denied the
position from which they might give leadership,
and on the other, the profession as a whole is
denied a proper representation in the councils of
the nation.
81973 the Interim Committee for the Australian
Schools Commission
- A mark of a highly skilled occupation is that
those entering it should have reached a level of
preparation in accordance with standards set by
the practitioners themselves, and that the
continuing development of members should largely
be the responsibility of the profession. -
- In such circumstances, the occupational group
itself becomes the point of reference for
standards and thus the source of prestige or of
condemnation. . . . in Australia teachers as an
occupational group have had few opportunities to
participate in decision-making. - Their organisations have been traditionally more
concerned with industrial matters, including
those that affect the quality of services
offered, than with the development of expertise,
which has been seen as primarily the
responsibility of the employer. (p. 123)
91998 Senate Inquiry into Status of Teaching , A
Class Act
- A system of professional recognition for
teachers must be established which is based on
the achievement of enhanced knowledge and skills
and which retains teachers at the front line of
student learning. Such knowledge and skills
should be identified, classified and assessed
according to criteria developed by expert panels
drawn from the profession. Education authorities
should structure remuneration accordingly. (p.
7)
102003 National Statement from the Teaching
Profession on Teacher Standards, Quality and
Professionalism (agreed to by more than twenty
teacher associations and unions)
- A nationally coordinated, rigorous and consistent
system should be established to provide
recognition to teachers who demonstrate advanced
standards.The enterprise bargaining process
between employers and unions will be an important
mechanism for providing recognition for
professional certification. All employing
authorities should be encouraged to provide
recognition and support for professional
certification as the process comes to demonstrate
its credibility and its effects on professional
learning.
11National Professional Bodies
- Australian Teaching Council (1994-96)
- Teaching Australia (NIQTSL) (2003-2008)
- Australian Institute for Teaching and School
Leadership (2009- ?) - (Formed to provide leadership for Commonwealth,
state and territory governments in promoting
excellence in the profession of teaching)
12 AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS CAREER STAGES/CERTIFICATION LEVELS CAREER STAGES/CERTIFICATION LEVELS CAREER STAGES/CERTIFICATION LEVELS CAREER STAGES/CERTIFICATION LEVELS
AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Graduate Proficient (i.e. Registered) Highly Accomplished Lead
Professional Knowledge 1. Know students and how they learn
Professional Knowledge 2. Know the content and how to teach it
Professional Practice 3. Plan for and implement effective teaching and learning
4. Create and maintain supportive and safe learning environments
5. Assess, provide feedback and report on student learning
Professional Engagement 6. Engage in professional learning
7. Engage with colleagues, parents/carers and the community
13- A little theory
- How is it all supposed to work?
14A Standards-based Professional Learning and
Certification System
- Main components
- Teaching standards that articulate what teachers
should get better at and provide direction for
professional development over the long term - Career paths that value teaching and provide
substantial incentives and for teachers to attain
these standards - An infrastructure for professional learning that
enables teachers to gain the knowledge and skill
embodied in the teaching standards - A voluntary system of professional certification
based on valid methods for assessing teacher
performance
15 16Certification in Professions
- Certification refers to an endorsement by a
professional agency that a teacher has attained a
designated standard of teaching. - This process should be seen as distinct from the
rewards or recognition that an employing
authority may choose to give to that
certification, if any. Certification is a
professional qualification that belongs to the
teacher regardless of where they teach.
17An important distinction
- Systems for recognising and financially rewarding
accomplished teachers
- System for identifying accomplished teachers and
providing certification of their knowledge and
skill
Responsibility of employing authorities
- Responsibility of the profession
-
- National professional body
- Profession-wide standards
- Standards-based performance assessment by trained
peers - Portable certification
- Voluntary
- Recognition of certification may be built into
industrial agreements and career pathways - Specific to particular jurisdictions/ employers
- Certification not the only basis for performance
pay
18 Another important distinction Two different
purposes for teacher evaluation
- Performance management (e.g annual performance
reviews, bonus schemes) Employer responsibility - Professional certification Provided by
independent national professional body (aims to
be recognized by employers)
19A surprising policy emerges
- OR, the things you say to get elected
20ALP Federal Election PolicyReward Payments for
Great Teachers
- AITSL to develop the performance management
system (The Australian Teacher Performance
Management Principles and Procedures) - Performance bonus of 8000 for 10 of teachers
each year - Methods
- Lesson observation
- Analysis of student performance data (e.g.
NAPLAN) - Parental feedback
- Teacher qualifications and professional
development - 1.25billion over five years
- 50million to states and territories to make
necessary changes
21Letter to the Minister
- Does the Government still plan to implement the
policy announced just prior to the election
called "Reward Payments for Great Teachers"? If
so, what will be the relationship between that
program, which is a performance management bonus
pay system, and the standards-based certification
system announced by the Minister today?
22- Dear Mr Ingvarson
- Thank you for your email of 9 February 2011 to
the Department of Education, Employment and
Workplace Relations concerning the Reward
Payments for Great Teachers election commitment. -
- On 9 August 2010, the Australian Labour Party
(ALP) announced a 1.25 billion election
commitment, Reward Payments for Great Teachers,
to recognise and reward top performing teachers.
In the 2010-11 Mid Year Economic and Fiscal
Outlook (MYEFO) process Cabinet advised that the
Reward Payments for Great Teachers commitment
will be reconsidered in the 2011-12 Budget
process. -
- The Reward Payments for Great Teachers election
commitment has two elements?- development of a
nationally consistent performance management
system, known as the Australian Teacher
Performance Management Principles and Procedures
for roll out into all schools from 2012 and ?- a
performance bonus paid once per performance
assessment to the top ten percent of teachers,
commencing in 2014. - The Australian Teacher Performance Management
Principles and Procedures will be a nationally
consistent performance management framework which
is built around the new National Professional
Standards for Teachers. I trust this information
is of assistance. - Yours sincerely
- Quality Teaching Branch, Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations
23- Thank you for replying to my query. However, I
do not think you have addressed the second part
of my question. - What is the relationship between the Australian
Teacher Performance Management Principles and
Procedures (i.e. the Rewards Payments for Great
Teachers policy) and AITSLs standards based
certification system announced by the Minister on
Feb 9th? - The two approaches seem to be incompatible.
24Three essential steps in developing standards for
professional certification
- Defining what is to be assessed i.e. what do
highly accomplished teachers know and do. (This
is what the National Professional Standards for
Teachers aim to do - Developing valid and consistent assessment
methods for gathering evidence about what a
teacher knows and is able to do in relation to
the standards and - Developing reliable procedures for assessing that
evidence and deciding whether a teacher has met
the standard. (i.e. performance standards).
25Developing standards for accomplished teaching
Defining good teaching
Capturing good teaching
Measuring good teaching
Content Standards (Capabilities Competencies,
etc.)
Methods for gathering evidence for assessment
- Training assessors
- Setting Performance standards (How good is good
enough?)
26- Standards are not standards unless it is clear
how they can be used to assess performance
27- The decathlon as an analogy for developing a
nationally consistent certification system for
highly accomplished teachers
28Who is the World's Greatest Athlete? The
decathlon decides
- The decathlon is an athletic event consisting of
ten track and field events. Events are held over
two consecutive days and the winners are
determined by the combined performance in all.
Performance is judged on a points system in each
event, not by the position achieved. The
decathlon is contested mainly by male athletes,
while female athletes contest the heptathlon. - Traditionally, the title of "has been given to
the man who wins the decathlon. This began when
King Gustav V of Sweden told Jim Thorpe, "You,
sir, are the World's Greatest Athlete"
29Main components of a set of standardsfor great
all-round athlete (decathlon)
Guiding conception of a great all-round athlete
- Performance standards
- What level of performance meets the accomplished
standard (benchmarks)? - How will we discriminate between levels of
performance?
- How will we gather evidence?
- Day 1
- 100 meters
- Long Jump
- Shot Put
- High Jump
- 400 meters
- Day 2
- 110 meter hurdles
- Discus
- Pole Vault
- Javelin
- 1500 meters
- hind it
Content standards What constitutes a great
all-round athlete? strength speed stamina enduranc
e perseverance
30Benchmark levels needed to earn 1000, 900, 800,
and 700 points in each sport.
Event 1000 pts 900 pts 800 pts 700 pts Units
100m 10.395 10.827 11.278 11.756 Seconds
Long Jump 7.76 7.36 6.94.1 6.51 Meters
Shot Put 18.4 16.79 15.16 13.53 Meters
High Jump 2.20 2.10 1.99 1.88 Meters
400m 46.17 48.19 50.32 52.58 Seconds
110m Hurdles 13.8 14.59 15.419 16.29 Seconds
Discus Throw 56.17 51.4 46.59 41.72 Meters
Pole Vault 5.28 4.96 4.63 4.29 Meters
Javelin Throw 77.19 70.67 64.09 57.45 Meters
1500m 233.79 247.42 261.77 276.96 Seconds
31- Applying the analogy to the certification of
highly accomplished teachers
32Developing standards for accomplished teaching
Defining good teaching
Capturing good teaching
Measuring good teaching
Content Standards (Capabilities Competencies,
etc.)
Methods for gathering evidence for assessment
- Training assessors
- Setting Performance standards (How good is good
enough?)
33Methods for capturing evidence of teaching
- samples of students' work over time plus
commentary - video recordings of classroom practice plus
commentary - documentation of accomplishments outside the
classroom - Written assessments (of PCK)
- Student evaluations of teaching
34Ensuring reliable assessment against the AITSL
standards
METHODS OF ASSESSMENT METHODS OF ASSESSMENT Written assessments Portfolio entries Portfolio entries Portfolio entries Student evaluation Classroom observation
AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Tests of pedagogical/ content knowledge Student work- or learning- based Video-based Documented activities Questionnaire Trained observers
Professional Knowledge Know students and how they learn v v v v v
Professional Knowledge Know the content and how to teach it v v v v v
Professional Practice Plan for and implement effective teaching and learning v v v v v
Professional Practice Create and maintain supportive and safe learning environments v v v
Professional Practice Assess, provide feedback and report on student learning v v v v v
Professional Engagement Engage in professional learning v
Professional Engagement Engage with colleagues, parents/carers and the community v
35Examples of portfolio entries for primary teachers
- 1. Provide evidence of a unit of work, with
student writing samples, in which you have
developed students writing ability over time. - 2. Develop an inter-disciplinary theme and
provide work samples that show how you engage
students in work over time that deepens their
understanding of an important idea in science. - 3. Provide a videotape and commentary
illustrating how you create a climate that
supports students abilities to understand
perspectives other than their own. - 4. Provide evidence, through a videotape, written
commentary, and student work samples, of how you
have help build students mathematical
understanding.
36Links between teaching standards and performance
assessment tasks
Knowledge of subject
Ability to plan for effective learning
Knowledge of students
Portfolio entry Teaching a major idea in science
Ability to reflect insightfully on
effectiveness of their teaching
Ability to engage students in a sequence of
learning activities
Ability to assess student progress and provide
helpful feedback
37- Just as it is difficult to imagine a decathlon
that would gain respect if each country decided
on its own events and performance standards, it
is difficult to see how a nationally consistent
system that provides a widely respected
certification to highly accomplished teachers can
emerge if each jurisdiction develops its own
assessment methods, using AITSLs standards only
as a framework .
38Issues in planning a national certification
system for highly accomplished teachers
- Do the standards distinguish between highly
accomplished and proficient teaching? - What methods of assessment provide valid evidence
of meeting the standards? - How will we gain a representative sample of what
a teacher knows and does in relation to the
standards? - How will we ensure that the evidence covers all
the standards, and in more than one way where
possible? - How do we do this without placing an unreasonable
burden on teachers? - How do we ensure that assessors are trained to
high levels of consistency in interpreting the
evidence and making judgments? - Should teachers meet a certain level on every
standard, or should they be able to compensate
for a poor performance on some standards with a
good performance in others?
39How to ensure AITSL certification works
- Strengthen involvement of the profession in the
operation of the certification system e.g.
standards committees, assessment development
teams, assessor training. - Focus on ensuring that the assessment of
performance is rigorous i.e. a valid indicator of
teacher excellence fundamental - Once this is done, convince employing authorities
to give salary recognition to nationally
certified teachers to encourage standards-based
professional development - Encourage multiple ways to assist teacher
professional development toward the standard - Mainstream the certification scheme make it a
condition of eligibility for school leadership
positions
40Example of Portfolio Entry Designing Science
Instruction
- Provide evidence of a unit of work which shows
how you link learning activities together to
promote students' understanding of one important
scientific concept along with the development of
one or more related process goals. - Choose students who represent different kinds of
challenges for you. - Choose three instructional activities, related
instructional materials, two student responses to
each activity, and submit a Written Commentary.
41- Problems with the current Framework
42 AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS
Professional Knowledge 1. Know students and how they learn
Professional Knowledge 2. Know the content and how to teach it
Professional Practice 3. Plan for and implement effective teaching and learning
4. Create and maintain supportive and safe learning environments
5. Assess, provide feedback and report on student learning
Professional Engagement 6. Engage in professional learning
7. Engage with colleagues, parents/carers and the community
43 AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS
Professional Knowledge 1. Know students and how they learn 1.1 Physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics of students 1.2 Understand how students learn 1.3 Students with diverse linguistic, cultural, religious and socioeconomic backgrounds 1.4 Strategies for teaching Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students 1.5 Differentiate teaching to meet the specific learning needs of students across the full range of abilities 1.6 Strategies to support full participation of students with disability
Professional Knowledge 2. Know content and how to teach it 2.1 Content and teaching strategies of the teaching area 2.2 Content selection and organisation 2.3 Curriculum, assessment and reporting 2.4 Understand and respect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to promote reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians 2.5 Literacy and numeracy strategies 2.6 Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
44 AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Career Stages Career Stages Career Stages Career Stages
AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Graduate Proficient (i.e. Registered) Highly Accomplished Lead
PROFESSIONAL KNOWLEDGE 1. Know students and how they learn 1.1 Physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics of students Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics of students and how these may affect learning Use teaching strategies based on knowledge of students physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics to improve student learning. Select from a flexible and effective repertoire of teaching strategies to suit the physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics of students. Lead colleagues to select and develop teaching strategies to improve student learning using knowledge of the physical, social and intellectual development and characteristics of students.
45 AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Career Stages Career Stages Career Stages Career Stages
AITSL STANDARDS AITSL STANDARDS Graduate Proficient (i.e. Registered) Highly Accomplished Lead
PROFESSIONAL Standard 3 Plan for and implement effective teaching and learning PRACTICE 3.3 Use teaching strategies Include a range of teaching strategies in teaching. Know Select and use relevant teaching strategies to develop knowledge, skills, problem solving and critical and creative thinking. Apply Support colleagues to select and apply effective teaching strategies to develop knowledge, skills, problem solving and critical and creative thinking. Support Work with colleagues to review, modify and expand their repertoire of teaching strategies to enable students to use knowledge, skills, problem solving and critical and creative thinking Lead
46National Professional Standards Framework
- No clear conception of what good teachers get
better at - Confusion between developing expertise and
changing roles and promotion certification - Knowledge domain and Practice domain not clearly
distinguished leading to duplication - Not as yet in a suitable form to be used for
developing assessment methods or setting
standards deciding how good is good enough -
-
47Developing standards
- Start by describing what counts as quality
learning in your teaching field - Then ask, what do teachers need to know and be
able to do to enable that kind of learning? - Develop standards with their assessment and
professional development purpose in mind
48Standard 6. Highly accomplished teachersof
science engage students in scientific Inquiry
- Highly accomplished teachers of science actively
involve students in a wide range of scientific
investigations . . . . - They both teach and model practices that allow
their students to approach knowledge and
experiences critically, recognise problems, ask
questions and pose solutions. Their teaching
reflects both the excitement and challenge of
scientific endeavour and its distinctive rigour.
49- Where is the profession in all this?
50Australian Science Teachers Association
- National professional standards for highly
accomplished teachers of science - March 2002
http//www.asta.edu.au
51PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT
Name of association Present or Intended Level of Use Present or Intended Level of Use Present or Intended Level of Use
Name of association Competent Accomplished Teacher Leadership
Australian Association of Environmental Educators ? ?
Australian Association of Mathematics Teachers (AAMT) ?
Australian Association for Special Education ?
Australian Association for Teachers of the Deaf ?
Australian Association for the Teaching of English (AATE) ?
Australian Council for Health, Physical Education and Recreation ? ? ?
Australian Council of TESOL Associations ?
Art Education ? ?
Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations (AFMLTA) ?
Australian Geography Teachers Association ?
Australian Literacy Educators Association (ALEA) ?
Australian Library Association/Australian Library and Information Association (ASLA/ALIA) ?
Australian Science Teachers Association (ASTA) ? ?
Australian Society of Music Education Inc. (ASME) ? ? Expert
Early Childhood Australia (ECA) ?
History Teachers Association of (HTAA) ? Effective
52Ensuring a nationally consistent approach to the
certification of highly accomplished teachers
- Need to think profession-wide, not
- Certification must be respected it is to be
rewarded - Teacher mobility is a key aim of COAG NP
- Professions certify excellent practice wise
employers reward it