INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The state panel overseeing teacher licensing has
approved new rules Indiana’s state superintendent says will allow future
educators to spend less time learning how to teach and more time focused on
subject matter.
The Division of Professional Standards Advisory Board on Thursday approved
the proposal, which had drawn sharp opposition from universities and others
who said Superintendent Tony Bennett shouldn’t dictate college curriculums.
The board made several changes to the proposal in an effort to compromise,
and Bennett said Thursday he was proud of the final product.
“We crafted these changes with the belief that students’ academic success is
determined, in large part, by the quality of their teachers,” Bennett said.
“These new rules for licensing go further than ever before to make sure all
Indiana’s school children receive the high-quality instruction they
deserve.”
Gov. Mitch Daniels, also a Republican, also praised the new rules.
“The single best way to have better prepared kids is to have better prepared
teachers,” Daniels said in a statement.
The original proposal would have required elementary education majors to
take no more than 30 college credit hours in teaching methods. That limit
was later eliminated, a move Indiana University School of Education Dean
Gerardo Gonzalez said was a fair compromise.
“The faculty really should be in charge of the curriculum,” Gonzalez said.
“Not having credit limits allow the faculty flexibility.”
The original proposal would have required those who want to become high
school math teachers, for example, to major in math and minor in education.
Currently, college students can major in education and take some classes in
math to qualify as secondary math teachers. Education schools complained
that such a change would essentially destroy their secondary education
majors.
The rule approved Thursday allows students who want to be high school
teachers to major in secondary education, but only if a college’s secondary
education program meets or exceeds the content requirements of a specific
subject major, such as math or physics. The Department of Education said
that compromise worked because it still ensures that teachers learn about
the subject they will eventually teach.
The rules also will make it easier for school boards to hire superintendents
who have had nontraditional career paths. And they will allow current
teachers to apply certain professional development programs toward license
renewal, possibly saving them money on tuition-based courses.
The Department of Education said the new rules take effect July 31, but they
will not affect education majors who graduate from college before 2013.
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On the Web:
http://www.doe.in.gov/news/2009/07-July/REPA.html
Posted 1/8/2010