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Educators critical of teacher licensing plan

KEVIN RICHERT/Idaho Education News | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 2 months AGO
by KEVIN RICHERT/Idaho Education News
| October 23, 2014 9:00 PM

Diane Hardin, principal at Parma's Maxine Johnson Elementary School, comes from a family of public school teachers - and she could envision her 14-year-old daughter wanting to follow the family tradition.

But Hardin says the proposed tiered teacher licensing rule again shows disrespect to teachers and politicizes education.

"I find myself fighting the impulse to tell (her), 'Please don't go into education in Idaho,'" Hardin said Tuesday, during a crowded and raucous public hearing on the plan.

Some 250 people - including educators, administrators and parents - packed the cafeteria at Meridian's Mountain View High School for the State Board of Education's third public hearing on the plan. No one testified in favor of the proposal. Even Rep. Lance Clow, R-Twin Falls, a House Education Committee member, used his testimony to suggest technical changes.

Opponent after opponent urged the State Board to start over, scrapping the plan entirely. "There are just too many variables for the state to start another initiative," Weiser School District Superintendent Wil Overgaard said. "Slow down and get it right."

Superintendents in Kootenai County's two largest school districts told The Press Wednesday that they have their own concerns about the licensing rule.

"We know we have a new state superintendent coming in. To rush this in before that person has their feet on the ground might not be the best decision," said Coeur d'Alene Superintendent Matt Handelman.

Handelman said on the surface there are some positive things about the proposed plan.

"It certainly makes a lot of sense to try and attract and retain good teachers," he said.

Handelman said he's concerned the new law may not allow districts to veer away from the state salary schedule, a move which aims to help rural districts, but will affect districts like Coeur d'Alene where teachers are paid more than the state allows.

Handelman and Post Falls Superintendent Jerry Keane each said they are concerned the new rule will have unintended consequences which could harm the school environment.

"This new system puts an awful lot of responsibility on principals," Handelman said.

Keane said principals are responsible for ensuring that all students and staff feel safe and secure, while helping everyone continue to improve.

"If the current board rule is implemented as written it will undermine the work that districts and administrators have done to make sure that the teacher supervisory process is authentic," Keane said. "The enormous pressure that the principal will feel while evaluating staff, knowing that it could lower a teacher's salary or influence that status of their licensure will drive some of our best principals out of the industry."

The State Board will take the next 30 to 60 days reviewing public comments and will decide how to adjust the plan, State Board member Rod Lewis said after the three-hour hearing. He still expects a plan to come before the 2015 Legislature, but he expects some adjustments.

On Tuesday in Meridian, the criticisms ran the gamut:

* Use of standardized tests

Educators criticized tying teacher pay and professional advancement to standardized test scores - especially the new version of the ISAT, which has been rewritten and aligned to the Idaho Core Standards. After a field test last spring, the ISAT will be used for the first time this spring as a school and student accountability measure.

* Teacher evaluations

The tiered licensure plan hinges on two yardsticks: student growth and teacher evaluations, conducted by two local evaluators. Speaker after speaker criticized the idea of linking teacher pay to the evaluations. Mark Jones, a Boise principal, said principals should not be given the authority to influence teacher pay or licensure - comments that drew loud applause from the crowd.

* Special needs students

If pay is tied, in part, to student growth, teachers may have little incentive to work with special education students, English language learners and students from poorer households.

* Funding

Tiered licensure and the teacher pay raises linked to it carry a projected price tag of $200 million. The tiered licensure plan is an administrative rule - which one of the Legislature's education committees could approve, without a full vote of the House or Senate. And a rule does not come with appropriations attached to it.

"I don't see $200 million coming," said Rep. John Gannon, D-Boise.

This drew a response from Lewis - a member of Gov. Butch Otter's education task force which included tiered licensure among its 20 far-reaching recommendations from 14 months ago. Lewis said the tiered licensure plan and the teacher career ladder are intertwined.

"We are not interested in moving one forward without the other," Lewis said.

The career ladder proposal would raise starting teacher pay from $31,750 to $40,000. Pay for teachers in the second, professional tier, would range from $47,000 to $51,000. At the top of the scale, master teachers would receive $54,000 to $58,000.

Lewis couched the plan as a compromise. Legislators will want some accountability measures attached to a career ladder, he said, but support is building for a boost in teacher salaries.

"I think this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to significantly increase teacher pay," he said, drawing catcalls and snickers from some in the audience.

Lewis hopes to get a rule ready for the 2015 session, because legislators seem ready to move.

"We do have considerable concern that, if we delay, that momentum will be lost," he said after Tuesday's hearing.

However, Idaho Education Association President Penni Cyr urged the State Board not to rush to the Statehouse next winter. The task force's working groups have until next year to work, and have funding in hand, and should use that time to craft a plan teachers can support.

"We cannot afford to lose more teachers," she said. "And this plan won't do it."

Staff writer Maureen Dolan contributed to this report.

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