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Teacher Preparation

Utah Lawmakers Look to Institute Test of Teaching Skills

By Emmanuel Felton 鈥 February 09, 2017 1 min read
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A few months after to take the helm of classrooms, some state lawmakers are looking to require educators to pass an exam to prove that they can teach before getting a full license.

Senate bill 78, which won , would compel the state board of education to 鈥 that is performance based and assesses an individual鈥檚 pedagogical skills,鈥 but the bill would leave it up to the board to decide which test is best.

One former .

鈥淚 think this is a really important step to ensure that every single teacher who steps into a classroom in Utah is a highly effective teacher that can best support our children,鈥 F. Ann Millner, the president of Weber State University in Ogden, Utah, told the newspaper. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of interesting we鈥檝e not really had this in place for the teaching profession. We鈥檝e had it on the content side. We鈥檝e not had that on what鈥檚 really important, their ability to teach.鈥

But not everyone is happy about the proposed legislation. The state鈥檚 teachers鈥 union and some education school professors have expressed concern that the bill would create an unequal playing field for teachers certified through traditional teacher preparation programs and those who entered the classroom under the alternative certification plan created last summer. Teachers in traditional programs would be given the test after they completed their training, while alternatively certified teachers would have the benefit of years in the classroom before they had to take the test of teaching skills.

鈥淥ne group has to pass an assessment to receive a license ... but another group of teachers has up to two years in a classroom working with students before they must pass an assessment to retain a license. We have concerns about that,鈥 , 鈥淚f the standard is every educator should be ready to teach on day one, that standard should apply to every educator. We support that standard.鈥


A version of this news article first appeared in the Teacher Beat blog.