Assessing and evaluating teacher preparation programs
assessing and evaluating teacher preparation programs
assessing and evaluating teacher preparation programs
apa task force report
Task Force Members Mary M. Brabeck, PhD Carol Anne Dwyer, PhD Kurt F. Geisinger, PhD Ronald W. Marx, PhD George H. Noell, PhD Robert C. Pianta, PhD Frank C. Worrell, PhD (Chair)
Staff Rena F. Subotnik, PhD
The American Psychological Association wishes to acknowledge the support of apa's Board of Educational Affairs (bea) and the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (caep) in developing this report. This report was received by the American Psychological Association's Council of Representatives on February 21, 2014.
Assessing and Evaluating Teacher Preparation Programs
Available online at: teacher-preparation-programs.pdf
Printed copies available from: Center for Psychology in Schools and Education Education Directorate American Psychological Association 750 First Street, ne Washington, dc 20002-4242 Phone: 202.336.5923 tdd/tty: 202.336.6123 Email: rsubotnik@
Suggested bibliographic reference: Worrell, F. Brabeck, M., Dwyer, C., Geisinger, K., Marx, R., Noell, G., and Pianta R. (2014). Assessing and evaluating teacher preparation programs. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Copyright? 2014 by the American Psychological Association. This material may be reproduced in whole or in part without fees or permission provided that acknowledgment is given to the American Psychological Association. This material may not be reprinted, translated, or distributed electronically without prior permission in writing from the publisher. For permission, contact apa, Rights and Permissions, 750 First Street, ne, Washington, DC 20002-4242.
apa reports synthesize current psychological knowledge in a given area and may offer recommendations for future action. They do not constitute apa policy or commit apa to the activities described therein.
Cover photo used under Creative Commons license. Originally posted on Flickr by U.S. Department of Education.
contents
Abstract
01
Executive Summary
03
Assessing and Evaluating Teacher Preparation Programs
05
Using Student Learning Outcome Data to Assess
Teacher Education Programs
13
Using Standardized Observations to Evaluate
Teacher Education Programs
19
Using Surveys to Evaluate Teacher Education Programs
23
Cross-Cutting Themes in This Report
27
Recommendations
29
Task Force Member Biographies
33
References
37
Appendix
40
abstract
Effective teaching has long been an issue of national concern, but in recent years focus on the effectiveness of programs to produce high-quality teachers has sharpened. Long-standing achievement gaps persist despite large-scale legislative changes at the federal and state levels, and American students continue to show poorer performance on international tests compared to peers in other developed nations. These and other factors have resulted in the creation of new accreditation standards for teacher education programs. These standards, developed by the Council for the Accreditation of Education Programs (caep), require teacher education programs to demonstrate their graduates are capable of having strong positive effects on student learning.
The data and methods required to evaluate the effectiveness of teacher education programs ought to be informed by well-established scientific methods that have evolved in the science of psychology, which at its core addresses the measurement of behavior. Recent work highlights the potential utility of three methods for assessing teacher education program effectiveness: (1) value-added assessments of student achievement, (2) standardized observation protocols, and (3) surveys of teacher performance. These methodologies can be used by institutions to demonstrate that the teacher candidates who complete their programs are well prepared to support student learning. In this light, we discuss the evaluation of teacher education programs using
these three methodologies, highlight the utility and limitations of each of these methodologies for evaluating teacher education programs, and provide a set of recommendations for their optimal use by teacher education programs and other stakeholders in teacher preparation, including states and professional associations.
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related download
- missouri standards for teacher education programs
- assessing and evaluating teacher preparation programs
- educating school teachers
- undergraduate teacher education programs
- teacher education policies and programs in
- teaching anti bias curriculum in teacher education programs
- teacher education handbook arkansas state university
- defining professionalism in teacher education programs
Related searches
- teacher preparation programs in texas
- approved teacher preparation program
- online teacher preparation programs
- accredited teacher preparation programs
- teacher preparation programs in california
- teacher preparation program washington state
- oregon teacher preparation program
- state approved teacher preparation program
- florida approved teacher preparation program
- alternative teacher preparation program texas
- teacher preparation programs online
- educator preparation programs in texas