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News
at The Chicago Public Education Fund
Mike Sanders, Development/Communications Director
(312) 558-4520
Education Week, March
23, 2005
Conferees mull best uses of NBPTS teachers
By Bess Keller, Education Week
CHICAGO—Teachers with national
certification could spearhead improvement in many of the most
challenged schools, but only if policymakers and principals
see the complexity of such an undertaking.
That conclusion was reached at a gathering
here last week of school and community leaders from four big-city
districts with sizable contingents of teachers who have won
certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards.
Cautioned Lori Nazareno, a teacher with
the credential at Myrtle Grove Elementary School in Miami,
“We can’t expect national board-certified teachers
to parachute into the middle of a school that is saying, ‘Save
me!’ ” and have success.
Chicago leaders convened the meeting
jointly with the Arlington, Va.-based NBPTS to consider how
the district can best use its existing crop of 380 nationally
certified teachers while encouraging more of its 27,000 teachers
to seek the credential. The district has set an ambitious
target of 1,200 board-certified teachers by 2007.
Arne Duncan, the chief executive officer
of the 435,000-student district, calls the endeavor “a
core strategy” for improving the city’s schools.
It has drawn $2.4 million from the Chicago Public Education
Fund, a “venture capital” philanthropy that raises
money in the local business community.
At last week’s meeting, which
was the brainchild of the fund, Chicago leaders drew ideas
from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C.; Los Angeles; and Miami-Dade
County, Fla., districts, where the proportions of board-certified
teachers are greater than in Chicago but still under 1 percent
of the total in each of the districts.
Bonuses Targeted in California
In one sense, the gathering reflected
the widespread conviction that high-caliber teaching holds
the key to raising student achievement and closing gaps between
poor and minority children and their more affluent white peers.
But in another, it underscored perhaps the greatest obstacle
to making that insight pay off: Skilled and experienced teachers
have long been underrepresented in schools serving disadvantaged
children.
Many at the meeting said change at struggling
schools can’t depend solely on the efforts of highly
accomplished teachers. Even if financial incentives and high
hopes can get them into such schools—or can cultivate
them there—such teachers will not stay without a supportive
working environment. Nor will they be effective unless they
are groomed for leadership and given opportunities to influence
the quality of teaching and administration at the school.
Currently, the more than 40,000 teachers
nationwide who have earned the advanced certification through
testing and a year of documented self-reflection are less
likely than their counterparts without the voluntary national
credential to be teaching in schools serving poor and minority
students, according to a paper by Barnett Berry and Tammy
King of the Southeast Center for Teaching Quality in Chapel
Hill, N.C.
The exception is in California, which
abolished an across-the-board bonus for teachers who earn
the certification but kept a $20,000 award paid out over four
years for those working in low-performing schools. Los Angeles
also offers a bonus of up to 15 percent of a teacher’s
salary, half in exchange for doing such work as mentoring
other teachers.
Even within the four urban districts
that were the focus of the meeting here, board-certified teachers
overall are not at the low-performing schools that the organizers
say need them most. Partly that’s because such schools
are often hard places to earn the credential, which typically
requires hundreds of hours of work. It’s also that accomplished
teachers are unwilling to stay or move to troubled schools
where their chances of success seem remote, Mr. Berry and
others stressed.
“I see a pattern of a lot of people
who achieve [national-board certification] as a way to move
to a better school or one that doesn’t have the problems
their current one has,” said Victor Harbison, a Chicago
teacher with the certification who attended the meeting.
Money’s Not Enough
Even substantial money doesn’t
make the job of luring teachers to a struggling school much
easier, said Nancy Webber, another board-certified teacher
at the gathering. Ms. Webber moved to a low-performing high
school in the 122,000-student Charlotte-Mecklenburg district
this year to be part of a pilot project that uses teachers
like her to help keep other teachers from quitting.
Ms. Webber estimates that the financial
incentives available to teachers in the district’s lowest-performing
schools next year will go as high as $15,000, part from the
state and part from the district. “I’m out grassroots-recruiting
big-time, and I’ve got two,” she said, who are
willing to move to a school in her project. She considers
her experience “proof positive money is not the issue.”
Or it’s at least not the only issue. During one panel
offering, three Miami teachers with national certification
discussed what drew them to Myrtle Grove Elementary School,
a low-performing school that gets special help under a new
program in the 363,000-student school system. They cited the
chance to work in a building with like-minded colleagues and
a principal who grants them the freedom to teach in the best
ways they know how.
Michelle Ivy, who moved from a high
school to work at Myrtle Grove Elementary, decried the idea
of forcing teachers with the advanced credential into low-
performing schools, a power that the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
school board is considering. “Some teachers do not belong
in [such] schools, and they’ll leave,” she argued.
Barbara L. Johnson, the principal at
Myrtle Grove, said principals need to understand the certification
process. “Some principals have no idea what [board-certified
teachers] can do,” she said.
Leadership Isn’t Automatic
At the same time, teachers and researchers
cautioned that accomplished teaching does not automatically
translate into leadership, without which a board- certified
teacher’s influence remains largely confined to a classroom
or two. Teachers who would help colleagues raise the level
of teaching need to have the confidence born of knowing, for
example, how adults learn best.
Districts must also help map out ways
to best use the teachers. In Charlotte-Mecklenburg, for instance,
which has among the highest density of teachers with the credential
in the nation—almost 750 among some 7,700 teachers—the
district has paid for a full-time coordinator of activities
(herself a board-certified teacher) involving the teachers
since 1998. As a result, teachers with the credential are
involved in curriculum development, research, professional
development, and service on committees at various levels.
Though the 10-year-old credential is
not without its critics, who claim it has not proved itself
as a way for teachers or schools to improve, many applaud
an attempt to get more of those teachers into the most challenged
schools.
“I think there’s tremendous
value in bringing in talent to dysfunctional schools,”
said Kate Walsh, the president of the Washington-based National
Council on Teacher Quality, which advocates better teaching
and more flexible entry into the field. “There are plenty
of heroes in those schools who stick it out, but too often,
they are a revolving door for teachers.”
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