Groups of teacher educators and other higher education officials met here last week in a gathering that essentially served as the first step in Illinois鈥 effort to ensure that education programs in the state produce young teachers capable of teaching to the common K-12 content standards adopted in all but four states.
Representatives from all 12 of the state鈥檚 public universities, from 35 independent colleges, and from 31 community colleges put tentative toes into the common-core pond at the meeting, beginning the difficult work of assessing how and where their current efforts to train teachers are stopping short of the standards鈥 goals.
Even after just one day, it was clear that the process involved some breakthroughs, occasional frustration, and a good degree of soul-searching. After all, preparing teachers to instruct in ways that help develop students鈥 ability to analyze and apply knowledge is a goal to which teacher preparation has long aspired, many of the attendees noted.
鈥淚t鈥檚 something we鈥檝e talked about doing, and thought we were doing, but probably aren鈥檛 doing,鈥 said Amee Adkins, the associate dean of the college of education at Illinois State University, in Normal. 鈥淭his is another chance to work on it.鈥
The common-core standards envision a higher level of rigor based on the deeper understanding of a pared-down number of curricular aims. But effective implementation poses a particular challenge for teachers, who must not only be fluent in that content themselves but also attain the appropriate pedagogy and curricula to be able to convey it to their students. (鈥淢any Teachers Not Ready for the Common Core,鈥 April 23, 2012.)
Overhaul or Update?
As with their in-service efforts, states鈥 attempts to revamp teacher training in alignment with the English/language arts and mathematics standards appears to be widely divergent.
Legislation in Colorado requires teacher-preparation programs to align curricula to the standards this year. Kentucky has been hard at work encouraging its K-12 and higher education systems to work together on implementation, and has trained more than 2,000 higher education faculty on the standards. Maine hosted a statewide forum last month for teacher educators similar to Illinois鈥. Other states have barely begun the work.
In Illinois, as in most states, university-based programs still prepare the lion鈥檚 share of the nation鈥檚 teachers, and state officials explained that they view moving the higher education piece forward as a smart investment.
鈥淭hese standards are here to stay,鈥 said Christopher Koch, the state鈥檚 schools superintendent. 鈥淲hy pay for it in professional development later, when it鈥檚 much more costly?鈥
The path forward is a long one. An informal survey conducted electronically at the beginning of the meeting showed that the faculty representatives had a range of familiarity with the standards, and differing opinions about what integrating them would mean for the shape of teacher education.
For example, 22 percent said they envisioned a 鈥渄ramatic overhaul鈥 of their programming, while slightly fewer than half the attendees indicated that their programs would require updating鈥攂ut not a major overhaul.
At the same time, a majority of the attendees reported that their faculty members were not yet well versed in the standards and that they either had not begun or were only in preliminary phases of aligning their curricula to the standards.
Illinois鈥 size and large student population also create some additional hurdles, compared with efforts in smaller or less populated states, Mr. Koch acknowledged.
It counts more than 860 school districts, including one of the largest in the nation, Chicago. And its robust community college system plays an important part in postsecondary education and teacher preparation, adding another layer of complexity to the process.
Common Threads
In attempting to outline next steps, the programs鈥 faculty members identified several key areas of concern over the course of the meeting.
Take the quality of student-teacher or 鈥渃linical preparation.鈥 Making sure that candidates work alongside a mentor teacher who is able to model the practices called for in the standards will be crucial, said MeShelda Jackson, the chairwoman of the school of education at Benedictine University, a Roman Catholic college in Lisle.
But it鈥檚 also going to be a major challenge given the range of districts鈥 familiarity with the standards and a challenge to oversee for the school, which places candidates in more than 15 districts, she said.
The need for better collaboration between education and arts and sciences faculties also emerged as a theme. Though that has been a long-standing goal of teacher education, some said that the common core could be the impetus to cement such a relationship.
That was the major breakthrough that Lanette Poteete-Young, the dean of the college of arts and sciences at Judson University, in Elgin, came to in discussions with her colleagues.
鈥淢y liberal arts faculty don鈥檛 have a clue about what you鈥檙e doing, or why you鈥檙e doing it,鈥 she told the education faculty in the room. 鈥淲e support you, but we don鈥檛 have a very good understanding at all about what鈥檚 really needed. There are a lot of things that we can do, and I have a lot of different ideas about content in particular, but I still need to understand these targets.鈥
Meanwhile, the state鈥檚 community colleges said they are waiting to take their cues from the needs of four-year institutions. They harbor concerns about how the standards鈥 lofty goals will mesh with the reality of the high school students who enroll in their programs.
Even in the College of DuPage, a community college located in the affluent suburbs west of Chicago, more than half of newly enrolled students test into remedial mathematics before they are permitted to take a credit-bearing course on elementary-math-content knowledge, said Tom Schrader, the college鈥檚 associate dean for math and physical sciences.
Finally, the common-core standards face some obstacles related to the unique politics of higher education. The process of adding and deleting courses, potentially a necessary step in revamping curricula, is a highly sensitive one in a time- and credit-hour-limited enterprise, faculty members said. And the new standards also could raise fears among faculty about academic freedom, they warned.
鈥淭heir first reaction is probably to argue with it,鈥 said Ms. Adkins of her faculty at ISU. 鈥淢y role, and the role of the rest of our team, is to present it to the faculty in a way that they鈥檙e able to embrace it and to say, 鈥楲et鈥檚 stop a minute and see if these are reasonable and appropriate.鈥 鈥
State Responsibility
The meeting was also state officials鈥 first glimpse into colleges鈥 readiness to adopt and implement the standards.
鈥淭his is just the opening volley,鈥 said Debbie Meisner-Bertauski, the associate director of academic affairs for the Illinois board of higher education. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be the basis for us to plan additional supports.鈥
As part of the process, state officials sought feedback on what they could do to support the colleges鈥攁nd got an earful from some faculty members, who are worried about how to mesh the standards with several other major policy changes on the forefront.
New regulations to flesh out a 2011 bill streamlining the state鈥檚 licensure system are being developed, and the states鈥 teacher colleges are also working to implement the Teacher Performance Assessment, a licensing test now being piloted in more than half the states.
鈥淗ow do we make the common core fit with the new licensing requirements, the new testing requirements?鈥 asked Bob Barwa, an assistant professor of education at the University of St. Francis, in Joliet. 鈥淲e鈥檙e getting hit on all sides.鈥