NCTQ Releases 2018 State Teacher Policy Best Practices Guide

Guide highlights leading state work across important policy areas that impact teacher quality

Who: National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ), a non-partisan research and policy organization dedicated to ensuring every classroom has an effective teacher.

What: NCTQ's 2018 State Teacher Policy Best Practices Guide which highlights leading state work across 37 different policy areas that impact teacher quality. This resource serves as a guide to all states seeking concrete ideas and examples of how to improve teacher policy.  

Despite consistent concerns regarding whether states are acting quickly and ambitiously enough to improve the quality of the teacher workforce, there is great work happening across many states in important policy areas affecting teacher quality. By expanding the knowledge and awareness of these exemplary policies and practices currently being implemented, this tool provides states with a sense of what is possible, along with the necessary information to catalyze improvement, as they seek to drive positive change for their teachers and students.

Notable state policies to improve teacher quality highlighted in this comprehensive guide include:

  • LouisianaNew York, and Rhode Island are the only states that require elementary special education teachers to pass the same elementary content tests as general education teachers, as well as require that secondary special education teachers pass rigorous licensure tests across all subject areas they intend to teach.
  • North Carolina allows teachers to be compensated for prior work experience by awarding them one year of credit on the salary schedule for every year of full-time, relevant, non-teaching work experience.
  • Utah provides annual salary supplements to teachers with corresponding degrees assigned to teach in shortage-subjects, as well as to teachers employed in high-poverty schools who achieve a median growth percentile of 70 percent or higher.
  • New Mexico is the only state that requires elementary candidates to complete an academic content major; three additional states--Connecticut, Mississippi, and Oklahoma--require elementary candidates to have a concentration in an academic subject area. 
  • Florida and Alabama require teacher preparation institutions to provide remediation, at no additional cost, for graduates who do not achieve satisfactory teacher evaluation ratings during their first two years in the classroom.

To view the 2018 State Teacher Policy Best Practices Guide click here. 

 

Featured

  • University of Pittsburgh to Build New Residence Hall

    The Board of Trustees from the University of Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Penn., recently approved the construction of a new residence hall for first-year students, according to university news.

  • Rowan University, HPE Partner on New Learning Initiative

    Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J., recently announced that it has expanded its partnership with enterprise technology provider HPE to improve research capabilities and hands-on learning opportunities, according to a news release.

  • Indiana University Launches Capital Campus in D.C.

    Indiana University recently held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new IU Capital Campus in Washington, D.C., according to university news. The eight-story facility will provide a central hub for the university’s existing programs and business operations based in D.C., uniting them under one roof and providing the opportunity to expand.

  • Wenger Names New Vice President of Sales for Performing Arts, Controls

    Wenger Corporation, which provides products and solutions for music and theater education, performing arts and athletic storage, recently announced the hiring of a new Vice President of Sales for Performing Arts and Controls.