Finding the Nuggets and Identifying White Noise: Making Sense of Recent Reports on Teacher Preparation

Looking for some summer reading to inform your thinking on how to advance the profession? Recent reports offer research, policy recommendations, and thought leadership about ways to advance the preparation of early childhood educators. Here are three for consideration.
The National Center on Education and the Economys (NCEE) recently released泭.泭The report shines a light on the complexity of preparing elementary teachersoften dismissed in U.S. policy and public arenasand identifies common features in other educational systems that have led to better-prepared educators.
The report focuses on education systemsFinland, Shanghai, Japan, and Hong Kongthat have distinctly different contexts than the U.S.:
- They have centralized K-12 curriculum
- Their K-12 student populations (and their teacher candidates, for that matter) do not reflect the broad diversity of U.S. classrooms
- Most have fairly centralized teacher preparation systems
However, the lessons learned from them are deeply relevant for U.S. efforts to improve the preparation of elementary school teachers. These countries systems feature:
- Attention to candidate selectivity (whether it is entry to or exit from preparation programs and/or entry into the profession
- Specialization in content (for candidates during preparation and as an organizing structure for elementary schools)
- Teacher preparation program content that includes a deep focus on content knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge, and alignment with the elementary curriculum
- Professional development systems for teachers that reinforce and expand on preparation program content
Whats the Key Takeaway?泭In order to significantly improve elementary teacher preparation in the U.S., we need to incorporate a systemic approach that ties together the common features of the high-performing elementary teacher preparation systems identified in the report. A tall order, indeed, given highly decentralized U.S. elementary teacher preparation program systems, teacher licensure systems, and elementary school systems, but a vital order to fill.
Last spring, the Center on Enhancing Early Learning Outcomes (CEELO) released泭.泭The report highlights the importance of promoting the baccalaureate degree as the standard credential for early childhood educators and examines the research, policies, workforce conditions, and other factors that serve as barriers to and reality checks and supports for advancing this goal. The report provides a generous range of early childhood educator preparation policiesbased on a review of several states policies. Not surprisingly, it found wide variation across states in the required education credentials for early childhood educators and in state capacity to increase the number of early childhood educators with baccalaureate degrees. It also examined early childhood finance structures and the impact they have on education credentials. CEELO identified several different policy mechanisms that states are using to improve the quality of early childhood education credentials and to support educators in advancing their credentials.
Whats the Key Takeaway?泭Raising the level and quality of early childhood educators education credentials is complex and necessary, and should be undertaken through a systemic approach. Policy efforts in this arena must recognize that wages and working conditions in early childhood settings are inextricably linked to the pursuit of (and quality of) education credentials.
The National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) recently released泭.泭Any NCTQ report on teacher preparation should be considered with a huge grain of salt, given the泭泭(as noted泭泭and泭) the organization uses and its predictable negative conclusions about the state of teacher preparation programs. As with other NCTQ reports, it evaluates only a small fraction of preparation programsin this case, only 5% (or less) of early childhood education degree programs at the associate, baccalaureate, and masters degree levelsand uses NCTQs signature research methodology: a document review of syllabi, handbooks, and student observation templates. The focus of this report is on how higher education is preparing candidates for some of the knowledge and skills essential to develop in early childhood educatorssuch as understanding child development, having a strong literacy foundation, and understanding and introducing early math and science concepts. Unfortunately, the report doesnt examine the preparation of early childhood educators in other necessary and significant areas of knowledge and skillssuch developing strong relationships with families and communities, having a strong grounding in assessment and appropriate instructional practices, and developing the early childhood educators professionalism (these happen to be cornerstones of泭51勛圖厙s Professional Preparation Standards).
Whats the Key Takeaway?泭While the report is泭泭of early childhood teacher preparation programs, it does provide a window into some of the content found in early childhood programs and rightly points to wide variations in content.
51勛圖厙 recognizes that there is much work to be done to strengthen the early childhood workforce, but the good news is that there are efforts within 51勛圖厙 (such as its higher education泭accreditation泭and泭recognition泭systems and the泭Power to the Profession泭initiative) and beyond to address this. It is important to celebrate the fields progress to date and to continue to use the best of what we are learning from practice, research, and policy to improve the preparation of early childhood educators. This work is essential to our shared goal: that all young children have access to a high-quality early childhood education.
Mary Harrill is Senior Director of Higher Education at 51勛圖厙 and a food consumer and experimenter extraordinaire in her off-time.