Challenges of Public Education

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Public education in the United States of America continuously faces many challenges – diverse student body, overcrowded classrooms, and lack of resources. Besides, many think that in order to provide quality of education for all students we need to improve effectiveness of our teachers. It is necessary to evaluate existing school teachers routinely. However, it will not be sufficient for improving the teacher body overall. Not only have we needed to evaluate existing teachers. It is especially important to ensure that young inexperienced teacher candidates are prepared to educate all students and meet their academic needs. Ravitch points out that “we don’t need to hire bad teachers” ( 69??? ) Thus, we need to ensure that prospective teacher candidates upon their graduation possess necessary skills to support student learning and take charge of their classrooms from day one. That is why New York and 25 other states are currently in the process of changing the way they give their initial certification. The new legislation is expected to take place in New York State beginning May 1, 2014. All candidates graduating at that time and thereafter will be subjected to the new Teacher Performance Assessment or edTPA.
The current approach to initial teacher certification in New York is similar to the approach of many other states in the country. Candidates must complete a state-improved undergraduate program, meet some type of student-teaching requirements and pass three written exams made up of multiple choice questions and essays (Baker). This approach, however with its merit and validity, simply does not demonstrate pre-service teachers’ ability to manage classrooms and educate students with different abilities and needs. Moreover, a p...

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...gh to pass a paper-and-pencil test…you have to demonstrate whether you can actually teach” (Baker). Stephanie Wood-Garnet, an assistant commissioner in the New York State Education Department critiques the current option of pre-service teacher assessment by saying that it is not enough to pass multiple-choice test. “We want to know if you can drive” (Baker). The current approach to the assessing of pre-service teachers is failing. It is failing to demonstrate whether or not a candidate can lead a classroom. It is failing to demonstrate whether a candidate can focus on long-term lesson planning and to make adjustment as necessary. It is failing to demonstrate how adept candidates are at focusing on individual students at different performance levels. The table in the Appendix 1 demonstrates the difference between “typical” student teaching and new edTPA experience.

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