At a time when more Texas teachers are leaving the classroom, the state’s licensing board is considering a new certification exam that could help better prepare new teachers – and perhaps help keep them longer in the job.
On Friday, the 11-member State Board for Educator Certification will vote on whether to adopt the Educative Teacher Performance Assessment, also known as the edTPA exam. This new licensing test, developed at Stanford University, requires teachers to submit answers to essay questions, provide a sample lesson plan, a 15-minute video of themselves teaching in the classroom as well as a report on their own students’ progress.
If approved, the move would mean ditching the old Pedagogy and Professional Responsibilities or PPR exam, a test of 100 multiple choice questions that has been in use since 2002.
“This is about how we make sure that those [teacher] candidates are getting the support and coaching that they need and they deserve to be effective and to stay in the profession,” said Jonathan Feinstein, state director of The Education Trust, which advocates for historically underserved students.
The edTPA will especially be a boost for alternative certification programs, he said, which sent nearly 50% of the newly certified teachers into the classroom during the 2020-2021 year, according to data from the Texas Education Agency.
Two months ago, John P. Kelly, who sits on the state’s teacher certification board, called this upcoming exam vote a “very momentous” decision.
“I’ve been praying and hoping that we would reach a conclusion that is best for the teachers and the students of this great state,” Kelly said. If adopted at Friday’s board meeting it would still have to be approved by the State Board of Education at its next meeting in June before it could go into effect.
Critics of the current PPR teacher certification exam have pointed out its makeup is a less-than-precise way of testing a new teacher’s potential. All 100 questions on the test are multiple choice, making it easier to pass.
Frank Ward, spokesperson for the Texas Education Agency, called the current exam a “flawed” measure of teacher readiness.“Fortunately, there’s a proven alternative,” he said “[The] edTPA goes well beyond asking questions that aren’t designed to demonstrate how effective a teacher will be in his or her first year in the classroom.”
If the edTPA is approved Friday, it will need final approval from the State Board of Education, with a vote most likely taking place in June. If approved, the edTPA will start as an optional test in 2022-2023, then required as a pass/fail exam in 2023-2024 and be fully implemented with a passing score in 2024-2025.
Not everyone is a fan, though.
At least 17 use the edTPA as its required certification exam. In 21 others, the edTPA is used as an option for teacher preparation programs. It is more expensive, costing nearly $200 more than the current Texas teacher’s licensing exam, which experts say creates another barrier.
In two instances, the edTPA has been adopted as a statewide exam and then scrapped altogether.
In New York, Black test takers were nearly twice as likely to fail the edTPA compared to their white or Hispanic peers. The state recently stopped using the exam citing that students were trying to finish the edTPA requirements rather than learning from student teaching and they found it challenging to complete the multi-faceted aspect of it.
In Washington state, a 2016 study showed Hispanic teacher candidates were more than three times as likely to fail the exam when compared to white candidates. The state scrapped the exam last year.
In Georgia, the state parted ways with the edTPA exam as education officials called it a barrier of entry to the profession. Educator programs in the state can still require students to take the edTPA but it is not required to be certified.
In New Jersey, teacher unions are calling for the end of the exam.
And in Illinois, lawmakers have made efforts to get rid of the assessment as well for all the same reasons. The edTPA in the state has been paused due to the pandemic.
According to an July 2021 study, researchers found that the exam reduced the number of students graduating as teachers and it had adverse effects on student learning.
Ryan Franklin, senior director of policy and advocacy at Educate Texas, said some states had an uneven roll-out for the exam and others just didn’t see the need for it anymore.
He said the same can happen in Texas. If down the line, edTPA has served its goal and there is another, better way to prepare teachers the state can look at those options.
When Doug Hamman, professor and director of Teacher Education at Texas Tech University, Hamman first heard that edTPA was coming to Texas, he saw the same studies and he wasn’t sold. But, he knew that if the state was considering the test, his program needed to be prepared.
Texas Tech has been one of 40 programs piloting the exam, testing it out for the past three years. In his experience, the exam has made Texas Tech’s education program better.