Friday, May 10, 2019

49 states do not publish the elementary content state licensing test data


A new Databurst from the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) , Maintaining strong elementary content requirements for prospective teachers , documents the fact that 49 states do not publish the elementary content state licensing test data that the public needs . These data would reveal programs’ varying first - time pass rate , which would provide important information to aspiring elementary teachers about program quality. States instituted these tests to ensure that aspiring elementary teachers have a firm grasp of mathematics, English language arts, science, and social studies.  Candidates who do not ultimately pass the test will not qualify for a standa rd teaching license. 

While federal law requires that states report licensure test pass rates for their teacher preparation program completers, programs may define “program completers” as those candidates who have both finished the program requirements and passed their licensure tests — disregarding the sometimes significant numbers of candidates who fail their tests . The result is that programs and states are able to accurately report extremely high “ pass rates ”, even though their actual pass rates may be a fraction of what they report. 

Recent NCTQ analysis of ETS data for the most common elementary content licensure test revealed that fewer than half of aspiring elementary teachers pass this test the first time they take it, and the pass rate after multiple attempts is still only 72 percent. Failure to publicly report first - time and final pass rate data for all tes t takers — not just “program completers” — in elementary teacher preparation programs has meant that insufficiencies of teacher preparation programs remain hidden from the public. 

In addition to details on each state’s pass rate reporting, the NCT Q analysis includes a review of the quality of each state’s required elementary content licensure test. These tests vary significantly in quality , with fewer than half of states (22 ) requiring aspiring elementary teachers to pass separately scored subtests in each core content area. Without such subtests, strong knowledge in one core content area may compensate for deficiencies in another . 

See the full NCTQ data, analysis, and recommendations for all 50 states and the District of Columbia here: https://www.nctq.org/publications/NCTQ - Databurst: - Maintaining- strong - elementary - content - requirements - for - prospective - teachers

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