Why this matters
Preparing teachers to be ready for the classroom on day one should be a process of continuous improvement. Gathering feedback from student teachers, cooperating teachers, and placement schools and districts is essential to identify what’s working well and what needs to be done differently. Longer-term outcome data can provide evidence of success, and it can also be used to identify challenges (e.g., a high proportion of candidates who do not ultimately get jobs in teaching) and point toward solutions.
What the field says
Generally, prep programs report that they do track data on clinical practice, but their emphasis is on data collected during clinical practice (e.g., survey data from student teachers) and less so on outcomes after student teachers have finished preparation, such as whether they are hired into teaching positions and how they fare in their new roles.
Key Components and Actions
But what about...
Using program approval to strengthen clinical practice
Numerous states have begun incorporating a review of programs’ clinical practice approaches into their program approval process.
Meet the case studies
Results
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Texas
US PREP
Southeastern Louisiana University
Mount St. Joseph University
Michigan
Chicago Public Schools
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
Questions to consider
- What data do you currently have available, or could gather easily, to measure immediate and longer-term outcomes for clinical practice?
- What would you like to know about your clinical practice system?
- What data do you need to answer your research questions?
- What data is not currently available?
- How might you be able to access, collect, or develop systems to organize the data you do not currently have?
- How are you currently using data to improve your clinical practice system?
- How might you strengthen your use of data for continuous improvement?