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Focus Area 5

Student teacher skill development

Select a different focus area Strong district-prep program partnerships Student teacher-cooperating teacher matches Cooperating teacher and program supervisor training Student teacher placement sites Student teacher skill development Data and outcomes

Why this matters

Teaching is a complex job that requires practitioners to plan carefully for instruction and also to respond to students on the spot at every moment. To prepare for this career, aspiring teachers need field experiences that grow in difficulty, focused on using high-quality curricula and supplemented by opportunities to engage in additional activities like parent-teacher conferences and Individualized Education Program (IEP) meetings. All of these experiences should be coupled with feedback and coaching to help candidates improve, which can make them more effective when they have a class of their own.1

What the field says

In NCTQ surveys, two-thirds of school districts and 94% of prep programs agreed that clinical opportunities should be woven throughout a candidate’s preparation, and 70% of prep programs report currently embedding clinical experiences prior to full-time student teaching.

Key Components and Actions

  • But what about...

    Meet the case studies

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  • Western Governors University

    Western Governors University

    Scaling clinical placement to over 4,800 districts across the country—without sacrificing quality
    Utah
    Salt Lake City, Utah, skyline.

    Utah

    Financial support for student teachers
    Texas
    Top of the Texas State Capitol building in Austin, Texas.

    Texas

    Establish a clear vision for high-quality preparation, and help less prepared teachers rise to meet it
    Michigan

    Michigan

    Replicating a medical model—including paid clinical practice—in teacher preparation
    Massachusetts
    Sailboats sailing underneath the Boston, Massachusetts, skyline.

    Massachusetts

    Measuring whether every student teacher will be ready on day one
    Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
    Charlotte, North Carolina, skyline.

    Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools

    Dedicating staff time to create a more streamlined, supportive, and attractive student teaching experience

    Questions to consider

    • What early field experiences do candidates receive?
    • What skills should candidates practice, how are those experiences scaffolded, and how do candidates receive feedback?
    • What experiences are student teachers given to explore and implement high-quality instructional materials, both prior to and during clinical practice?
    • What resources do student teachers need to be able to implement high-quality instructional materials?
    • What observation instruments are used to give feedback to student teachers?
    • In what ways do the observation instruments align (or not) with the prep program’s expectations and expectations for candidates once they become in-service teachers?
    • How are observation instruments differentiated based on the type of experience (e.g., an early fieldwork experience vs. full-time student teaching) or based on the content or grade the student teacher is teaching?
    • What skills and knowledge do novice teachers need to be successful?
    • How are you defining learning outcomes for student teachers collaboratively, providing relevant instruction and practice opportunities for teacher candidates, and assessing those outcomes?
    References
    1. Boyd, D. J., Grossman, P. L., Lankford, H., Loeb, S., & Wyckoff, J. (2009). Teacher preparation and student achievement. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 31(4), 416–440.