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For-Profit, Alternative Teacher Certification Booming

Teacher Certification

  Nick Pandolfo and Morgan Smith First Posted: 11/29/11 01:47 PM ET Updated: 11/29/11 02:01 PM ET

This piece comes to us courtesy of The Hechinger Report.

DENTON, Texas — One afternoon in mid-November, Jeff Arrington scattered 80 paper gingerbread men labeled with numbers across the floor of his high school disaster-response class.

The numbers corresponded with the severity of injuries ranging from burns to hysterical blindness. His students had to categorize the "men" based on the level of medical attention each required.

Arrington, in the middle of his third month of teaching at the Advanced Technology Complex in the Denton Independent School District, has a background well suited to the subject. He was a police officer for six years — he turned in his badge on Sept. 12 and began teaching the next day.

He is earning his teaching certificate through an online, for-profit alternative certification program, a nontraditional route to teaching that is becoming more common in Texas. Such programs, which can offer certification in three months to two years, are booming despite little more than anecdotal evidence of their success. They draw candidates like Arrington who bring valuable life experience, but there are concerns about how they will perform as teachers, especially since they are more likely to end up in poor districts teaching students in challenging situations.

More than 110 alternative certification programs — including iteachTexas, which Arrington is completing, and nonprofits like Teach For America — produce 40 percent of all new teachers in Texas, according to an analysis of Texas Education Agency data by Ed Fuller, a Penn State University education professor and former University of Texas researcher.

For-profit programs dominate that market: in each year since 2007, the two largest companies, A+ Texas Teachers and iteachTEXAS, have produced far more teachers than any other traditional or alternative program. While virtually all paths to the classroom have seen declines since 2003, according to Fuller's analysis, for-profit alternative certification programs have grown by 23 percent. (While the percentage has increased, the actual number of for-profit alternative certificates granted has decreased since the 2009 economic recession.)

Other states have begun allowing for-profits to enter the alternative teacher training market, but Texas has done so to the greatest extent, according to Emily Feistritzer, president of the National Center for Alternative Certification. Earlier this year, New York began permitting private entities like the American Museum of Natural History and Teach For America to grant teaching certificates and master's degrees, but they are nonprofits. Some states, like Illinois, require that any alternative routes to the classroom be connected to the university system.

iteachTEXAS, begun in 2003, is the first for-profit, non-university based alternative certification program to expand across state lines, with the newly created iteachU.S. operating programs in Louisiana and Tennessee. Additional offshoots will soon come to Michigan and at least two other states.

Diann Huber, president of iteachU.S., said the program's goal is to provide a new career opportunity for people who have been laid off in other industries, like auto workers in Michigan, who may be able to use their knowledge to teach high-need subjects like math and science.

Texas began experimenting with alternative certification programs in the mid-1980s. Then, the state "didn't regulate who was operating private programs, and people saw that was a way to make a fast buck," said Rae Queen, the president of the Texas Alternative Certification Association, who also runs a for-profit alternative certification program in San Antonio. Queen said the state now has a much more rigorous application and audit process for certification programs. In 2008, the state also instituted a minimum grade-point average of 2.5 for all teaching candidates.

Still, Queen said the reputation of for-profit programs suffers. "There are some companies out there that say ‘you want to be a teacher, start today,'" she said, "and they've done that through their own advertising campaigns."

Some traditional educators believe that for-profits, which typically charge around $4,000 for a program leading to certification, accept applicants with little regard for demand or how they might perform in the classroom. "The for-profits will take anyone," said Nell Ingram, director of the Dallas Independent School District alternative certification program, adding that her program will not offer courses in subjects that are not in demand.

Principals offer mixed reviews of teachers hired from for-profit programs. Most say those teachers succeed in the classroom at the same rate as traditionally certified ones, but others report that they seem less prepared.

Bettejean Gosnell, who earned her certificate through iteachTexas about seven years ago and teaches special education in Argyle, said she was the alternative certification "poster child," a former Nabisco employee whose busy life drew her to online teacher certification courses. But while she said the program "worked out perfect" for her, she said it did not support her once she was in the classroom.

"I remember thinking that I wanted constructive criticism," Gosnell said, "and I wasn't getting it."

The state's most recent effort to regulate the industry came in the last legislative session, when Representative Mike Villarreal, Democrat of San Antonio, offered a bill that would require potential teachers to spend at least 15 of the mandated 30 hours of practice teaching in classrooms.

The bill struggled to pass — in the end, a watered-down version made it through — because of opposition from some in the for-profit industry, who went after it, Villarreal said, because of their interest in "having as much flexibility as possible to deliver a very simple curriculum with limited time commitment" to process clients.

Vernon Reaser, president of A+ Texas Teachers, testified against the bill at a hearing in March. Reaser said it could have unforeseen practical consequences that could burden school districts and would not necessarily raise the quality of teachers in the classroom.

Reaser, who did not return further requests for comment, supported the changes to the bill that ultimately passed.

Evaluating teacher-training programs — regardless of whether they produce teachers through alternative or traditional routes — is "one of the toughest areas to get ahold of," said Representative Rob Eissler, Republican of The Woodlands, who has headed the Public Education Committee in the Texas House since 2007.

Eissler said for-profit programs were no more likely to turn out less-qualified teachers than their nonprofit competitors. "Like anything else," he said, "there are some that are really good and some that aren't as good as the others." He said there is a need for the state to study which programs are getting the best results. Right now, Eissler said, "most of what we know is anecdotal."

The state's recent $4 billion reduction in public education spending has led to hiring freezes and layoffs in many districts. Some in the education community still question whether for-profits will be motivated to produce new teachers without a corresponding demand.

Queen said her program tries to avoid churning out graduates who will not get jobs by working with school districts to identify their greatest needs. She frowns upon applicants who she senses want to teach because they think it is easy.

"I will tell them they need to go out and substitute teach and spend time in a classroom," she said, "and they end up self-selecting. They'll come back and say, ‘This is not at all what I thought teaching would be — you are right.'"

Versions of this story ran in The New York Times and The Texas Tribune.

Read more coverage on for-profit education at The Hechinger Report.

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This piece comes to us courtesy of The Hechinger Report. DENTON, Texas — One afternoon in mid-November, Jeff Arrington scattered 80 paper gingerbread men labeled with numbers across the floor of ...
This piece comes to us courtesy of The Hechinger Report. DENTON, Texas — One afternoon in mid-November, Jeff Arrington scattered 80 paper gingerbread men labeled with numbers across the floor of ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hugatree
Retired teacher, writer
06:07 AM on 12/01/2011
Would you want someone with a 2.5 grade average teaching your child?
05:47 AM on 12/02/2011
Why not? It's not a 3.0, but it shows that they had adequate understanding of the subject matter, at least.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beasteben
evil carbs
05:57 PM on 11/30/2011
As a teacher, I'm actually not against this at all. My university credentialing classes were bogus. I learned how to teach by teaching and making mistakes. I learned from my peers and researched on my own what I thought was important for my practice.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Gary Stager
05:55 PM on 11/30/2011
Qualified experience­d educators are losing their jobs and young people with Masters degrees and teaching credential­s can not find employment­. Why is the Federal government­, along with many states and districts, investing in union-bust­ing schemes like Teach-for-­America?

What sort of pixie dust is sprinkled upon these missionari­es sent to teach where we are led to believe others have failed for years? How is it that so many major urban superinten­dents have no qualificat­ions whatsoever­?

Teach-for-­America proves over and over again that in America today, unqualifie­d is the new qualified.
11:24 AM on 11/30/2011
There's a reason Texas is near the bottom of the barrel in terms of education. Look where they're getting their teachers from. The teacher of the year at the school where I worked last year was inspired to teach by a billboard and pursued the alt. cert. program from there. He also doesn't know who Madeline Hunter is, yet he is viewed as an excellent teacher who knows little to nothing about teaching. As someone who received a fabulous education in Texas during the 90s to come back and teach in the early 2000s in this crappy environment makes me very sad.
04:00 AM on 11/30/2011
Wow... A lot of times these for profit don't even take this whole "certification" stuff seriously. I paid to take a TESOL course at www.oxfordseminars.com and it just turned out to be a weekend course.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hugatree
Retired teacher, writer
06:12 AM on 12/01/2011
I watched an episode of House Hunters International on HGTV in which a young American couple quit their jobs and got certfication to teach English in Asia. The footage of this guy teaching showed him speaking English to his new students in a weird, fake-Korean accent. It was like watching someone shout at a non-English speaker so the person would understand better. What's the point of pointless certificates?
05:43 AM on 12/02/2011
It's all one big money making scheme. You get sites like www.eslcafe.com, www.oxfordseminars.com, www.teachabroad.com, www.alliesinternationalstaffing.com, www.horizon.com, and about a million others that make money from the schools, peddling these under qualified teachers.
08:40 PM on 11/29/2011
True, teacher training needs to be revamped in a big way. I was not ready to teach in a classroom of my own my first, or even second years teaching. It took me until my 3rd year to really hit my stride. If we gave teachers a year of teaching as an apprentice, the way the skilled trades do, and then evaluated them to see if they are ready or maybe need a second year of apprenticeship, and at the end of that its either yes or no, we would vastly improve the teaching corps. We would also have first-year teachers doing as well as 3rd or even 4th year teachers. We would have to pay for their living expenses while they do that, or just pay them for their labor, whatever. But notice I am advocating MORE time, not LESS time. We need to spend MORE money on teacher training, not LESS.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Viable Way
09:15 PM on 11/29/2011
But we don't need to spend more MONEY, but do need to spend more TIME! The university courses cost $15.00 per HOUR OF CLASS TIME even at a public school...what prospective teachers need is more time GETTING PAID as an aid or a sub for time IN THE CLASSROOM, rather than more hours PAYING for the privilege!

All the teacher training sessions could have been useful if there had been some stability, where a new program built on an old one rather than just the newest one for today that disrupts what you had been using successfully.

Of course, there needs to be consistent support from administration too.
05:21 PM on 11/29/2011
Is it any wonder why Texas with its on-line teacher certification has such a nonthinking 'hang 'em high' mentality population? Instead of educating their young, they instead teach them life experiences. I wonder what that could be in TX? Dragging black people to death from the back of a pickup truck? Tying gays to fences and let them die? Or maybe it's "Remember the Alamo" or "Let's secede from he union before those yanks come down here and try to enlighten our young. Jeez! We'll never be able to hang people if that happens. We'll lose our status as hanging more people in a year than all the other states combined. Damn those yanks!"
Sorry, Just my thoughts on the matter.
04:33 PM on 11/29/2011
If education is being financed by Wall Street, how smart do you think they want the public to be????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Viable Way
07:42 PM on 11/29/2011
Every time I hear about "for profit" schools or teacher training schools, I cringe. Remember that the ONLY GOAL of a for profit school is PROFIT. The more money they can keep for themselves and avoid spending IN THE CLASSROOM, the more successful they claim to be!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miataboy
It's time to hear from the moderates!
08:47 PM on 11/29/2011
Just like "for profit" health insurers.
03:16 PM on 11/29/2011
I can't speak for Texas but if certification is anything like GA, where you have to get a masters to even step in the classroom, then more power to them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Viable Way
07:50 PM on 11/29/2011
The correlation between HIGHER DEGREES and BETTER TEACHERS is VERY WEAK!
08:40 PM on 11/29/2011
Not really. Its actually a very strong correlation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hugatree
Retired teacher, writer
06:20 AM on 12/01/2011
Where did you get that fact? The better educated a teacher is in his/her subject, the better students perform in subject knowledge. That's why good teacher ed programs require students to have more credits in their fields and higher GPA's before admittance to education studies. Back in the 60s when huge numbers of students were being trained as teachers, anyone could enter a teaching program and continue to graduation with a 2.0 average and a semester of student teaching. Now prospective teachers must not only have higher averages to be trained as teachers, they also must pass national teaching exams and are expected to achieve national certifications as well.
03:04 PM on 11/29/2011
I think we tried to underpay teachers years ago. Most left the field.
I guess history is pointless as the elite learned nothing about de-regulating housing and speculating.
I guess people do not matter and profits do.
Oh well soon a PHD will not be worth the paper it is written on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tultican
Thomas Ultican, MEd. BS Mecahnical Engineering
03:21 PM on 11/29/2011
The elites made money. History teaches that they can cheat and steal with impunity. That is why there is no hesitation to destroying public education for profit. The elites have lost their moral compass.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miataboy
It's time to hear from the moderates!
08:48 PM on 11/29/2011
You can't lose what you never had.