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Special
to LSUS
News
Recognizing Redesign
Dr.
Dave Gustavson, dean of the LSUS College of Education
and Human Development, receives a certificate from
Governor Kathleen Blanco recognizing the efforts
of the college’s faculty and staff for the
successful redesign of teacher preparation and
educational leadership programs. The recognition,
which also went to the deans of the state’s
other public and private colleges of education
in late May, was from the governor, the Louisiana
Legislature and the Board of Regents “for
leading the charge to accomplish a feat most states
have found elusive.” The governor said the
efforts “have resulted in Louisiana’s
recognition as a national leader in the improvement
of teacher preparation and educational leadership
programs.”
Education
deans honored
by Governor, Legislature, Regents
Redesigned Teacher Education Programs
Drawing National
Attention Dr. Dave Gustavson, dean of the LSUS College of
Education and Human Development, was among
deans of Louisiana’s
21 public and private colleges of education who were
recognized May 25 by Gov. Kathleen Blanco, the Louisiana
Legislature and the Board of Regents for leading the
charge to accomplish a feat most states have found
elusive – the successful redesign of teacher
preparation and educational leadership programs at
all universities in the state. The efforts of the faculty
and staff in colleges throughout the state have resulted
in Louisiana’s recognition as a national leader
in the improvement of teacher preparation and educational
leadership programs.
“These
accomplishments would not have occurred without the
collaborative partnerships that have existed among
the governor, Board of Regents, Board of Elementary
and Secondary Education, Louisiana Department of
Education,
the university system boards, all public and private
universities, and the partnering districts,” Commissioner
of Higher Education Joseph Savoie said. “Other
states are envious of the unique partnerships that
exist in our state.”
Over the past four years, faculty from universities
and local school districts across Louisiana have
been actively engaged in the redesign of all
regular and
alternate teacher preparation programs for grades
PK-12. These new programs were initially evaluated
by national
experts, and additional improvements were made
to the programs before they were approved for
implementation by July 1, 2003.
District and university partners have now redesigned
all graduate programs in teacher education
and educational leadership. These programs
have also
been evaluated
by national consultants, and all approved programs
will be implemented on July 1, 2006.
“The
redesign of these programs has taken a tremendous
amount of time and effort,” said Jeanne Burns,
Associate Commissioner for Teacher Education Initiatives
for the Board of Regents and Governor. “However,
we have now seen an increase in the number of new teachers
completing teacher preparation programs in Louisiana
from 2,336 in 2001-02 to 2,664 in 2003-04. In addition,
the number of teachers completing our teacher preparation
programs meeting all certification requirements at
the point of completion have increased from 89 percent
in 1999-2000 to 99 percent in 2003-2004. Our numbers
have increased and our quality has improved.”
All redesigned programs are now aligned with
Louisiana’s
K-12 content standards, Louisiana’s teacher standards
and Louisiana’s educational leadership standards,
and better address the needs of teachers, leaders and
students.
“It
is critical that new teachers and new principals
understand the new expectations in our PK-12 schools
in Louisiana and leave their university
programs prepared
to help students achieve at higher
levels,” said
State Superintendent Cecil Picard. “Our
new certification requirements and
the university redesign efforts are
helping us achieve that goal.”
“Many
of the changes that have been made to the programs
are a result of the 1999-2000 and
2000-2001 recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Commission,” said Frances
Henry, member of the Board of Regents and co-chair
of the Blue Ribbon Commission. “We
are often asked to help other states
understand why our Commission
has been so successful when other Commissions
are struggling.”
“We
all understand the importance of the Board of Elementary
and Secondary Education and the
Board of Regents aligning our efforts and working
with the Governor to implement
the Commission’s recommendations,” said
Glenny Lee Buquet, member of the Board of Elementary
and Secondary Education and co-chair of the Blue Ribbon
Commission. “This has helped
us to secure funds from the U.S.
Department of Education and The
Wallace
Foundation to support many of the
redesign activities involving the
universities
and districts.”
The
recognition event with the governor also acknowledge
Louisiana’s
growing national reputation as a leader in teacher
education improvement. Among
recent examples of such national recognition
are these:
• Louisiana
has been identified by the New York Times as
one of five
states leading other states
in improving
the preparation of new teachers
and educational
leaders. • The
Center for Teaching Quality has identified Louisiana
as
one of a limited
number of
states where higher education
and K-12 education are sharing
data for the purpose of improving
the
preparation of new
teachers.
The center recently completed
case studies
about Louisiana,
Virginia
and Illinois to provide the
nation with examples of states that
are “building
a comprehensive teaching quality
data system that will help
universities, the
state and the nation answer
questions about how to define
a quality teacher
and what steps need to be
taken to recruit, prepare,
and retain
them.”
• Education Week’s 2005 and 2006 Quality Counts
Report has ranked Louisiana No. One in the nation for
two consecutive years in Efforts to Improve Teacher
Quality and has awarded Louisiana a grade of “A” each
year. The redesign of all teacher
preparation programs and the implementation
of
a rigorous Teacher Preparation
Accountability System assisted
the state in attaining the rating.
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