Lawsuit: “Highly Qualified Teacher”
Rule Violates NCLB and Harms Students
A coalition of parents, students, community groups,
and legal advocates sued the United States Department
of Education (ED) in federal district court in San Francisco
in August 2007 because it allows novice teachers in
training to be considered highly qualified. The plaintiffs
claim that classification of intern teachers as highly
qualified harms students, especially the “large
numbers of poor and minority students” served
by these “intern teachers.” “A primary
purpose of NCLB was to address this problem,”
said one plaintiff.
Represented by Public Advocates (a public interest
law firm and advocacy group) and Goodwin Procter LLP
(a national law firm serving as pro bono counsel), the
Renee
v. Spellings plaintiffs are asking the court to
void ED’s regulation as arbitrary and capricious
under the federal Administrative Procedure Act.
Alternative Routes to “Qualification”
At a press conference announcing the suit, plaintiffs
said NCLB intends to promote teaching quality and ED
has sidestepped this focus by broadening the definition
of “qualified teacher” and making it easy
to obtain qualification. The coalition resists the alternative
route to certification that considers teachers with
little or no training – brief pre-service training
and on-the-job training – to be qualified. According
to ED’s provision, these teachers are highly qualified
on their first day on the job. Former Teach for America
interns shared their accounts during the press conference,
as they acknowledged that their six-week training internship
was hardly a basis for teacher qualification. Nevertheless,
according to ED’s definition, their qualification
effectively came into play on the first day of their
internships, they said.
John Affeldt, managing attorney for Public Advocates,
said that “nationwide, there are tens of thousands
of these interns in the classroom, although there is
no way to know the exact number because states are not
required to report it.”
Disproportionate Representation
Alternative routes to certification, the plaintiffs
said, aggravate the achievement gap and augment disparities
among students because intern teachers are generally
concentrated in low-income and high minority districts.
California has over 10,000 interns and over 50% of them
serve in the lowest performing schools, according to
the complaint. Coalition members added that across the
nation students of color are more likely to be taught
by non-qualified teachers, perpetrating the pervasive
achievement gap between students. Moreover, the coalition
concludes that if intern teachers are disproportionately
placed in schools, they will not benefit from the skills
of experienced teachers. Students and teachers alike
are harmed by the concentration of intern teachers and
the full responsibilities these interns assume, they
assert.
Shortcoming the Illusion of Teacher Shortages
Some members of the coalition expressed concern over
the illusion of a ‘shortage’ of qualified
teachers. Although California and the United States,
in general, give the impression of shortages when they
label intern teachers as “qualified,” the
problem they need to address is lowering the level of
attrition for experienced teachers. Studies show that
for the most part, there is no lack of well-prepared,
certified teachers entering the teaching profession
each year. The problem is the high turn-over of teachers
resulting from different frustrations that emerge within
the profession.
Coalition members noted that school districts across
the nation are having problems retaining teachers, especially
in low-income schools, and that the influx of “qualified”
intern teachers, who are automatically put in the same
category as veteran teachers, worsen the attrition rates
of experienced teachers. Although the group said it
recognizes the contributions of programs such as Teach
for America, it believes that these programs do not
initially produce highly qualified teachers. Therefore,
instead of luring in “qualified” intern
teachers, schools should invest in their staffs and
strive to keep the experienced teachers that grow with
their communities, according to the plaintiffs.
Low State Standards
Lastly, plaintiffs expressed concern about allowing
states to create their own standards for “highly
qualified” teachers. During the press conference,
one parent explained how surprised she was to discover
that her first-grader son was being taught by a college
student and a substitute teacher, who taught two days
a week. “I feel like I’m being lied to,”
she said, even though she acknowledged that under ED’s
regulation, this low standard is allowed.
Prepared by Marcela Briceno August 24, 2007
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