Knowledge, skills, and cultural responsiveness. Providers
prepare candidates who demonstrate the knowledge, skills and cultural
responsiveness required for the particular certificate and areas of
endorsement, which reflect the state's approved standards.
(1) Providers demonstrate effective,
culturally responsive pedagogy using multiple instructional methods, formats,
and assessments.
(a) Qualified faculty use
multiple instructional strategies, pedagogies, and assessments to address
candidates' academic language ability levels and cultural and linguistic
backgrounds.
(b) Providers create
opportunities for faculty members and program personnel to pursue, apply, and
practice ongoing professional learning to improve their knowledge, skill,
effectiveness, and cultural responsiveness.
(c) Faculty within the program and the unit
collaborate among one another, with content specialists, P-12 schools, members
of the broader professional community, and diverse members of local communities
for continuous program improvement.
(d) Faculty members and program leaders
systematically and comprehensively evaluate faculty's effectiveness in teaching
and learning, and competence on the cultural competency, diversity, equity, and
inclusion standards under WAC
181-85-204.
(2) Providers ensure that completers
demonstrate the necessary subject matter knowledge for success as educators in
schools.
(a) Candidates demonstrate knowledge
and competence relative to the standards related to the role adopted by the
board. Providers ensure that candidates in teacher preparation programs
demonstrate the most recently published In TASC Standards, candidates in
principal programs demonstrate the most recently published NELP - Building
Level Standards, candidates in superintendent programs demonstrate the most
recently published NELP - District Level Standards, candidates in program
administrator programs demonstrate the most recently published NELP Building or
District Level Standards, candidates in school counselor programs demonstrate
the most recently published CACREP standards, candidates in school psychologist
programs demonstrate the most recently published NASP standards for graduate
preparation of school psychologists, and candidates in career and technical
education educator preparation programs demonstrate and document the career and
technical education standards approved by the professional educator standards
board.
(b) Teacher candidates must
take a board approved basic skills assessment prior to program admission. A
provider of a teacher preparation program must assure that all candidates
entering the program have successfully met the basic skills requirement under
chapter
181-01 WAC at the time of admission. The provider must collect and hold
evidence of candidates meeting this requirement.
(c) Teacher candidates must take a content
knowledge assessment prior to beginning student teaching. The provider must
collect and hold evidence of candidates meeting this requirement. Teacher
candidates apply content knowledge as reflected in board approved endorsement
competencies. Endorsement assessments are not required for teacher candidates
in career and technical education business and industry route
programs.
(d) Providers ensure that
educator candidates complete coursework on issues of abuse and emotional or
behavioral distress in students under
RCW
28A.410.035 and WAC
181-79A-200.
(e) Under
RCW
28A.410.040, a teacher candidate whose only
baccalaureate degree is in early childhood education, elementary education, or
special education must have completed 30 quarter credits, or the equivalent in
semester credits or continuing education credit hours, in one academic field in
an endorsement area under WAC
181-82A-202.
(f) Candidates for an initial certificate in
a career and technical education residency teacher preparation program must
complete a minimum of 45 quarter credits, or the equivalent in semester credits
or continuing education credit hours, in the specific career and technical
education area for which certification is sought.
(3) Providers ensure that candidates
demonstrate pedagogical knowledge and skill relative to the professional
standards adopted by the board for the role for which candidates are being
prepared.
(a) Candidates demonstrate knowledge
and competence relative to the standards related to the role, which were
adopted by the board. Providers ensure that candidates in teacher preparation
programs demonstrate most recently published In TASC Standards, candidates in
principal programs demonstrate most recently published NELP - Building Level
Standards, candidates in superintendent programs demonstrate most recently
published NELP - District Level Standards, candidates in program administrator
programs demonstrate the most recently published NELP Building or District
Level Standards, candidates in school counselor programs demonstrate the most
recently published CACREP standards, candidates in school psychologist programs
demonstrate the most recently published NASP standards for graduate preparation
of school psychologists, and candidates in career and technical education
educator preparation programs demonstrate and document the career and technical
education standards approved by the professional educator standards
board.
(b) Faculty and mentors
provide regular and ongoing feedback to candidates regarding field based
performance that is actionable and leads to improvement in candidates'
practice.
(c) Providers demonstrate
through structured observation, discussion, surveys, and/or artifacts that
program completers effectively apply the professional knowledge, skills, and
dispositions that the preparation program was designed to achieve.
(d) Providers may use the edTPA teacher
performance assessment as a formative tool as long as notification to
candidates is included in all program descriptions under chapter 28A.410
RCW.
(e) Providers of career and
technical educator preparation programs provide candidates all necessary
guidance to document, demonstrate, and submit for approval the required hours
of occupational experience.
(f) In
order to ensure that teacher and principal candidates can recognize signs of
emotional or behavioral distress in students and appropriately refer students
for assistance and support, teacher and principal preparation program providers
must incorporate the social emotional standards and benchmarks, and must
provide guidance to candidates on related competencies described in
RCW
28A.410.270.
(4) Providers ensure that candidates are well
prepared to exhibit the knowledge and skills of culturally responsive educators
as described in the cultural competency, diversity, equity, and inclusion
standards under WAC
181-85-204.
(a) Providers ensure that candidates
demonstrate knowledge and competence relative to cultural competency,
diversity, equity, and inclusion standards under WAC
181-85-204.
(b) Providers offer all candidates
meaningful, reflective opportunities to interact with racially and culturally
diverse colleagues, faculty, P-12 practitioners, and P-12 students and
families.
(c) Providers prepare
candidates to adapt their practices based on students' prior experiences,
cultural knowledge, and frames of reference to make learning encounters more
relevant and effective.
(d)
Providers ensure course work explicitly focuses on cultural responsiveness and
integrates components of culturally responsive education within and throughout
all courses.
(e) Faculty explicitly
model equity pedagogy in course work and field experiences in ways that enable
candidates to integrate their own cultural and linguistic backgrounds into
classroom activities.
(5) Teacher candidates engage with the since
time immemorial curriculum focused on history, culture, and government of
American Indian peoples as prescribed in
RCW
28B.10.710.
(a) There shall be a one quarter or semester
course, or the equivalent in continuing education credit hours, in either
Washington state history and government, or Pacific Northwest history and
government in the curriculum of all teacher preparation programs.
(b) No person shall be completed from any of
said programs without completing said course of study, unless otherwise
determined by the Washington professional educator standards board.
(c) Any course in Washington state or Pacific
Northwest history and government used to fulfill the requirement of this
section shall include information on the culture, history, and government of
the American Indian peoples who were the first human inhabitants of the state
and the region.
(d) Teacher
preparation program providers shall ensure that programs meet the requirements
of this section by integrating the curriculum developed and made available free
of charge by the office of the superintendent of public instruction into
existing programs or courses and may modify that curriculum in order to
incorporate elements that have a regionally specific focus.
Notes
Wash. Admin.
Code §
181-78A-232
Adopted by
WSR
19-15-144, Filed 7/24/2019, effective
8/24/2019
Amended by
WSR
19-24-103, Filed 12/4/2019, effective
1/4/2020
Amended by
WSR
21-08-023, Filed 3/29/2021, effective
4/29/2021
Amended by
WSR
21-15-084, Filed 7/16/2021, effective
8/16/2021
Amended by
WSR
21-20-052, Filed 9/28/2021, effective
10/29/2021
Amended by
WSR
22-03-075, Filed 1/18/2022, effective
2/18/2022
Amended by
WSR
22-08-101, Filed 4/5/2022, effective
5/6/2022
Reviser's note:RCW
34.05.395 requires the use of underlining and
deletion marks to indicate amendments to existing rules, and deems ineffectual
changes not filed by the agency in this manner. The bracketed material in the
above section does not appear to conform to the statutory
requirement.