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TEACHER
EDUCATION
RECOGNISE
AND SHARE
OUTSTANDING
PRACTICE
INSPIRED
LEARNING
ENTRY
INTO THE
PROFESSION
DEVELOP
AND MAINTAIN
PROFESSIONAL
PRACTICE
MARCH 2013
Contents
Letter
Ministers introduction
Inspired learning
12
15
18
MARCH 2013
Dear Minister
In July 2012, you constituted us as a panel to prepare a discussion paper for you on
steps that might be taken to improve the quality of teaching and learning in NSW
schools, and then to prepare advice for you following a request for submissions and
a round of consultations with the profession.
We received 98 formal submissions in response to the questions posed in the
discussion paper and comments from 577 people through the on-line forum. We also
met with many groups and individuals over that period to hear their feedback on the
discussion paper.
Based on the feedback from the consultation, the research evidence presented to us
and our combined educational experiences, please find attached our recommendations
for a set of reforms and desired actions that, in our view, would contribute powerfully
to the consolidation and improvement of teaching and learning in NSW schools.
We would like to thank the many individuals and stakeholder groups who contributed
so enthusiastically and constructively to the consultation process. Their many ideas and
comments helped to inform our deliberations.
We look forward to supporting you in implementing these actions, so that NSW
becomes the place recognised nationally and internationally for its work in support
of the teaching profession, leading to better outcomes for all NSW students.
Yours sincerely
Dr Michele Bruniges AM
Director-General of Education
and Communities
March 2013
Mr Patrick Lee
Chief Executive of the
NSW Institute of Teachers
Mr Tom Alegounarias
President of the Board of Studies NSW
Ministers introduction
Adrian Piccoli MP
Minister for Education
March 2013
Inspired learning
INSPIRED
LEARNING
MARCH 2013
MARCH 2013
Initial teacher
education
Future directions
Entrants into teacher education will be high academic
performers, have well-developed literacy and numeracy skills
and show an aptitude for teaching.
Teaching will attract more of the brightest and motivated school
leavers and career changers.
NSW teacher education programs will produce high quality
graduates with personal attributes suited to teaching.
All teacher education students will receive high quality
professional experience as part of their teacher education
programs.
The quality of the teaching workforce in NSW will be informed
by a strong evidence base.
Current state
The NSW Institute of Teachers (the Institute) assesses the
quality of initial teacher education (ITE) programs in NSW
against requirements introduced progressively between 2007
and 2009. The first cohorts of students from programs based
on these standards are now entering the profession. In 2012,
NSW ITE program requirements were revised to incorporate
the nationally agreed Accreditation of Initial Teacher Education
Programs in Australia: Standards and Procedures (the national
Standards and Procedures).
Like other professional degrees, there is no mandatory
government minimum Australian Tertiary Admissions Rank
(ATAR) for entry into ITE. ATAR cut-offs are determined by
academic achievement, the demand for a program and the
number of places available, with cut-offs for the same program
often varying across different campuses.
ATAR cut-off scores for entry into NSW ITE programs in 2013
ranged from 58.80 to 94.30. There is some call for improving
the quality of entrants into teacher education programs through
the setting of minimum ATAR cut-offs, but there is considerable
support for the view that selection should not be based solely
on a single measure such as an ATAR. Transparency and
consistency in the use of ATAR scores, with multiple schemes to
allocate bonus ATAR points, are also widely questioned. Some
ITE providers argue that more emphasis should be placed on the
quality of graduates as they exit from ITE programs, and their
aptitude for teaching demonstrated through the accreditation
process during their first years of teaching.
MARCH 2013
INITIAL
TEACHER
EDUCATION
INSPIRED
LEARNING
MARCH 2013
MARCH 2013
MARCH 2013
11
Entry into
the profession
Future directions
All beginning teachers will receive a high quality induction
program to support their entry into the teaching profession.
All beginning teachers will receive high quality support to
enhance their teaching skills during their first year of teaching.
Teachers returning to the profession will be required to refresh
and update their knowledge of curriculum, pedagogy and
educational expectations.
Accreditation and probation processes in NSW government
schools will be aligned to create one system for beginning
teachers.
Current state
All NSW teachers who commenced teaching from 1 October
2004, or who have been away from teaching for five years or
more, are required to be accredited. The Institute of Teachers
Act 2004 requires teachers employed on a full-time basis to gain
accreditation at Proficient Teacher (Professional Competence)
within three years. Currently teachers who are offered
permanent employment in NSW government schools must be
accredited at Proficient Teacher (Professional Competence) in
their first year of teaching. Teachers in NSW non-government
schools employed on a permanent basis generally have up to
three years to meet this requirement, with most completing the
requirements within 18 months to two years.
The vast majority of teaching graduates are employed
as teachers for the first time on a casual basis and are
allowed five years to gain accreditation at Proficient Teacher
(Professional Competence).
During the first years of a teaching career, induction
programs play a critical role in supporting the development
of capable and confident professional teachers. The quality of
induction into the profession for beginning teachers was a key
issue raised in the consultation, with general consensus that
beginning teachers should have reduced teaching loads and
support from trained mentors.
INSPIRED
LEARNING
ENTRY
INTO THE
PROFESSION
MARCH 2013
MARCH 2013
13
MARCH 2013
Develop and
maintain
professional practice
Future directions
The Australian Professional Standards for Teachers will apply
to all NSW teachers.
All teachers will be supported by high quality performance
and development processes.
The processes of the Institute and school authorities will be
streamlined to reduce duplication and give greater recognition
to school-based, classroom-focused professional learning.
Underperforming teachers and school leaders will be treated
in an efficient and fair way.
Current state
The Australian Professional Standards for Teachers (the
Professional Teaching Standards) provide a clear framework
to guide teachers in the development of evidence for
accreditation, and the maintenance of accreditation through
professional learning.
NSW is the only jurisdiction which does not currently require
accreditation of all teachers. All teachers first employed from 1
October 2004 and those returning to teaching following a break
of five years or more are required to be accredited on the basis
of the Professional Teaching Standards. Approximately 56 000
teachers who are actively teaching, including those on approved
leave from teaching, have been accredited.
INSPIRED
LEARNING
DEVELOP
AND MAINTAIN
PROFESSIONAL
PRACTICE
15
MARCH 2013
17
Recognise and
share outstanding
practice
Future directions
Teaching excellence will be recognised and rewarded
through mechanisms that include remuneration and new
leadership responsibilities for accredited Highly Accomplished
and Lead Teachers.
Teachers who aspire to be principals will have achieved
the higher levels of teacher accreditation and undertaken
professional learning to prepare them to be leaders of a school.
Excellence in teaching and professional learning will be
identified, shared and developed through professional
collaboration and learning.
Current state
Most NSW teachers are paid according to how long they have
been teaching. Teachers identify that effective teaching is
recognised locally within schools, but that high performing
teachers do not currently receive wider recognition or benefit
for their excellent practice. Teachers also identify that the most
valid forms of recognition of outstanding teaching practice are
centred on the classroom and include lesson observation and
the assessment of student progress.
The Professional Teaching Standards provide the framework for
assessing and accrediting teacher performance at the levels of
Highly Accomplished and Lead Teacher. Accreditation at these
levels can provide a valid and professionally robust framework
for teacher remuneration based on demonstrated highly
accomplished and lead teaching. Highly Accomplished and Lead
Teachers can have a significant impact on the development of
teaching excellence within, between and among schools. As of
the end of 2012, 58 teachers across all school sectors in NSW
had gained accreditation at either Highly Accomplished or Lead
Teacher level, with 351 teachers currently progressing through
the accreditation process for those two standards.
Excellent teaching practice that is linked to evidence of student
progress should be identified, analysed and shared. Teachers
identify that feedback from other teachers is a significant
source of professional learning. They also find that collaboration
through planning lessons, teaching and analysing student
achievement together provides them with the opportunity
to reflect on, refine and recalibrate their teaching practice.
Teachers do not always find this culture of professional support
in the schools in which they work.
18 great teaching, inspired learning
RECOGNISE
AND SHARE
OUTSTANDING
PRACTICE
INSPIRED
LEARNING
MARCH 2013
19
www.schools.nsw.edu.au/greatteaching
MARCH 2013