Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
1.0
REGULATORY AUTHORITY AND PURPOSE
1.01
These rules shall be known as Arkansas Department of Education Policies
Governing Programs for Educator Licensure Offered by Institutions of Higher
Education in Arkansas.
1.02 The
State Board of Education enacts these policies pursuant to its authority as set
forth in Ark. Code Ann. §§
6-11-105,
6-17-422, and
25-15-201 et seq.
1.03 It is the purpose of these policies to
set forth the requirements for Arkansas Department of Education (ADE) approval
of educator licensure programs offered by a college or university in
Arkansas.
1.04 These policies are
to be viewed in conjunction with and do not replace the Arkansas Department of
Education Rules Governing Educator Licensure. If a conflict exists between
these policies and the Rules Governing Educator Licensure, the Rules Governing
Educator Licensure shall take precedence over the policies.
2.0
DEFINITIONS
For these policies the following terms are defined:
2.01
Accreditation of an
institution of higher learning, professional education unit, or program of
study is the official recognition granted to the institution of higher
learning, professional education unit or program of study that meets the
standards of quality established by the accrediting agency.
2.02
ADE is the Arkansas
Department of Education.
2.03
ADHE is the Arkansas Department of Higher Education.
2.04
CAEP is the Council for
Accreditation of Educator Preparation.
2.05
Candidacy for Accreditation
means the status granted to a professional education unit that has met
CAEP's pre-conditions for accreditation.
2.06
Candidate is an individual
who has been admitted into an educator licensure program.
2.07
Data Literacy means the
knowledge and skill in accessing, generating, and analyzing data from a variety
of sources to facilitate instruction and decision making.
2.08
Disciplinary Literacy means
the knowledge and skills in reading, writing and reasoning processes that are
specific to the intellectual beliefs and methods by which scholarship is
created in a content field.
2.09
Disposition for Teaching means the professional attitudes, values,
and beliefs of an individual regarding instruction, student learning and
development, including beliefs that all students can learn and all teachers can
improve their knowledge and skills.
2.10
Distance Learning Technology
means the electronic or digital learning media, including the Internet,
e-mail, television, and other audio-visual communication devices used to
deliver instruction where the teacher and the students are in separate physical
settings.
2.11
Educator
Licensure is the official recognition by the State Board that an
individual has met state requirements and has been authorized to practice as a
professional educator in Arkansas.
2.12
Field Experiences means the
activities for students in professional education that are completed in P-12
school settings. These include observations, tutoring, assisting teachers and
administrators, student teaching, pre-service teaching and
internships.
2.13
General
Studies means the courses and other learning experiences in the liberal
arts and sciences that students in degree programs normally complete during the
first two years of their higher education experience.
2.14
Nontraditional Educator Licensure
Program at an institution of higher education means a graduate-level
preparation program designed for individuals seeking licensure as a teacher who
did not complete an undergraduate educator preparation program but which, under
the Arkansas Department of Education rules for nontraditional licensure, allows
them to serve as teacher of record while enrolled in a program of
study.
2.15
Preconditions
are fundamental requirements undergirding CAEP standards that must be
met before a professional education unit is permitted to advance to candidacy
for initial accreditation.
2.16
Professional Education Unit is a college, school, department, or
other administrative entity within an institution of higher education that is
primarily responsible for coordinating all programs for the initial and
advanced preparation of educators and other professional school personnel; also
referred to as "unit".
2.17
Program or Program of Study means a curriculum that is aligned
with the Arkansas Teaching Standards, and that requires a candidate to
demonstrate and document competency in the specific knowledge, skills, and
dispositions for a particular endorsement to an educator's license, a licensure
content area or level of licensure provided by a college or university
accredited and approved under these rules.
2.18
Provisional Teaching License
means a temporary, non-renewable license, which is issued by the State
Board to an individual who has met certain requirements but not all of the
requirements for a standard license that allows the holder to teach or work in
Arkansas public schools.
2.19
Specialized Professional Association (SPA) means any of the
national associations representing educators of specific subject areas, grade
levels or student groups; administrators; or other school professionals that
establish standards for candidates preparing for educator licensure.
2.20
Standard Teaching License
means a five-year renewable license issued by the State Board that
allows the license holder to teach in Arkansas public schools.
2.21
Supervised Clinical Practice
means pre-service teaching or internship in a school setting that
provides candidates with extensive opportunities to develop and demonstrate
competence in the professional roles for which they are preparing; completed
under the guidance and supervision of licensed practicing school personnel and
college or university supervisory personnel.
2.22
Teacher Effectiveness Support
System (TESS) is an integrated evaluation, feedback, and support system
under the Department of Education Rules Governing The Teacher Effectiveness and
Support System that encourages teachers to improve their knowledge and
instructional skills in order to improve student learning,
2.23
Teacher of Record means an
individual, or individuals in a co-teaching assignment, who has or have been
assigned the lead responsibility for a student's learning in a subject/course
with aligned performance measures.
2.24
Traditional Program for Educator
Licensure means an undergraduate program of study or graduate program of
study at an institution of higher education that prepares candidates for
traditional licensure as a teacher, school counselor, library media specialist,
school administrator, or other school professional.
2.25
Universal Design for Learning
means a scientifically valid framework for guiding educational practice
that (A) provides flexibility in the ways information is presented, in the ways
students respond or demonstrate knowledge and skills, and in the ways students
are engaged; and (B) reduces barriers in instruction, provides appropriate
accommodations, supports, and challenges, and maintains high achievement
expectations for all students, including students with disabilities and
students who are limited English proficient.
3.0
APPROVAL REQUIRED
Any educator licensure program offered by a college or
university in Arkansas must be approved by the Arkansas Department of Education
(ADE), Office of Educator Licensure (OEL). These policies shall be effective
beginning September 1, 2014, and they shall supersede any previous ADE policies
pertaining to professional education programs offered by colleges or
universities in Arkansas. As often as may be necessary, these policies will be
reviewed by the Professional Licensure Standards Board (PLSB) and approved by
the Arkansas State Board of Education (State Board).
4.0
POLICIES FOR INSTITUTIONS OF
HIGHER EDUCATION PROVIDING PROGRAMS FOR EDUCATOR LICENSURE
4.01 Prior to program implementation, public
institutions of higher education in Arkansas and any out-of-state institutions
of higher education offering programs (including programs with online
coursework) to students in Arkansas shall be approved by the Arkansas Higher
Education Coordinating Board to offer certificate and degree programs leading
to educator licensure in Arkansas.
4.02 Institutions of higher education that
offer programs in Arkansas leading to educator licensure shall be accredited by
a regional accrediting agency that is recognized by the United States
Department of Education (USDE) or the Council for Higher Education
Accreditation (CHEA).
5.0
POLICIES FOR PROFESSIONAL
EDUCATION UNITS PROVIDING PROGRAMS FOR EDUCATOR LICENSURE
5.01 A professional education unit accredited
by CAEP and in compliance with all other policies set forth in this document is
considered eligible by the ADE to provide professional education programs
leading to educator licensure in Arkansas.
5.01.1 If a unit is not yet accredited by
CAEP, it shall meet all other preconditions for CAEP accreditation before the
ADE can approve any of its programs for educator licensure.
5.01.2 If a unit fails to achieve initial
CAEP accreditation, or CAEP accreditation is discontinued, the unit and its
individual programs for educator licensure shall forfeit state
approval.
5.01.3 The unit shall
inform current and potential candidates of its standing with regard to CAEP
accreditation and state approval of its licensure programs.
6.0
POLICIES FOR
ALL PROGRAMS LEADING TO EDUCATOR LICENSURE (TRADITIONAL AND
NONTRADITIONAL)
6.01 An educator
licensure program proposed by a professional education unit that is CAEP
accredited may be granted initial state approval upon review by the ADE in
accordance with the Protocol for the Review and Approval of Programs of
Study Leading to Educator Licensure or Endorsement in
Arkansas.
6.02 An educator
licensure program proposed by a professional education unit that has met all
other requirements for candidacy for CAEP accreditation, except having a
state-approved licensure program, may be granted provisional state approval
until accreditation is achieved or for a period of no longer than five (5)
years. If accreditation is not achieved within the 5-year period, the unit's
professional education programs will forfeit state approval, and no new
students may be admitted into the programs.
6.03 Continued state approval of an educator
licensure program shall be granted if it attains recognition from its
affiliated CAEP Specialized Professional Association (SPA), or is accredited by
a CAEP recognized organization associated with the field of study, or is
recommended for approval based upon results of a CAEP or state review of the
program.
6.03.1 A program for licensure
endorsement requiring less than 18 credit hours shall not be required to
prepare individual program reports, but the programs must provide candidate
performance data from state-required licensure assessments in the unit's
documentation for CAEP accreditation.
6.03.2 A program having no completers or
enrolled candidates during its most recent three (3) years of operation may be
declared to be inactive, and therefore shall not be required to prepare a
program report in conjunction with preparation for the unit's CAEP
accreditation review.
6.04 Any revisions to an ADE-approved program
of study for licensure shall be submitted to the ADE Office of Educator
Licensure in accordance with the Protocol for the Review and Approval
of Programs of Study Leading to Educator Licensure or Endorsement in
Arkansas.
7.0
POLICIES FOR TRADITIONAL EDUCATOR LICENSURE PROGRAMS
7.01 All traditional educator licensure
programs shall include curriculum that addresses requirements established by
Arkansas statutes governing educator preparation and the ADE Rules Governing
Educator Licensure, including without limitation, instruction in:
7.01.1 The Arkansas Teaching Standards and
the appropriate content knowledge and pedagogical competencies for the
respective licensure areas;
7.01.2
The Code of Ethics for Arkansas Educators;
7.01.3 Data literacy;
7.01.4 Disciplinary literacy;
7.01.5 Universal Design for Learning
(UDL);
7.01.6 The Teacher
Excellence and Support System, Ark. Code Ann.
6-17-2801 et seq.;
7.01.7 Child maltreatment, under Ark. Code
Ann. §
6-61-133;
7.01.8 Parental involvement, Ark. Code Ann.
§
6-15-1705;
7.01.9 Teen suicide awareness and prevention,
Ark. Code Ann. §
6-17-708; and
7.01.10 Information on the identification of
students at risk for dyslexia and related disorders, under Ark. Code Ann.
§
6-41-609.
7.02 All programs that prepare candidates for
licensure to teach in grades birth through kindergarten (B-K), kindergarten
through grade six (K-6) or grades four through eight (4-8) shall include at
least six semester hours of instruction in reading pedagogy. The instruction
shall include theories and strategies for teaching reading, diagnosis of
reading difficulties, intervention strategies for struggling readers and
disciplinary literacy as identified in the competencies for educator
licensure.
7.03 Traditional
programs that prepare candidates for middle childhood licensure to teach in
grades four through eight (4-8) shall require concentrations in at least two
content areas to be selected by the candidates from English-language arts,
mathematics, science and social studies. The concentrations shall include at
least eighteen (18) semester hours of coursework in each of the selected
content areas.
7.04 Traditional
programs that prepare candidates for secondary licensure to teach in grades
seven through twelve (7-12) shall require candidates to have content
preparation in a teaching field equivalent to the institutional requirements
for an academic major (at least 30 semester hours). Degree requirements shall
be determined by the institution, but the requirements for a student seeking a
teaching degree shall not be substantially different from the requirements for
a student seeking a non-teaching degree in the same content field.
7.05 Programs that prepare candidates for
standard or add-on licensure to teach special education in grades K-12, shall
include a curriculum of at least twenty-one (21) semester hours in special
education content and pedagogy and shall comply with standards of the Council
for Exceptional Children (CEC).
7.06 Programs that prepare candidates for
licensure as school administrators, grades P-12, shall comply with the
Standards for School Administrators in Arkansas and
Educational Leadership Constituent Council (ELCC) standards.
7.07 Professional education programs shall
engage candidates in direct, substantial, quality participation in field
experiences and supervised clinical practice.
7.07.1 The combination of field experiences
and supervised clinical practice shall provide opportunities for a candidate
for teacher licensure to teach across the entire grade of the license being
sought.
7.07.1.1 Field experiences and
supervised clinical practice in a program of study for teacher licensure, Birth
- Kindergarten (B-K), shall be divided between prekindergarten and
kindergarten, with no less than 40% of the total experiences completed in
either area.
7.07.1.2 Field
experience and supervised clinical practice in a program of study for teacher
licensure, grades K-6, shall be divided between grades K-3 and 4-6, with no
less than 25% of the experiences completed in either grade range.
7.07.1.3 Field experiences and supervised
clinical practice in a traditional program of study for teacher licensure,
grades 4-8, shall be divided between grades 4-6 and 7-8, with no less than 25%
of the total experiences completed in either grade range, and shall include
teaching in each area of concentration selected by the candidate.
7.07.1.4 Field experiences and supervised
clinical practice in a traditional program of study for teacher licensure,
grades 7-12, shall be divided between grades 7-9 and 10-12 in the licensure
content area(s) with no less than 25% of the total assignment completed in
either grade range. If a candidate is seeking licensure in more than one
content area, the field experiences and supervised clinical practice shall be
divided among the content areas.
7.07.1.5 Field experiences and supervised
clinical practice in a traditional program of study for teacher licensure,
grades K-12, shall be divided between grades K-6 and 7-12 in the licensure
content area with no less than 25% of the total experiences completed in either
grade range. If no K-6 settings are available in a K-12 licensure area,
candidates may complete their experiences within the 7-12 grade
range.
7.07.2 Programs
of study for the licensure of teachers shall require candidates to be engaged
in supervised clinical practice for a minimum of sixty (60) complete school
days (approximately 420 contact hours).
7.07.3 Programs of study for the licensure of
building-level administrators, district-level administrators,
curriculum/program administrators, school counselors, school psychologists,
library media specialists, and other professional school personnel shall
require candidates to complete supervised clinical practice across the grade
range for each license being sought by the candidate.
7.07.4 Field experiences and supervised
clinical practice in traditional undergraduate or graduate programs for teacher
licensure areas that involve grades K-12, or in graduate programs for school
administration and other non-teaching licensure areas, shall be completed in:
7.07.4.1 Traditional public K-12 school
settings that are accredited by the ADE; or
7.07.4.2 Traditional in-state or border-state
private or public school settings where Common Core and other content standards
adopted by the State Board are taught and faculty are subject to an evaluation
system that uses a framework substantially similar to Arkansas' TESS.
7.07.5 Field experiences and
supervised clinical practice in a B-K licensure program shall be completed in:
7.07.5.1 An early childhood education setting
accredited by the Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education of the
Department of Human Services as a Better Beginnings Level 3 or higher program;
or
7.07.5.2 A border-state early
childhood education setting having state accreditation similar to the Arkansas
accreditation for a Better Beginnings Level 3 or higher program.
7.07.6 Field experience and
internship placements for candidates in a traditional program of study for
educator licensure shall not include priority schools, public schools or school
districts in academic distress, or school districts under administrative
takeover for violations of the Standards for Accreditation of Arkansas Public
Schools and School Districts, unless:
7.07.6.1
The candidate is in an administrator licensure program and the state has
replaced the administrator in the applicable priority school, public school or
school district in academic distress ,or school district under administrative
takeover; or
7.07.6.2 Under an
extreme circumstance, based on a recommendation from the Department of
Education Director of Educator Licensure, the Assistant Commissioner for
Licensure of the Department of Education approves the field experience or
internship placement in the applicable priority school, public school or school
district in academic distress, or school district under administrative
takeover.
7.07.7
Candidates for educator licensure may complete their supervised clinical
practice in instructional settings that employ distance learning technology,
but at least 75% of their clinical practice must engage them in face-to-face
interaction where the candidate and the students are in the same physical
setting.
7.07.8 Professional
education faculty, including adjunct faculty, and cooperating teachers who
teach and/or supervise teacher candidates must be trained in the domains and
criteria of Arkansas' TESS. Candidates shall be placed only with cooperating
teachers or mentors who have received at least a proficient or
equivalent rating in their latest TESS performance review or, if applicable,
under 7.07.4.2, an equivalent performance review.
7.08 Programs of study for teacher licensure
shall require the following of candidates before completing the program:
7.08.1 Achieve a passing score on each
state-approved content assessment for the license.
7.08.2 Take the state-approved pedagogical
assessment.
8.0
POLICIES FOR CANDIDATES IN
TRADITIONAL PROGRAMS FOR EDUCATOR LICENSURE
8.01 Candidates in programs leading to a
baccalaureate degree with educator licensure shall complete, as a minimum, a
general studies curriculum similar to that required for other baccalaureate
degree programs offered by the institution.
8.02 To qualify for admission as a candidate
into a traditional program for first-time educator licensure:
8.02.1 An individual shall have earned a
cumulative grade point average in non-remedial coursework of no less than 2.5
(4.0 scale) until Fall 2015 and 2.7 (4.0 scale) beginning in Fall
2015.
8.02.2 An individual shall
achieve a passing score, as determined by the ADE, for each of the
state-approved basic skills assessments, except as noted below.
8.02.2.1 In lieu of the state-approved basic
skills assessments, an individual seeking entry into a baccalaureate program
for first time licensure for teaching may substitute:
8.02.2.1.1 A minimum composite score of 24 on
the ACT and either:
8.02.2.1.1.1 A minimum
score of 22 in each of the Reading, Mathematics, and combined English/Writing
sections, or
8.02.2.1.1.2 For one
(1) or more of the Reading, Mathematics, or combined English/Writing sections
with a score lower than the minimum, a passing score on the equivalent section
of the basic-skills assessment approved by the State Board; or
8.02.2.1.2 A minimum score of 1650
on combined Math and Cricital Reading, and Writing, and either:
8.02.2.1.2.1 A minimum score of 510 in each
of the Math, Critical Reading, and Writing sections on the Scholastic Aptitude
Test (SAT), or
8.02.2.1.2.2 For one
(1) or more of the Math, Critical Reading, or Writing sections with a score
lower than the minimum, a passing score on the equivalent section of the
basic-skills assessment approved by the State Board.
8.02.2.2 An individual seeking
entry into a post-baccalaureate program for first time educator licensure may
substitute passing scores, determined by the ADE, from the Graduate Record
Examination (GRE), the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), or the Medical College
Admission Test (MCAT) in lieu of the state-approved basic skills
assessments.
8.03 A candidate for licensure in teaching
shall demonstrate proficiency in oral communications and shall indicate an
appropriate disposition for teaching.
8.03.1 A
candidate shall demonstrate proficiency in oral communications as determined by
requirements in the candidate's program of study.
8.03.2 A candidate shall indicate, via
interviews or other means determined by the candidate's program of study, an
appropriate disposition for teaching.
8.04 Before entering a classroom to complete
a supervised clinical practice, a candidate shall apply to the Identification
Bureau of the Arkansas State Police for a criminal records check and to the
Department of Human Services for a Child Maltreatment Central Registry check
and shall successfully complete those background checks in accordance with the
Department of Education Rules Governing Background Checks and Licensure
Revocation.
9.0
POLICIES FOR NONTRADITIONAL EDUCATOR LICENSURE PROGRAMS
9.01 Nontraditional educator licensure
programs may be offered at the post-baccalaureate level by institutions of
higher education. Such programs may be offered as degree or non-degree programs
of study.
9.02 A nontraditional
educator licensure program may admit and prepare candidates only for
ADE-approved teacher licensure areas at the middle childhood (grades 4-8) and
secondary (grades 7-12 or K-12) levels, not including special
education.
9.03 A nontraditional
educator licensure program shall include one of the following two tracks or
both tracks:
9.03.1 Track 1 allows a
candidate to be employed as a teacher of record with a provisional teaching
license for the duration of the prescribed program of study; a candidate shall
teach only in the content area(s) and grade level(s) indicated on the
provisional teaching license. Candidates shall be placed only with cooperating
teachers or mentors who have received at least a proficient or
equivalent rating in their latest TESS performance review or, if applicable,
under 7.07.4.2, an equivalent performance review.
9.03.2 Track 2 allows a candidate to complete
a traditional internship (student teaching) as a culminating experience of the
candidate's program of study or obtain a provisional teaching license and be
employed as a teacher of record as a culminating experience of the candidate's
program of study.
9.04 A
candidate in a nontraditional educator licensure program shall complete an
internship or obtain a provisional license and be employed as a teacher of
record only in the area(s) which s/he has passed the state-required content
assessment(s).
9.05 Nontraditional
educator licensure programs shall include curriculum that addresses
requirements established by Arkansas statutes governing preparation for
nontraditional educator licensure and ADE rules governing nontraditional
educator licensure, including without limitation, instruction in:
9.05.1 The Arkansas Teaching Standards and
specific pedagogical competencies for the respective licensure areas;
9.05.2 The Code of Ethics for
Arkansas Educators;
9.05.3
Data literacy;
9.05.4 Disciplinary
literacy;
9.05.5 Universal Design
for Learning (UDL);
9.05.6
Arkansas' Teacher Excellence Support System (TESS), Ark. Code Ann.
6-17-2801 et seq.;
9.05.7 Child maltreatment, under Ark. Code
Ann. §
6-61-133;
9.05.8 Parental involvement, Ark. Code Ann.
§
6-15-1705;
9.05.9 Teen suicide awareness and prevention,
Ark. Code Ann. §
6-17-708; and
9.05.10 Information on the identification of
students at risk for dyslexia and related disorders, under Ark. Code Ann.
§
6-41-609.
9.06 Nontraditional educator licensure
programs that prepare candidates to teach grades four through eight (4-8) shall
include at least six (6) semester hours of instruction in reading pedagogy. The
instruction shall include theories and strategies for teaching reading,
diagnosis of reading difficulties, intervention strategies for struggling
readers and disciplinary literacy as identified in the competencies for
educator licensure.
9.07 Candidates
completing a nontraditional educator licensure program in middle childhood,
grades 4-8, or secondary social studies, grades 7-12, must complete a three
semester hour course in Arkansas history, as required by state law, or a
45-hour professional development piece in Arkansas History through
ArkansasIDEAS.
9.08 Nontraditional
educator licensure program shall require internships or teaching service to be
completed in:
9.08.1 Traditional public K-12
school settings that are accredited by the ADE; or
9.08.2 Traditional in-state or border-state
private or public school settings where Common Core and other content standards
adopted by the State Board are taught and faculty are subject to an evaluation
system that uses a framework substantially similar to Arkansas' TESS.
9.09 Teaching and internship
placements for candidates in nontraditional educator licensure programs shall
not include priority schools, public school or school districts in academic
distress, or school districts under administrative takeover for violations of
the Standards for Accreditation of Arkansas Public Schools and School
Districts.
9.09.1 Under an extreme
circumstance, based on a recommendation from the Department of Education
Director of Educator Licensure, the Assistant Commissioner for Licensure of the
Department of Education may approve the field experience or internship
placement in the applicable priority school, public school or school district
in academic distress, or school district under administrative
takeover.
9.10
Candidates in nontraditional educator licensure programs may complete their
teaching or internships in instructional settings that employ distance learning
technology, but at least 75% of their clinical practice must engage them in
face-to-face interaction where candidates and the students are in the same
physical setting.
9.11 Professional
education faculty in nontraditional educator licensure programs, including
adjunct faculty, and cooperating teachers who teach and/or supervise
nontraditional teacher candidates must be trained in the domains and criteria
of Arkansas' TESS. Candidates shall be paired only with cooperating teachers or
mentors who have received at least a proficient or equivalent
rating in their latest TESS performance review or, if applicable, under
7.07.4.2, an equivalent performance review.
10.0
POLICIES FOR CANDIDATES IN
NONTRADITIONAL EDUCATOR LICENSURE PROGRAMS
10.01 Individuals seeking admission into a
nontraditional educator licensure program are subject to the following
requirements:
10.01.1 An applicant shall
provide an official transcript(s) documenting an earned bachelor's degree or
higher from an institution of higher education that is regionally or nationally
accredited by an accrediting organization recognized by the U.S. Department of
Education or the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. An applicant who
earned a degree from an out-of-country college or university may provide an
official college transcript evaluation from a nationally recognized credential
evaluation agency documenting that their degree is equivalent to a four-year
degree from an accredited United States institution of higher
learning.
10.01.2 An applicant
shall have earned a cumulative grade point average in non-remedial coursework
of no less than 2.5 (4.0 scale) until Fall 2015 and 2.7 (4.0 scale) beginning
in Fall 2015.
10.01.3 An applicant
shall have achieved a passing score, as determined by the ADE, for each of the
state-approved basic skills assessments, except as noted below:
10.01.3.1 An individual seeking entry into a
post-baccalaureate program for first-time educator licensure may substitute
passing scores, determined by the ADE, from the Graduate Record Examination
(GRE), the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), or the Medical College Admission
Test (MCAT) in lieu of the state-approved basic skills assessments.
10.01.4 An applicant seeking
licensure in middle childhood, grades 4-8, must achieve passing scores, as
determined by the ADE, on at least two of the state-required content
assessments required for middle childhood licensure.
10.01.5 An applicant seeking licensure in
secondary teaching, grades 7-12 or K-12, must achieve a passing score, as
determined by the ADE, on the state-required content assessment(s) for each
level and content area in which licensure is sought.
10.02 A candidate for nontraditional
licensure in teaching shall demonstrate proficiency in oral communications and
shall indicate an appropriate disposition for teaching.
10.02.1 The candidate shall demonstrate
proficiency in oral communications as determined by requirements in the
candidate's program of study.
10.02.2 The candidate shall indicate, via
interviews or other means as determined by the candidate's program of study, an
appropriate disposition for teaching.
10.03 Before entering a classroom to complete
a supervised clinical practice, a candidate for nontraditional licensure shall
apply to the Identification Bureau of the Arkansas State Police for a criminal
records check and to the Department of Human Services for a Child Maltreatment
Central Registry check and shall successfully complete those background checks
in accordance with the Department of Education Rules Governing Background
Checks and Licensure Revocation.
11.0
PROGRAM AND UNIT ACCOUNTABILITY
REQUIREMENTS
11.01 An educator
licensure program having at least ten (10) program completers during its most
recent three-year period shall maintain an eighty percent (80%) average
candidate pass rate on all assessments required by the state for professional
licensure. Programs failing to maintain a three-year average pass rate of at
least 80% on the assessments will be placed on probation for a period of no
more than three (3) years. The probation shall end if an 80%> average pass
rate is achieved within the 3-year probationary period. A program that fails to
achieve an 80%> average pass rate by the end of the 3-year probationary
period shall forfeit its state approval.
11.02 A professional education unit shall
maintain an eighty percent (80%) pass rate on the state-required licensure
assessments among all of its candidates for licensure during its most recent
three-year period. A unit that fails to maintain an 80% pass rate will be
placed on probation for a period of no more than three (3) years. The probation
shall end if an 80% pass rate is achieved within the 3-year period. A unit that
fails to achieve an 80% pass rate by the end of the 3-year probationary period
will forfeit its state approval and will no longer be eligible to offer any
programs for educator licensure.
11.03 A professional education unit may be
designated as "low performing" as defined in the Plan for Title II
Reporting Requirements of the Higher Education Act published by the
ADE. If a unit is designated as low performing for three consecutive years,
state approval for the unit and its programs for licensure will be revoked, and
the unit will no longer be eligible to recommend candidates for educator
licensure.
11.04 If a program or
unit is designated as "on probation" or "low performing," current and potential
candidates must be advised of the program's or unit's
standing.