飞跃:地区与大学合作解决特殊教育人才短缺问题

Laura Hedin, Lydia Gerzel-Short, Lisa Liberty, Jason Pope
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:学区-大学合作伙伴越来越依赖于 "自己培养 "的执照计划来解决教师短缺问题。由于特殊教育职位空缺是一个长期存在的问题,我们的学区-大学合作项目开发了 "LEAP"--持证教育工作者快速通道,成功地将 26 名辅助专业人员培养成了特殊教育教师(SE)。设计/方法/途径在本综述中,我们介绍了一个地区与大学的合作项目,该项目解决了从事特殊教育工作的辅助人员在考取执照时遇到的障碍(要点 #4,反思与创新)。来自一个大城市和几个地区学区的 25 名辅助专业人员(28 人进入项目,25 人完成项目)通过 LEAP 完成了特殊教育执照课程。略多于一半的 LEAP 参与者是黑人或西班牙裔(见表 1),促进了特殊教育教师队伍的多样化。大学与学区的合作成功地设计并实施了一项计划,该计划允许参与者:a) 继续就业;b) 在其所在的地理区域参加夜校课程或在线学习;c) 在赞助学区完成所有实地体验(要点 #2);d) 接受 "结业辅导员 "的指导。我们介绍了解决辅助专业人员所遇到的障碍的方法,并倡导地区与大学合作,以解决长期的教师短缺问题。研究局限性/影响局限性包括缺乏有关计划完成者在 2023 年秋季开始这项工作的第一年教学中取得成功的数据。此外,由于参与研究的地区是大型城市地区,因此很难将计划的细节推广到小型和农村地区。实践意义为发展自己的特殊教育执照计划提供了实用技巧。详细描述了候选人遇到的障碍以及地区-大学合作伙伴解决这些问题的方法。社会影响所述计划为三个参与地区/机构提供了训练有素的教师,以填补特殊教育的长期空缺。由于接受特殊教育服务的学生面临学业失败的风险,而且受到教师流失的影响尤为严重,因此,通过自我成长执照计划来解决这一领域的问题是一项多样性、公平性和包容性的举措。原创性/价值现有的研究文献对人员短缺地区长期存在的教师短缺问题和教师队伍缺乏多样性问题发出了警告,但很少有出版物介绍成功的项目。合作伙伴的合作促进了对课程格式和授课方式的重新构想,以适应成人学习者的需求,避免了替代课程中经常出现的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Taking the LEAP: a district-university partnership to address shortages in special education
PurposeDistrict-university partners increasingly rely on “grow-your-own” licensure programs to address teacher shortages. Because vacancies in special education represent a chronic issue, our district-university partnership developed LEAP – the Licensed Educators’ Accelerated Pathway, successfully preparing 26 paraprofessionals as special education teachers (SEs). We describe a model university-district partnership in which we collaborated to design and implement paraprofessionals’ SE licensure program.Design/methodology/approachIn this general review, we describe a district-university partnership collaboration that resolved barriers experienced by paraprofessionals working toward licensure in special education (Essential #4, Reflection and Innovation). The specialized design and partnership solutions were grounded in SE preparation research literature.Findings25 (28 entered the program and 25 completed) paraprofessionals from one large urban and several regional districts completed special education licensure through LEAP. Slightly more than half of LEAP participants were Black or Hispanic (see Table 1), contributing to the diversification of SE workforce. University-district partnership was successful in designing and delivering a program that allowed participants: a) to remain employed, b) attend evening classes in their geographic region or online, c) complete all field experiences in sponsoring districts (Essential #2) and d) receive concierge advising from a “completion coach.” We describe solutions to barriers experienced by paraprofessionals and advocate for district-university collaboration to address chronic teacher shortages.Research limitations/implicationsLimitations include lack of data on success of program completers during their first year of teaching as they began this work in Fall 2023. Further, because the participating district was large and urban, generalization of program details for small and rural districts is difficult.Practical implicationsPractical tips for developing grow-your-own special education licensure programs are providing. Detailed descriptions of barriers candidates experienced and ways the district-university partners resolved these issues are included. Programs like the one described has the potential to positively impact teacher pipeline issues.Social implicationsThe program described provided highly-trained teachers to fill chronic vacancies in special education in three participating districts/agencies. Because students receiving special education services are at risk for school failure and are disproportionately impacted by teacher turnover, addressing this area through grow-your-own licensure programs represents a diversity, equity and inclusion initiative. Further, upskilling diverse paraprofessionals to licensed teacher roles represent an economic boost, which they might not otherwise have achieved.Originality/valueAvailable research literature signals alarm over persistent teacher shortages in hard-to-staff districts and lack of diversity in the teacher workforce, but few published accounts describe successful programs. Partner collaboration fostered a re-imagining of course formatting and delivery to accommodate adult learners, avoiding problems often reported with alternative programs.
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