EdCal EdCal v49.26 4/29/19

April 29, 2019 EDCAL   1 Education California | The official newspaper of the Association of California School Administrators Volume 49 | Number 26 | April 29, 2019 Students get hands-on experience in Veterinary Science CTE program Elizabeth Belaski doesn’t call herself an innovator, but she knows how to change a student experience from classroom learning to hands-on learning and give her students a deeper set of skills and knowledge. “To create our next generation of leaders you have to give students the tools to fur- ther their passion,” she said. “If you create an educational environment where students are excited and challenged, we’re doing our job.” Three years ago, Belaski took over the Veterinary Science program at Silicon Valley Career Technical Education in San Jose. Her goal was to create an experience for students that was clinic focused. She took it so far that when students walk into the classroom, the first thing they see is a reception desk similar to a veterinary clinic. Through this CTE program, students learn anatomy and physiology, as well as animal health and disease, animal behavior, and client communication. The class itself focuses on academics, technical skills and employability practices. Some of the program’s graduates have continued their education to become registered veterinary technicians and others plan to go to veterinary school. There are also two current students who are actually working in veterinary clinics now as a result of attending this class. “The general public has no idea how involved veterinary medicine is,” said Alyssa Lynch, Metropolitan Education District superintendent. “It’s really exciting to see these students have a real passion for Preliminary credential. ACSA, Students at Silicon Valley Career Technical Education perform an evaluation on a cat, using their training to check the heart rate and for anything that could be abnormal. animals and I see that they are making a difference in the field.” Right now there are more than 50 stu- dents in two classes and those classes are so popular that they fill up almost immediate- ly when registration opens. Belaski believes the veterinary industry is not an industry that will be taken over by innovation because of the animal-to-hu- man contact, which is a sign that these students are on a career path with longevity. “It’s a sign that we’re doing things right,” Belaski said. “These students receive the knowledge they need to immediately walk in and succeed as veterinary assistants.” What may be most interesting to those outside of the program is how the curricu- See VET, page 2 Charter school challenges CTC decision The April meeting of the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing was at- tended by ACSA CTC Liaison Doug Gephart, who filed the following report. Summit Preparatory Charter High School will seek teacher accreditation as an “experimental program” after the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing denied accreditation to the charter school, saying it did not meet its responsibilities to earn accreditation for its intern program. Summit Prep, one of 11 public char- ter schools operated by Summit Public Schools, had appealed the CTC’s decision earlier this year to not grant accredita- tion to its intern program. According to the CTC, the school changed its teacher training from an intern program to a resi- dency program without going through the commission’s prescribed process. Commission-approved intern programs are a path to the preliminary teaching credential that allows an individual the ability to complete their teacher prepara- tion coursework concurrent with their first year or two in a paid teaching position. The Summit Prep cohort of teachers are not currently in a paid teaching position but are taking approved coursework and receiving professional mentorship and guidance. Formal approval The CTC’s occurs over several new Chair is phases, with each phase elected, why requiring commission RICA needs review and approval. updates and Summit Prep was a look at granted initial approval; state grant however, in the middle programs. of this process, CTC staff discovered Summit Prep was not offering an intern program but a residency program for which Summit was not approved. CTC Committee on Accreditation staff verified their under- standing through their own investigation and notified Summit their accreditation for an intern program was being denied. Summit challenged the Committee on Accreditation authority to deny accredita- Inside tion and threatened legal action that would have been very expensive for both parties. Summit operates on private funding while the CTC is dependent upon fees collected from credential renewals and accreditation. The commission was clearly within its right to deny accreditation based on the fact Summit Prep was not providing an intern program. Unfortunately, a cohort of teacher candidates were caught in the mid- dle of the procedural arguments and faced possible elimination of their intern status. ACSA argued that the commission needed to hold Summit Prep accountable for properly complying with either the intern credential program or regroup and apply for a residency program while simultane- ously allowing for a provision that would not adversely impact the current cohort of teacher candidates. The commission, in an attempt to devise a solution that would maintain the integ- rity of their authority for the credential approval process, provided Summit Prep in partnership with the Sacramento County Office of Education’s Leader- ship Institute, offers aspiring teacher leaders the opportunity to earn a Preliminary Administrative Services Credential. Candidates will engage in six courses over the 12-month program which offers both face-to-face instruc- tion as well as online learning, guided fieldwork and an end-of-program project. Courses are taught by local and regional school administrators who have expertise in both the content and region. By completing four additional classes, candidates may apply the work from the Leadership Institute courses to obtain a Master’s Degree. The program begins in San Bernardino County in August 2019. Visit www. acsa.org/Credentialing to apply. The deadline to enroll is May 15. Math workshops. Calcurricu- lum is partnering with the California Department of Education to offer two-day, grant-funded workshops to help districts identify opportunities and strategies to improve their math pro- gram implementation. The workshops will be held May 20-21 in Sacramento and June 18-19 in Santa Ana. These free workshops will be beneficial to districts needing Tier 1 math curriculum support. E-mail info@calcurriculum. org for more information, or visit https://www.calcurriculum.org/news- events/math-implementation-work- shops-w-cde.html to register. Ray Curry nominations. Nom- inations are currently open for the Ray Curry Award, which honors an outstanding human resources or personnel administrator. This award will be presented during the Personnel Institute, Oct. 2, 2019 in Long Beach. Nominees must be a member of ACSA and have contributed or displayed accomplishments in the role of human resources/personnel administrator at the district, region or state levels. To make a nomination, visit www.acsa. org/raycurryaward. The deadline for nominations is June 28. See CTC, page 5 Want to improve schools? Report says to make a ‘principal pipeline’ Periodicals Dated Material Districts looking for an effective, afford- able way to improve schools may want to consider developing “principal pipelines,” according to new research from the RAND Corporation. The study examined how six large urban school districts implemented a concept called “principal pipelines,” a strategic ap- proach to the hiring, preparation, evaluation and support of school leaders, and how it improved an array of outcomes. The Wal- lace Foundation funded the $85 million, six-year initiative, the results of which were detailed in the report, “Principal Pipelines: A Feasible, Affordable, and Effective Way to Improve Schools.” RAND researchers found that schools in these districts that received a newly placed principal outperformed comparison schools in both math and reading. After three years, schools with new principals in these dis- tricts outperformed comparison schools by 6.22 percentile points in reading and 2.87 percentile points in math. These results are sizable: They suggest that a school whose students would otherwise have been at the median of the state reading achievement See PIPELINE, page 3