The Professional Preparation of Teachers Resolution
American Federation of Teachers (1984-01)
Item Metadata (#3480096)
ID: 3480096
Title: The Professional Preparation of Teachers Resolution
Creator: American Federation of Teachers
Date: 1984-01
Description: A resolution regarding the professional preparation of teachers
Subjects: Education Reform
Location: Washington, D.C
Original Format: Paper
Source: American Federation of Teachers,. (1984). The professional preparation of teachers. 1.
Publisher: WPR
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RESOLUTION -1984 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF TEACHERS, AFL-CIO
THE PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION OF TEACHERS
WHEREAS, teaching is a profession, that requires a firm grounding in its intellectual foundations as well as ex•perience in its practice and mastery of subject matter, and
WHEREAS, all of these components are required for the proper preparation of qualified teachers, and
WHEREAS, the current popular demand for excellence in education calls for a strengthening of such prepara•tion and not its weakening, and
WHEREAS, some official bodies responsible for the cer•tification of teachers have proposed a relaxation of such requirements for the sake of expediency;
RESOLVED, that the American Federation of Teachers reaffirms its commitment to professional studies, internship and subject matter mastery as the prere•quisites to teacher certification, and
RESOLVED, that the AFT encourages teacher preparation institutions and state certification boards to enhance teacher preparation by pursu•ing the following recommendations:
• requiring that all college and university graduates in teacher education have a major in an academic subject field other than education and that secondary school teacher candidates have an academic major in the subject which they will be teaching;
•
insuring that the clinical and field experiences of teacher education students are more directly supervised and planned by college or university faculty specializing in the appropriate discipline;
•
insuring that college and university faculty in•tegrate these experiences more closely with the student's on-campus course work; helping develop a better line between the university supervisor and classroom teacher supervising the experiences;
•
conducting a general periodic review and upgrading of course offerings, including broad educational issues as well as the more particular teacher training concerns; reviewing methods and foundation of education courses periodical•ly to insure their relevance and usefulness to the future educator, including computer skills for teachers in the teacher education curriculum;
•
evaluating faculty involved in teacher preparation programs on their ability to handle such respon•sibilities as classroom instruction and supervi•sion of clinical and field experiences and student teaching as well as on research;
•
insuring that, while alternative routes to certifica•tion of teachers should be studied, these routes do not ignore the need for vigorous academic training including professional teacher education courses supervision, and
RESOLVED, that the American Federation of Teachers
. opposes attempts to eliminate or compromise these requirements and any other attempt to de•professionalize the profession of teaching. (1984)