American Public Values Teacher Quality, Opposes High-Stakes Testing, Split on Opting Out

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For interviews, contact: Jerrica Thurman
(202) 478-4502 or jthurman@aacte.org

(August 25, 2015, Washington, D.C.) – AACTE’s more than 800 member institutions are dedicated to high-quality preparation that ensures the effectiveness, diversity and readiness of professional educators, supporting the priorities of the American public surveyed in the 47th annual PDK/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools. The recently released 2015 poll included questions on teacher quality and evaluation, standards, testing and more, and a new online polling format captured selected demographic information, allowing for more disaggregated responses than past surveys.

The survey shows that 95% of Americans consider the quality of teachers to be very important and an integral factor for improving public schools. As in past years, an overwhelming majority of the U.S. public also is pleased with the performance of their local schools. Testing is viewed less favorably, though, including for teacher accountability purposes; 55% of Americans and 61% of public school parents oppose using student scores on standardized tests as part of teacher evaluations. Respondents also are skeptical of federal policy influences on public schools and of the Common Core State Standards.

“Public school parents understand the real factors involved in providing high-quality education for their children,” said Sharon P. Robinson, Ed.D., president and CEO of AACTE. “While it is important to have the right metrics to inform instruction, the key to quality education is teaching, not testing.”

To encourage such use of assessment data, AACTE recently launched the Quality Support Initiative, designed to support the profession in efforts of continuous improvement and to achieve accreditation. The initiative offers a series of Online Professional Seminars focused on providing professional development and building programs’ capacity for high-quality educator preparation.

AACTE also shares the public’s opinion about the importance of teacher quality. Educator preparation programs are working to align themselves more closely with schools’ workforce needs, including increasing the diversity of the educator pipeline to better match students’ demographics. In AACTE’s “Networked Improvement Community,” 10 institutions are collaborating on strategies to recruit more Black and Hispanic men into teacher preparation programs. In addition, AACTE’s Holmes Program is expanding to support more underrepresented students pursuing careers in education, including the education professoriate, in schools and colleges nationwide.

“AACTE values the insights provided by the PDK/Gallup poll regarding Americans’ perceptions about our schools,” Robinson said. “These results inform our ongoing work to improve educator preparation for the benefit of all of our nation’s students.”

For more information on the PDK/Gallup poll reports, visit pdkpoll.org.

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AACTE: The Leading Voice on Educator Preparation The American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education is a national alliance of educator preparation programs dedicated to high-quality, evidence-based preparation that assures educators are ready to teach all learners on Day 1. Its over 800 member institutions represent public and private colleges and universities in every state, the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and Guam. AACTE leads the field in advocacy and capacity building by promoting innovation and effective practices as critical to reforming educator preparation. For more information, visit www.aacte.org.

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