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Missouri Career Education Mentoring Program

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Title: Missouri Career Education Mentoring Program


1
Missouri Career Education Mentoring Program
  • Presented by
  • Dennis D. Harden, Ed.D.
  • Coordinator, Career Education
  • Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary
    Education
  • Larae Watkins, Ph.D.
  • Coordinator, Research and Curriculum
  • Missouri Center for Career Education

2
We Need to Help Teachers Succeed because
  • Currently, more than half of new teachers leave
    the profession in their first five years.
  • New teachers who participate in induction
    programs are nearly twice as likely to stay in
    the professional as those who do not.
  • Research indicates a critical predicator of
    student success is teacher quality.
  • By the end of the decade, the U.S. will need two
    million new teachers.
  • Source Beginning Now Resources for Organizers
    of Beginning Teachers

3
A Quick View of New Teachers
  • Almost two thirds are younger than 27
  • More than one fourth of them are not fully
    certified
  • 42 have just completed college and have never
    taught
  • 34 are former teachers who are coming back to
    the profession
  • The majority are single and in debt.
  • Source Beginning Now Resources for Organizers
    of Beginning Teachers

4
The Financial Benefits of Mentoring
  • Question
  • What is the cost to the district when a new
    teacher leaves teaching or is not rehired?
  • Answer
  • The answer is found in answering more questions.

5
What are the districts costs
  • For new teacher recruitment, especially for
    recruiting the kind of diverse staff a great
    district wants?
  • For new teacher orientation and training during
    the first year or two?
  • In student learning during the year or two a new
    teacher is learning to teach?
  • For the loss of instruction continuity when new
    teachers leave or are not rehired because they
    are not successful?
  • For administrator time spent orienting,
    evaluating, coaching, and supporting new teachers
    who are not retrained?
  • When struggling novice teachers must focus more
    on their own needs, than those of the students?

6
Consider this
  • Every teacher who leaves the profession during
    the first three years likely costs taxpayers in
    excess of 50,000 (Leslie Huling and Virginia
    Resta, Southwest State Texas University). This
    is based on an industry standard of calculating
    2.5 times the employees initial salary in
    recruitment and personnel expenditures and lost
    productivity.
  • Source Effective Teaching by Harry and
    Rosemary Wong

7
In Missouri
  • According to Educator Certification, possessors
    of an initial professional certificate shall
    participate in a mentoring program approved and
    provided by the district for a minimum of two
    years.
  • Flexibility is built in that allows educators to
    participate in other mentoring programs as
    approved by the district.
  • Mentoring requirement includes teachers,
    administrators and all other certificate holders.

8
Career Education Mentoring Program
  • Started during the 2003-04 school year.
  • Included all career education program areas.
  • Mentor training provided at MoACTE Summer
    Conference.
  • Fall inservice for all mentors and proteges
  • Program modeled after Marketing and Cooperative
    Education initiative.
  • Facilitated by the Missouri Center for Career
    Education.
  • Added K-12/9-12 Guidance Counselors during
    2004-05 school year.

9
The Career Education Mentoring Program
Complements In-district Mentoring by
  • Providing an outstanding teacher in the same
    content area and specific courses to serve as a
    mentor.
  • Allowing each teacher in a program to focus on
    the specific courses taught.
  • Assisting with and addressing content-specific
    issues related to alternative certification.
  • Bringing new ideas and resources into a program
    and is less threatening since the mentor is from
    a different school.
  • Providing additional help for a new teacher even
    though the in-district mentor may be in the same
    content area program.
  • Avoiding any potential personality conflicts with
    fellow teachers and protecting the self-respect
    and confidence of the new teacher.
  • Creating a partnership with the in-district
    mentor, to ensure thorough coverage of district
    as well as content-specific policies and
    procedures.

10
How does it work?
  • A mailing goes to districts in the spring
    requesting the number and type of new career
    education teachers expected for the upcoming
    school year.
  • Follow up with an application for protege to
    complete and send back to DESE. Includes
    district administrator signature.
  • DESE program staff make mentor/protégé
    assignments/matches.
  • Mentor training at MoACTE Summer Conference.
  • Second year mentoring activities completed at
    MoACTE Summer Conference.
  • Content experts for each program area that serve
    as the point person for questions by the mentor
    and/or protégé.

11
How does it work? (continued)
  • Fall inservice meeting with all first year
    mentor/protégé teams.
  • Mid year meetings held for first year and second
    year mentor/protégé teams by program area.
  • Mentor/protégé school visits completed during the
    year.
  • Assignments completed by protege and verified by
    mentor.

12
How does it work? (Continued)
  • Assignments include
  • Individual mentoring plan
  • Structured Experiences I and II
  • Mentor/Protégé Visit Report
  • Mentoring Program Evaluation

13
Other Components
  • Funding
  • Participating in Administrator Mentoring Program
    for Career Education directors and assistant
    directors.
  • Statewide advisory committee
  • Mentoring Blog
  • Fine tuning of process ongoing
  • Research

14
Here is what participants have said about the
program
  • This is a great program to put new teachers on
    the right track. Having someone to reply to the
    hundreds of questions is very comforting.
  • Protégé
  • This program is most vital for new teachers in
    one-teacher departments as they have the least
    support and resources at their disposal.
  • Mentor

15
Here is what participants have said about the
program
  • The greatest benefit from my Mentoring
    experience is that a chain of support has been
    built.
  • Protégé
  • As a mentor, I thought it was particularly
    beneficial in that it gave me an awareness of my
    need for continued growth. The programs
    organized experiences are appropriate and
    helpful.
  • Mentor

16
Is It Working?
  • Data is needed to answer this question.
  • A longitudinal database is under development for
    long-term tracking of program participants.
  • Preliminary analysis of initial data show that
    the quick answer is YES!

17
What we are tracking
  • Mentoring Program Completion tied to
  • Missouri Teacher Certification Database
  • Types of certifications held
  • Missouri Core Data
  • Teaching assignments what, where, during which
    years

18
Preliminary findings
19
Preliminary findings
20
Things we plan to add to the data collection and
analysis
  • Comparing to the retention of new career
    education teachers who do not participate in the
    statewide program
  • Reviewing retention of program participants at 5,
    7 and 10 years from the start of their program
  • Reviewing retention by program area
  • Qualitative determination of precipitating
    factors that influenced participants decision to
    stay in or leave teaching

21
For more information, contact
  • Missouri Center for Career Education
  • http//missouricareereducation.org/pd/mentoring/in
    dex.html
  • or
  • Dennis D. Harden, Ed.D.
  • Coordinator
  • Career Education
  • Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
  • Dennis.Harden_at_dese.mo.gov
  • (573) 751-3500
  • or
  • Larae Watkins, Ph.D.
  • Coordinator, Research and Curriculum
  • Missouri Center for Career Education
  • lwatkins_at_ucmo.edu
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