October 2, 2012
BOE wants Teach for America, but state law is roadblock
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- To West Virginia Board of Education members, Teach for America seemed like a no-brainer.

Throughout the state, there is a crippling shortage of teachers. Every year, some of the brightest college graduates leave West Virginia for opportunities elsewhere and there is a perpetual struggle to get young talent to join the teaching force.

Given these factors, Teach for America, a competitive AmeriCorps-type teaching program that recruits top college graduates to teach in some of the most downtrodden school districts in the country for two years, sounded like a match made in heaven to members of the state school board.

"It's controversial, but this is an excellent program," board member Priscilla Haden said at a retreat in March.

In behind-the-scenes talks, state Board of Education members say they support starting a Teach for America program, according to a voice recording obtained by the Gazette last week. But restrictive state laws have set up major legislative roadblocks to establishing the program in West Virginia, and teachers unions also oppose the program.

"If we had teachers in all the slots, then I can see why we would be picky about [Teach for America]," board member Gayle Manchin said at a meeting at Stonewall Resort in March, according to the voice recording. "But a lot of [teachers] sitting in those seats aren't qualified in their content area. [School boards] are just trying to put warm bodies into the seats. This is the stuff that drives you insane."

Last year in West Virginia, there was a statewide shortage of 690 full-time teachers, according to state education data. About half of West Virginia's teaching force will be eligible to retire in the next decade, according to numbers from the American Federation of Teachers.

Starting a Teach for America program to increase the supply of educators is a major recommendation of a $750,000 audit of the state's education system. The audit, released by Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin in January, lays out a series of sweeping reforms from recruiting teachers to implementing energy savings, that could save the state $90 million a year.  

The state board has wrestled for months on how to respond to the politically charged audit. They have hedged on some reform issues like taking seniority out of the hiring process for teachers, according to the tape recording. But when it comes to TFA, board members were unequivocal in their support.  

Teach for America opened an Appalachia branch in April 2011, with 30 TFA members serving as first-year teachers in some of eastern Kentucky's highest-needs schools.  TFA plans to bring 90 teachers to understaffed schools in the area in the next three years. 

But the program can't take off in West Virginia, where state law essentially boxes out the TFA program, according to Heather Deskins, general counsel for the state Department of Education.

State law says that a new alternatively certified teacher must have 18 hours of higher education training and have a bachelor's degree in the subject area they want to teach, said Deskins.

"There is still no viable alternative teacher pathway, and that's obviously a barrier to TFA," said Natalie Laukitis, TFA's director of regional communications. "That barrier is fairly concrete. Unfortunately there's been no real movement in West Virginia on that piece."

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Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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