Latest News and Comment from Education

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Educators Told to Intern at Local Businesses To Renew Teacher Licenses

Educators Told to Intern at Local Businesses To Renew Teacher Licenses:
Educators Told to Intern at Local Businesses To Renew Teacher Licenses


Rachael Seibert is a teacher in her eighth year in Columbus City Schools in Ohio. She has a bachelor’s and master’s degree and welcomes professional development opportunities that improve her teaching. She usually works about 55 hours a week and teaches classes with sometimes as many as 35 students. In short, Seibert is a dedicated professional.
But as far as Ohio Governor John Kasich is concerned, it’s just not enough, which is why he has proposed that every classroom teacher take on a mandatory internship or “externship” at a local business in order to renew their teaching licenses.
The proposal can be found in Kasich’s 2017-18 budget outline, released in February – one of  many that seek to infuse the business world with the state’s public schools. Here’s what it says:
“Beginning September 1, 2018, the state board of education’s rules for the renewal of educator licenses shall require each applicant for renewal of a license to complete an on-site work experience with a local business or chamber of commerce as a condition of renewal.”
Ryan Burgess, who heads up the Governor’s Office of Workforce Transformation that designed these and other similar proposals, says this requirement is necessary for educators to learn more about today’s businesses – information and ideas that they can then take back to their students and help prepare them for the 21st economy.
It’s not that schools and educators shouldn’t always find more ways to cultivate more “real world” learning in the classroom, says Seibert. The problem is with Kasich’s specific proposal, which she calls “ludicrous.”
“I consider myself a highly-educated educator. I know how business works. My husband is small business owner and I integrate real-word topics in the classroom every day. The assumption that we don’t know how to this and that we need to ‘job-shadow’  is insulting,” says Seibert.
The Ohio Education Association (OEA) is strongly opposed to tying licensure renewal with on-site work experience with local businesses. “This is another needless hoop for teachers to jump through that was created by those who are not part of the profession,” said OEA President Becky Higgins.
Acquiring a better understanding of the kinds of skills employers are seeking is a Educators Told to Intern at Local Businesses To Renew Teacher Licenses: