Teachers Preparing To Improve Professional Certification

The West Virginia Department of Education is hosting professional development sessions in Bridgeport through July 13 to help teachers prepare for National Board Certification, the highest certification available in K-12 education.

The West Virginia Department of Education is hosting professional development sessions in Bridgeport through July 13 to help teachers prepare for National Board Certification.

National Board Certification is the highest certification available in K-12 education and can take up to five years to complete. 

“This is a voluntary process that a teacher who has experience chooses to go through to demonstrate their practice,” said Carla Warren, officer of the Division of Educator Development and Support at the West Virginia Department of Education. “They demonstrate their ability to understand their content, they then demonstrate their ability to know students well and the needs of students. It demonstrates their content knowledge and their pedagogical knowledge and the art of teaching. It demonstrates their ability to be an accomplished teacher.”

Warren said more than a decade of research supports the impact that a National Board Certified teacher has on their students, particularly those of low SES, or socioeconomic status.

“For our rural, low SES students here in Appalachia, this has the ability to make a tremendous impact on our students,” Warren said. “The fact that this is a voluntary certification speaks to the dedication and commitment of our teachers. Anytime that we can strengthen our teaching force, we are strengthening our student achievement.” 

West Virginia currently ranks 13th in the nation for the percentage of National Board Certified Teachers per capita. Warren said this is the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic that the state has been able to offer this preparation to teachers in person.

“We’re very excited. We have about 50 participants in Bridgeport this week. We were in Charleston last month and had about 60 participants,” she said. “These individuals who have chosen to come and participate are learning about the process and actually starting the process towards National Board Certification.”

Warren said West Virginia is one of only 29 states that provides additional compensation to a teacher who has achieved national board certification, and one of only 24 states that reimburses all of the fees associated with this certification. 

“The legislature provides a $3,500 salary stipend per year for the life of the certification,” she said. “In addition, most of our counties provide an additional stipend. By pursuing national board certification, some of these teachers will be able to increase their salaries up to $7,000 each year, based on where they live in the state.”

Legislators Learn Challenges For Teachers With The Third Grade Success Act

Legislators learned that it may take teachers years to be fully prepared for the implementation of the state’s new early childhood literacy requirements. 

Legislators learned that it may take teachers years to be fully prepared for the implementation of the state’s new early childhood literacy requirements. 

With House Bill 3035 and the Third Grade Success Act set to become law next month, the Joint Standing Committee on Education heard a presentation on the science of reading during interim meetings at Marshall University Monday.

Toni Backstrom, strategic state solutions manager at Lexia Learning, explained to the lawmakers that their goal of increasing reading proficiency is possible, but it will take a lot of work and specifically support for teachers.

“Research and science show us that 95 percent of students can learn,” she said. “I don’t say that lightly. A number of our students will struggle, they will need additional support and intervention. But if our teachers have the expertise, they can meet every one of those students where they are when they step into the room and get them on that trajectory to success.”

Senate Education Committee Chair Sen. Amy Grady, R-Mason, who is a teacher, said teacher training and professional development will likely take years.  

“Our teachers are so used to professional development being a one day thing. We have an eight hour day and schedule the kids are off and we have professional development that day and it ends that day,” Grady said. “For this to be expanded, I think that’s going to be our challenge, is the mindset of ‘Okay, it’s not something I’m learning in one day. It’s something that I am using and continuing to learn over the course of a few years and even still doing it after that as well.’”

West Virginia Agencies Adding More Art Funding

State officials are adding more funding for grants for West Virginia artists and arts organizations.The West Virginia Division of Culture and History and…

  State officials are adding more funding for grants for West Virginia artists and arts organizations.

The West Virginia Division of Culture and History and the West Virginia Commission on the Arts said they are adding a second funding cycle for professional development grants.

The program gives funding to artists interested in taking their artistic skills to the next level and nonprofit arts organizations interested in expanding programs that support artists.

The program awards artists up to $2,500 for new equipment, workshops, apprenticeships and more. Nonprofit arts organizations can apply for up to $5,000.

Applications will be accepted through Oct. 1.

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