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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (May 19, 2005) — Tennessee Tech University teacher
candidates are among the head of the class when it comes to passing the
state’s professional licensing exam.
Of the 259 TTU education majors who took the Educational Testing Service’s
PRAXIS II teacher licensing exams last year, 256 of those students passed,
earning a 99 percent success rate for the university and exceeding the
state’s 96 percent average.
“I’m so proud of how well our students have done,”
said Darrell Garber, TTU’s dean of education. “The pass rate
in 2000 — the year I became dean — was 91 percent, with the
state average at 93 percent. I thought we could do better than that, and
I’m pleased to discover I was right.”
Sandy H. Smith, TTU’s director of teacher education, said the university’s
pass rate for the licensing exam hovered at or around 90 percent for several
years but began to improve in 2000, when the College of Education began
requiring the test for student-teaching rather than simply graduation.
“We began offering a series of preparatory sessions that can also
be counted as a one-hour special topics course, although most education
majors don’t need the elective and participate on a non-credit basis,”
she said.
Each student’s attendance and progress is closely monitored throughout
the series of five weekly sessions, which focus on techniques for testing
success, such as applying teaching theories and strategies in practical
situations.
“The PRAXIS II was created to test the limits of a teacher candidate’s
knowledge, not just in subject content but also in practical teaching
applications. It’s a comprehensive series of cognitive tests that
aren’t made to be easy,” said Nikki Harrison, a TTU graduate
assistant who helped lead the preparatory sessions.
The greatest single improvement in any specific testing category, Garber
said, was World and United States History, up from only 71 percent to
100.
Other significant areas of improvement were in the Special Education
and Physical Education Content categories, each with a previous pass rate
of 77 percent and now up to 95 and 94 percent respectively.
Requiring students to take the licensure exam prior to student-teaching
has not only helped TTU increase its overall pass rate, however, Smith
said.
“It’s also created more confident student teachers —
and learning how to be confident and comfortable in front of a classroom
is what being a teacher is all about.”
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 19 May 2005
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