CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19) RESOURCE CENTER Read More
Add To Favorites

Three House bills address teacher shortage, creating pathways for veterans and aides, and for high schoolers eyeing a degree

Dominion Post - 2/20/2023

Feb. 20—MORGANTOWN — The House Education Committee approved three bills aimed at addressing the statewide teacher shortage by creating pathways for veterans and teacher aides, and launching a long-term "Grow Your Own " program.

HB 3368 creates a state Troops-to-Teachers program. It enables retired officers and staff non-commissioned offers to obtain a teaching certificate.

The veteran must be honorably discharged, hold a degree related to the teaching position to be filled and a military instructor certification. The veteran must pass sill and subject matter tests. The veteran would receive a veteran's preference on tests — 5 points plus another possible 5 points for a qualifying disability or Purple Heart.

Lead sponsor Delegate Bill Ridenour, R-Jefferson, said the bill has two aims: address the teacher shortage and draw on an available resource with valuable skill sets.

Delegate David Elliott Pritt, D-Fayette, is a classroom teacher and an Air Force veteran. He said veterans are well-trained in academics.

"Many of the courses that I went through when I was in the Air Force were much more academically rigorous than almost every college course that I took for my bachelor's or master's degree, period, " Pritt said. "It's hard for me to imagine that we would sit here and say those aren't the type of people we would want teaching kids."

It goes next to Finance.

HB 2761 would allow a county school board to employ an aide with no less than 10 years of experience as a teacher, with the proviso that the aide complete a teacher prep course and get certified within three years, or graduate from a higher education institution and enroll in an alternative certification program.

Carla Warren, with the state Department of Education, told the committee that the department will be launching a similar but distinct program this fall for classroom paraprofessionals to obtain a certificate. Paraprofessionals are a step above aides, she said, with more training and more authority regrading teaching and supervising students.

The committee passed an amended version with some additional requirements proposed by the bill's lead sponsor. The vote was not unanimous. It goes next to the full House.

HB 3035 creates the Grow Your Own West Virginia Pathway to Teaching Pilot Program.

The bill was a multi-faceted bill addressing reading and math education, but a committee amendment pared it down to just the Grow Your Own portion ; committee counsel said the other aspects were already handled in other bills moving through the system.

The three-year pilot program will provide a career path for those interested in education careers, staring from high school through a post-secondary degree. It will offer a dual-credit path to obtain an education degree after three years at an eligible institution, plus apprenticeship opportunities in the field and a classroom residency during the last year of instruction.

The Department of Education will report on the program annually to the Legislature and the state schools superintendent will recommend whether the program should be continued after completion of the pilot.

It goes next to Finance.

Tweet David Beard @dbeardtdp Email dbeard @dominionpost.com

___

(c)2023 The Dominion Post (Morgantown, W.Va.)

Visit The Dominion Post (Morgantown, W.Va.) at www.dominionpost.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.