At a time when most American states have embedded an initial certification test into their teacher preparation programs, Canadian educational authorities are faced with a choice: to test or not. One province, Ontario, has experimented with a standardized entry-to-the- profession testing instrument. For three years, 2002-04, teacher candidates were required to take an externally-administered examination, on top of the normal Bachelor of Education requirements, prior to certification. The results were decidedly mixed: politically viable, but pedagogically questionable. Now, the debate has been re-opened, as a new government seeks a more effective form of entry-level assessment for aspiring teachers.
The debates about teacher licensure have long reflected a grace, decorum, and rhetorical nu-ance mor...
Many Ontarians have lost faith in their teachers. In the court of public opinion, teachers are greed...
Today, public confidence in our educational system has eroded to a very low level. Many people do no...
A commitment to mandatory teacher testing formed part of the victorious Conservative government’s pl...
This study examines the historical origins and educational and political objectives of the Ontario S...
Video series produced by the Education Commons, OISE/UTThis is the second time in Ontario history th...
The job of any teacher is first and foremost to promote learning in their students. Student learning...
The focus of this article is on the introduction, justification, and enactment of the Mathematics Pr...
peer-reviewedThe 1980s witnessed an unparalled review, analysis, and critique of the quality of edu...
The Government of Ontario has introduced a teacher competency program in the province. Under the pro...
The introduction of an initial teacher certification test in Ontario in 2002 was met by a wide range...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the development of the Ontario College o...
As states and provinces develop large-scale assessment programs linked to their curricula, teachers ...
Pedagogues and practitioners alike accept the vital importance of an effective professional inductio...
The education reform movement includes efforts to raise teacher quality through stricter certificati...
The debates about teacher licensure have long reflected a grace, decorum, and rhetorical nu-ance mor...
Many Ontarians have lost faith in their teachers. In the court of public opinion, teachers are greed...
Today, public confidence in our educational system has eroded to a very low level. Many people do no...
A commitment to mandatory teacher testing formed part of the victorious Conservative government’s pl...
This study examines the historical origins and educational and political objectives of the Ontario S...
Video series produced by the Education Commons, OISE/UTThis is the second time in Ontario history th...
The job of any teacher is first and foremost to promote learning in their students. Student learning...
The focus of this article is on the introduction, justification, and enactment of the Mathematics Pr...
peer-reviewedThe 1980s witnessed an unparalled review, analysis, and critique of the quality of edu...
The Government of Ontario has introduced a teacher competency program in the province. Under the pro...
The introduction of an initial teacher certification test in Ontario in 2002 was met by a wide range...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study examines the development of the Ontario College o...
As states and provinces develop large-scale assessment programs linked to their curricula, teachers ...
Pedagogues and practitioners alike accept the vital importance of an effective professional inductio...
The education reform movement includes efforts to raise teacher quality through stricter certificati...
The debates about teacher licensure have long reflected a grace, decorum, and rhetorical nu-ance mor...
Many Ontarians have lost faith in their teachers. In the court of public opinion, teachers are greed...
Today, public confidence in our educational system has eroded to a very low level. Many people do no...