I would argue it does the opposite. People always want to ***** how anyone can teach, blah blah blah. Well if passing a teacher cert test wasn't a requirement I bet the schools would be filled with people who are even bigger idiots who think teaching is simple and an easy buck with summers off. It would be even worse for the kids. Granted, there would always be outliers but my guess would be that it would do more harm than good.Serotonin said:I am against unnecessary bureaucracy and administrative process.Booma94 said:So you want people teaching to be LESS qualified. Got it.Serotonin said:Booma94 said:
Not sure why it even matters. Once vouchers are instituted, no teacher certification will be needed. Private schools can already hire anyone to teach with no requirement for degree or certification, and when all of education is privatized it will only get easier to hire non-certified teachers.
I blue starred this post as a hopeful description of the future of education. Now I realize that you might be saying this like it's a bad thing.
My wife went through the teacher certification program here in Texas and it is every bit the joke one would imagine.
Do these certifications correlate with actual teacher effectiveness 5 or 10 years down the line? Holding other variables equal do schools with fully certified staff perform better than those without?
I will admit the certification is good at two things: keeping motivated new competition out of the teaching pool and creating a cottage industry of grift where companies make thousands off of prospective teachers.
At least now a teacher is required to pass the cert test you know that they ARE motivated to teach because they are jumping through all the hoops in order to do so. It isn't like becoming a teacher is the only job in the world where an additional certification is required in addition to a college degree.