| Glossary of Terms |
|
Accreditation. A process of assessing and enhancing academic and educational quality through voluntary peer review. NCATE accreditation informs the public that an institution has a professional education unit that has met state, professional, and institutional standards of educational quality.
Advanced Preparation. Programs at post-baccalaureate levels for (1) the continuing education of teachers who have previously completed initial preparation or (2) the preparation of other professional school personnel. Advanced preparation programs commonly award graduate credit and include masters, specialist, and doctoral degree programs as well as non-degree licensure programs offered at the graduate level.
APs or FEAPs. Abbreviation
for Florida Educator Accomplished Practices. The
state of
Assessment System. A comprehensive and integrated set of evaluation measures that provides information for use in monitoring candidate performance and managing and improving unit operations and programs for the preparation of professional educators.
Candidates. Individuals
admitted to, or enrolled in, programs for the initial or advanced preparation
of teachers, teachers continuing their professional development, or other
professional school personnel. Candidates are distinguished
from “students” in P-12 schools.
Conceptual Framework. An underlying structure in a professional education unit that gives conceptual meanings through an articulated rationale to the unit’s operation, and provides direction for programs, courses, teaching, candidate performance, faculty scholarship and service, and unit accountability.
Content. The subject matter or disciple that teachers are being prepared to teach at the elementary, middle level, and/or secondary levels. Content also refers to the professional field of study (e.g., special education, early childhood, school psychology, reading, or school administration.)
Dispositions. The values, commitments, and professional ethics that influence behaviors toward students, families, colleagues, and communities and affect student learning, motivation, and development as well as the educator’s own professional growth. Dispositions are guided by beliefs and attitudes related to values such as caring, fairness, honesty, responsibility, and social justice. For example, they might include a belief that all students can learn, a vision of high and challenging standards, or a commitment to a safe and supportive learning environment.
Diversity. Differences
among groups of people and individuals based on ethnicity, race, socioeconomic
status, gender, exceptionalities, language, religion, sexual orientation, and
geographical area.
Exceptionalities. A physical, mental, or emotional condition, including gifted/talented abilities, that requires individualized instruction and/or other educational support or services.
Field Experiences. A
variety of early and ongoing field-based opportunities in which candidates may
observe, assist, tutor, instruct, and/or conduct research. Field
experiences may occur in off-campus settings such as schools, community
centers, or homeless shelters.
General Education Knowledge. Theoretical and practical understanding generally expected of a liberally educated person. General education includes developing knowledge related to the arts, communications, history, literature, mathematics, philosophy, sciences, and the social studies, from multicultural and global perspectives.
Global Perspectives. An understanding of the interdependency of nations and peoples and the political, economic, ecological, and social concepts and values that affect lives within and across national boundaries. It allows for the exploration of multiple perspectives on events and issues.
Initial Teacher Preparation. Programs at baccalaureate or post-baccalaureate levels that prepare candidates for the first license to teach.
Institutional Standards. Candidate knowledge, skills, and dispositions identified by the institution to reflect its mission and the unit’s conceptual framework.
Internship. Generally, the post-licensure and/or graduate clinical practice under the supervision of clinical faculty; sometimes refers to the pre-service clinical experience.
INTASC. The Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium, a project of the Council of Chief State School Officer (CCSSO) that has developed model performance-based standards and assessments for the licensure of teachers.
Knowledge Bases. Empirical research, disciplined inquiry, informed theory, and the wisdom of practice.
Multicultural Perspective. An understanding of the social, political, economic, academic, and historical constructs of ethnicity, race, socioeconomic status, gender, exceptionalities, language, religion, sexual orientation, and the geographic area.
NCATE. The National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. NCATE is recognized by the U. S. Department of Education as the accreditation body for colleges and universities that prepare teachers and other professional personnel for work in elementary and secondary schools. Through its voluntary, peer review process, NCATE ensures that accredited institutions produce competent, caring, and qualified teachers and other professional school personnel who can help all students learn.
Pedagogical Content Knowledge. The interaction of the subject matter and effective teaching strategies to help students learn the subject matter. It requires a thorough understanding of the content to teach it in multiple ways, drawing on the cultural backgrounds and prior knowledge and experiences of students.
Pedagogical Knowledge. The general concepts, theories, and research about effective teaching, regardless of content areas.
Performance Assessment. A comprehensive assessment through which candidates demonstrate their proficiencies in subject, professional, and pedagogical knowledge, skills, and dispositions, including their abilities to have positive effect on student learning.
Portfolio. An accumulation of evidence about individual proficiencies, especially in relation to explicit standards and rubrics, used in evaluation of competency as a teacher or in another professional school role. Contents might include end-of-course evaluations and tasks used for instructional or clinical experience purposes such as projects, journals, and observations by faculty, videos, comments by cooperating teachers or internship supervisors, and samples of student work.
Professional Development Schools. Specially structured schools in which the P-12 school and higher education faculty collaborate to (1) provide practicum, student teaching, and internship experiences; (2) support and enable the professional development of school and higher education faculty; (3) support and enable inquiry directed at the improvement of practice; and (4) support and enhance student achievement. PDSs require the institutional commitment of colleges and universities, school districts, and teachers’ organizations.
Professional Knowledge. The historical, economic, sociological, philosophical, and psychological understandings of schooling and education. It also includes knowledge about learning, diversity, technology, professional ethics, legal and policy issues, pedagogy, and the roles and responsibilities of the profession of teaching.
Professional Standards. Candidate knowledge, skills, and dispositions set by the specialized professional associations (SPA program standards) and adopted by NCATE for use in its accreditation review. Professional standards also refer to standards set by other recognized national organizations/accrediting agencies that evaluate professional education programs (e.g., the National Association for Schools of Music)
Rubrics. Written and
shared criteria for judging performance that indicate the qualities by which
levels of performance can be differentiated, and that anchor judgments about
the degree of success on a candidate assessment.
SPAs. Specialized Professional Associations. The national organizations that represent teachers, professional education faculty, and other school personnel who teach a specific subject matter (e.g., mathematics or social studies), teach students at a specific developmental level. (i.e., early childhood, elementary, middle level, or secondary), teach students with specific needs (e.g., bilingual education or special education), administer schools, (e.g., principals or superintendents), or provide services to students (e.g., school counselors or school psychologists). Many of these associations are constituent members of NCATE and have standards for both students in schools and candidates preparing to work in schools.
Standards. Written expectations for meeting a specified level of performance. Standards exist for the content that P-12 students should know at a certain age or grade level.
State Standards. The standards adopted by state agencies responsible for the approval of programs that prepare teachers and other school personnel. State standards may include candidate knowledge, skills, and disposition.
Student Teaching. Pre-service clinical practice for candidates preparing to teach.
Students. Children and youth attending P-12 schools as distinguished from teacher candidates.
Technology, Use of. What
candidates must know and understand about information technology in order to
use it in working effectively with students and professional colleagues in the
(1) delivery, development, prescription, and assessment of instruction; (2)
problem solving; (3) school and classroom administration; (4) educational
research; (5) electronic information access and exchange; and (6) personal and
professional productivity.
Unit. The institution,
college, school, department, or other administrative body with the
responsibility for managing or coordinating all programs offered for the
initial and continuing preparation for teachers and other school personnel,
regardless of where these programs are administratively housed. Also
known as the “professional education unit.” The Chair of the Department of
Teacher Education has the authority and responsibility for the operation of
the teacher education unit at |

