BYU-Idaho teacher preparation program falls short of state requirements

REXBUG — Some elementary teacher candidates at Brigham Young University-Idaho must take additional classes after state officials determined some endorsement coursework falls short of state requirements.

State officials identified a “serious problem” at BYU-Idaho, according to an email sent by the university’s Associate Academic Vice-President for Curriculum Van D. Christman.

Any students who graduate after spring 2019 will need to meet full state requirements by taking additional coursework as identified by various departments.

The State Department of Education’s chief certification officer Lisa Colón Durham acknowledged the university needs to address the problem.

“We’ve identified where the holes are,” Colón Durham said. “How they are going to fix this is up to them.”

BYU-Idaho, owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and located some 30 miles north of Idaho Falls, in Rexburg, is a major supplier to Idaho’s teacher pipeline. The university’s teacher prep program graduated 384 students in 2017, according to the Federal Title II report numbers. By comparison, all other teacher prep programs in Idaho saw 545 graduates that same year.

“Since we have been informed of this issue, BYU-Idaho has been working closely with the State to rectify the situation and allow you to obtain a teaching certificate,” stated BYU-Idaho Teacher Education Department Chair Karla LaOrange in a letter to students.

In October, a 12-member state review team evaluated BYU-Idaho’s educator preparation program. Officials examined approximately 10 percent of the university’s institutional recommendation forms from 2015 to 2018. The forms are designed to verify that candidates have met state certification requirements. A draft report resulting from the October review shows that BYU-Idaho’s reviewed institutional recommendations did not meet state rule requirements for subject-area endorsements for grades 5-9 for at least one of the following reasons:

  • Insufficient minimum credit requirements.
  • Insufficient content.
  • A math endorsement lacking appropriate subject-area assessment and content.
  • Earth and space science and natural science courses that lacked a secondary science methods requirement.

On Wednesday, after Ed News first reported the requirement shortfall, BYU-Idaho Associate Academic Vice-President for Curriculum Van D. Christman clarified the issue in an email to faculty members.

“The state identified a serious problem for current (elementary education) students associated with the middle school endorsement that all these students are required to obtain at the same time they get their (elementary education) endorsement,” Christman said.

Christman echoed LaOrange’s assurance that the university began addressing the issue after learning about it from the state. Christman added that “the state is allowing any students who graduate (everything completed, including student teaching and Praxis tests) by spring 2019 to be able to be certified in both (elementary education) and their endorsement area.”

Any students who graduate after spring 2019 will need to meet full state requirements. Christman said this can be done in one of two ways:

  • Taking additional coursework as identified by the departments to meet the requirements. That coursework has been communicated to all elementary education students, Christman said.
  • Changing to the 2019 (updated) catalog and meet all the requirements for that catalog year. Christman suggested that students choosing this option should contact faculty members in the science and geology departments, since the science area may not have a minor available to students until the 2020 catalog.
Devin Bodkin

Devin Bodkin

EdNews assistant editor and reporter Devin Bodkin is a former high school English teacher who specializes in stories about charter schools and educating students who live in poverty. He lives and works in East Idaho. Follow Devin on Twitter @dsbodkin. He can be reached by email at [email protected].

Get EdNews in your inbox

Weekly round up every Friday