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[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 9005 Introduced in House (IH)]
<DOC>
118th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. R. 9005
To ensure that Federal work-study funding is available for students
enrolled in residency programs for teachers, principals, or school
leaders, and for other purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
July 11, 2024
Mr. Crow (for himself, Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. Chavez-DeRemer, and Mr.
Fitzpatrick) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the
Committee on Education and the Workforce
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To ensure that Federal work-study funding is available for students
enrolled in residency programs for teachers, principals, or school
leaders, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Teacher, Principal, and Leader
Residency Access Act''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) Across the United States, local educational agencies
and elementary and secondary schools are struggling to meet the
growing demand for qualified teachers. A 2023 study found that
over 310,000 teaching positions in the United States were
staffed by instructors who were underqualified to teach or were
left entirely vacant.
(2) Teacher shortages are disproportionately located in
low-income, high-minority schools, although schools of every
kind have been affected by a lack of qualified applicants in
key subjects including mathematics, special education, science,
world languages, career and technical education, and teachers
of English language learners.
(3) Teacher shortages are driven in significant part by
teacher turnover. Research shows that teacher turnover is
higher for those who enter the profession without adequate
preparation. Teachers who enter the profession through a
comprehensive high-quality program with comprehensive
preservice clinical experiences, formal feedback on their
teaching, and multiple courses in student learning, as required
in high-quality teaching residency programs, are more likely to
remain in the profession compared to teachers who enter through
a route that lacks these components. Not only are fully
prepared teachers more effective on average, they are also half
as likely to leave teaching as under-prepared teachers.
(4) Teacher shortages and teacher turnover are costly. Each
time a teacher leaves a school, it not only increases demand
but also imposes replacement costs on the local educational
agency, which range from $9,000 per teacher in small rural
local educational agencies to over $20,000 in large urban local
educational agencies. The national price tag of replacement
costs for teachers is over $8,000,000,000 a year.
(5) Teaching residency programs, which recruit candidates
to work as paid apprentices to skilled expert teachers while
completing highly integrated coursework, have been successful
in recruiting talented, diverse candidates into high-need
fields and local educational agencies.
(6) Research on teaching residency programs show that such
programs are effective in bringing more teachers of color into
the profession and in preparing such teachers to stay for the
long term. For the 2022-2023 school year, about 69 percent of
people in teaching residency programs that partner with the
National Center for Teacher Residencies identify as people of
color, which is higher than the 21 percent of teachers
nationally who identify as people of color.
(7) The teaching residency program model creates long-term
benefits for local educational agencies, schools, and for the
students served by such agencies and schools. Rigorous studies
of teaching residency programs have found significantly higher
retention rates for graduates of teaching residency programs,
addressing one of the primary contributors to teacher
shortages, as well as positive evidence about educator
effectiveness.
(8) A review of teaching residency program evaluations
shows that teachers who completed high quality teaching
residency programs tend to have higher teaching retention rates
over time compared to teachers who did not complete such
programs, including--
(A) in Boston, where teaching residents
participating in the Boston Teacher Residency program
had higher retention rates compared to teachers who
were not teaching residents, with 80 percent of
residents still teaching in Boston public schools for a
third year, compared to 63 percent of teachers who were
not teaching residents, and 75 percent of teaching
residents still teaching for a fifth year, compared to
51 percent of teachers who were not teaching residents;
(B) in Tennessee, where 90 percent of Memphis
Teacher Residency program participants were still
teaching for a third year, compared with less than 60
percent of teachers district-wide; and
(C) additional studies of teaching residency
programs show similarly high retention rates of
graduates, ranging from 80 percent to 90 percent
teaching in the same district after 3 years, and 70
percent to 80 percent teaching in the same district
after 5 years.
(9) In 2019, there were at least 50 teaching residency
programs nationwide, which range in size from five to 100
teaching residents per year. Several States, including
California, Delaware, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico, New
York, Pennsylvania, Texas, and West Virginia, are expanding
access to high-quality teaching residency programs through
increased levels of State investment and support.
(10) According to data from California, over 75 percent of
individuals who completed a teaching residency program rated
themselves as well or very well prepared to meet the State's
standards for the teaching profession. These residents reported
receiving more intensive clinical experiences and supports and
had more positive perceptions of their preparation than
participants in other pathways. Research also shows that
teaching residents strengthen schools across the country by
reducing teacher shortages and providing local educational
agencies with a more sustainable educator workforce.
(11) Teaching residency programs align with the purpose of
the Federal Work-Study Program to provide valuable work
experience and work related to a student's course of study and
intended profession. Further, the Federal Work-Study Program
prioritizes teaching reading based on scientifically-based
research on reading, a feature consistent with efforts in
teaching residency programs to equip all new teachers,
regardless of subject area, with the skills to support reading
and literacy skills for all students.
(12) According to a recent report by the George W. Bush
Institute on principal talent management, preparing successful
principals requires new, comprehensive approaches by school
districts, universities, States, and others who pull together
to train and support principals. Thoughtfully designed and
implemented principal residency programs can be a powerful
piece of this comprehensive and collaborative approach to
training future educational leadership.
(13) Residencies for aspiring school principals are a
promising approach to initiate principal candidates into school
leadership practice and has become a part of some comprehensive
principal preparation programs over the past 20 years.
Principal residencies reinvent the traditional internship
experience, which has often been the capstone experience in
principal preparation. Residency immerses principal candidates
in rigorous apprenticeship experiences that are designed to
advance leadership and management practices, as well as
emphasize data analysis, action, reflection, and
accountability.
SEC. 3. FEDERAL WORK-STUDY FOR RESIDENCY PROGRAMS FOR TEACHERS,
PRINCIPALS, AND OTHER SCHOOL LEADERS.
Section 443 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087-53)
is amended--
(1) in subsection (d)--
(A) in the header, by inserting ``School-Based''
before ``Tutoring'';
(B) in paragraph (1)--
(i) by striking ``tutoring in reading'' and
inserting ``school-based activities including
residency programs, tutoring in reading,''; and
(ii) by striking subparagraphs (A) and (B)
and inserting the following:
``(A) employed--
``(i) as reading tutors for children who
are preschool age or are in elementary school;
or
``(ii) in family literacy projects; or
``(B) serving in a residency program of the
institution.''; and
(C) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in subparagraph (A)(ii), by striking
``and'' after the semicolon;
(ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking the
period and inserting ``; and''; and
(iii) by inserting at the end the following
new subparagraph:
``(C) ensure that any student compensated with the
funds described in paragraph (1) who is serving in a
residency program receives compensation for time spent
in training and travel directly related to such
residency.''; and
(2) by adding the following new subsection at the end:
``(f) Residency Programs for Teachers, Principals, and Other School
Leaders.--
``(1) Use of funds.--Funds granted to an institution under
this section may be used to support students serving in
residency programs, including compensation for time spent in
training and travel directly related to such residency.
``(2) Priority.--An institution shall--
``(A) give priority to students who are serving in
a residency program and who have been determined to be
eligible for a Federal Pell Grant under section 401;
and
``(B) ensure that any student compensated with the
funds described in paragraph (1) for a residency
program receives appropriate training to acquire
teaching skills (as such term is defined in section
200) or school leader skills (as defined in this
section).
``(3) Federal share.--The Federal share of the compensation
of work-study students compensated under this subsection may
exceed 75 percent.
``(4) Definitions.--In this section:
``(A) Residency program.--The term `residency
program' means a school-based educator preparation
program in which a prospective teacher, principal, or
other school leader--
``(i) for 1 academic year, works alongside
a mentor teacher, principal, or other school
leader who is--
``(I) the teacher of record; or
``(II) rated as effective or above
in the State's school leader evaluation
and support system (as described in
section 2101(c)(4)(B)(ii) of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act
of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 6611(c)(4)(B)(ii)))
or, if no such ratings are available,
on other comparable indicators of
performance;
``(ii) receives concurrent instruction
during the year described in clause (i) from
the institution, which may be courses taught by
local educational agency personnel or residency
program faculty, in, as applicable--
``(I) the teaching of the content
area in which the teacher will become
certified or licensed;
``(II) teaching skills; and
``(III) leadership, management,
organizational, and school leader
skills necessary to serve as a
principal or other school leader;
``(iii) acquires effective teaching or
school leader skills; and
``(iv) prior to completion of the program,
attains full State teacher, principal, or
school leader certification or licensure, and
becomes profession-ready.
``(B) Profession-ready.--The term `profession-
ready'--
``(i) when used with respect to a teacher,
means a teacher who--
``(I) has completed a teacher
preparation program and is fully
certified and licensed to teach by the
State in which the teacher is employed;
``(II) has a baccalaureate degree
or higher;
``(III) has demonstrated content
knowledge in the subject or subjects
the teacher teaches;
``(IV) has demonstrated the ability
to work with students who are
culturally and linguistically diverse;
``(V) has demonstrated teaching
skills, such as through--
``(aa) a teacher
performance assessment; or
``(bb) other measures of
teaching skills, as determined
by the State; and
``(VI) has demonstrated proficiency
with the use of educational technology;
and
``(ii) when used with respect to a
principal or other school leader, means a
principal or other school leader who--
``(I) has an advanced degree, or
other appropriate credential;
``(II) has completed a principal or
other school leader preparation process
and is fully certified and licensed by
the State in which the principal or
other school leader is employed;
``(III) has demonstrated
instructional leadership, including the
ability to collect, analyze, and
utilize data on evidence of student
learning and evidence of classroom
practice;
``(IV) has demonstrated proficiency
in professionally recognized leadership
standards; and
``(V) has demonstrated the ability
to work with students who are
culturally and linguistically diverse.
``(C) School leader.--The term `school leader' has
the meaning given the term in section 8101 of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
``(D) School leader skills.--The term `school
leader skills' refers to evidenced-based competencies
for principals and other school leaders such as--
``(i) shaping a vision of academic success
for all students;
``(ii) creating a safe and inclusive
learning environment;
``(iii) cultivating leadership in others;
``(iv) improving instruction; and
``(v) managing people, data, and processes
to foster school improvement.''.
<all>
Introduced in House
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.
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