Melissa Tooley
Director, Educator Quality
How should becoming a skilled teacher look more like becoming a skilled coder? By using micro-credentials as a way to demonstrate meaningful professional growth and skills attached to real rewards in the workplace.
When schools closed due to COVID-19 this spring, many parents learned what education researchers already knew鈥攖hat.
So how do we attract, develop, and retain more high-quality teachers, particularly in our highest-need schools, as interest in becoming and remaining a teacher is ? As with many intransigent public issues, the answer is multi-faceted and complex. But there is an effort underway that has the potential to improve teacher efficacy and retention: a digital tool called 鈥.鈥
Taking a Lesson from Tech
Micro-credentials (MCs) first began to take hold in the technology sector of the U.S. economy around 2011. As employers鈥 need for workers with digital coding skills expanded rapidly, many individuals became interested in becoming 鈥渃oders.鈥 But a lack of formal education, financial constraints, and rapidly changing content kept many from entering the profession.
Coding 鈥渂oot camps鈥 and other short-term training programs proliferated to help build the necessary skill sets, but candidates still needed a way to demonstrate skills to employers before. Micro-credentials were relatively well-suited for this task because individuals could earn them by demonstrating, via a performance assessment, the application of a specific, discrete skill or competency in a real-world or simulated setting. A variety of organizations鈥攆rom those providing the boot camps, software companies that developed the coding language, and even would-be employers鈥攍ined up to offer micro-credentials. The credential earned was typically shared as a that incorporated verifiable data about the performance assessment. As a result, employers felt they could trust micro-credentials as a reliable indicator that the person possessing the badge was competent in the indicated micro skill.
Digital Promise saw the potential for applying micro-credentials in K鈥12 education, and joined with BloomBoard to introduce the first micro-credential platform for educators in 2014. Since then, the number of entities offering micro-credentials to engage teachers in professional learning and offer career growth has multiplied exponentially. Providers include regional and local education agencies, as well as and organizations that often focus on a specific content area or aspect of teaching. Even traditional are developing micro-credentialing as a new way to reach the teacher market for upskilling.
What鈥檚 more, some states and local education agencies are providing 鈥渟tacks鈥 of micro-credentials that cumulatively indicate teacher readiness to fill a particular workforce need (e.g., a dearth of computer science teachers). Others see micro-credentials as a strategy to bring more diversity into the teaching profession by making it more accessible and affordable. For example, a 鈥渟tack鈥 of micro-credentials could be a substitute for or traditional licensure exams.
Why It Matters
Most importantly, high-quality educator micro-credentials, which verify a discrete skill demonstrated through the submission of evidence, offer a stark change from the compliance-focused culture and processes that have existed for years in the teaching profession.
The United States is pretty good at mandating and investing in professional learning for educators. Most public schools鈥 labor contracts outline a specified number of professional development hours per school year. In 2015, TNTP estimated that large urban school districts were spending an average of on development efforts.
Where things break down is on the quality of learning opportunities. A significant portion of teachers鈥 professional development is done to fulfill state-mandated 鈥渃redit hours,鈥 time-based professional development units that teachers must earn in order to that allows them to teach in public schools. Most of this professional development does not reflect the scientific evidence on how adults best learn (e.g., personalized, sustained areas of focus over time, with formal opportunities for guided practice, collaborative feedback, and individual reflection). In fact, 鈥淧D鈥 often manifests itself as the exact: all teachers in a school, regardless of their experience or subject area, attend lecture-based trainings on the same topics, with no opportunities to practice the concept(s) or follow up with peers or supervisors on how they incorporated them in the classroom. This ineffective approach leaves many teachers with the view that PD is something they must endure, rather than something that supports them and their students.
Furthermore, there are few opportunities for career advancement for teachers that don鈥檛 require leaving the classroom. Teachers looking to progress professionally often have to become a school or district administrator, or even leave education altogether. The rare opportunities for teachers to gain increased recognition, authority, and compensation while staying in the classroom are often tied to experience or degree attainment, instead of demonstrable, on-the-job skills. And recent attempts to observe and recognize teacher ability in the classroom have largely backfired. For example, despite policies aimed at improving teacher performance evaluations, principals remain reluctant to provide their teachers with constructive feedback of areas for improvement. As a result, almost all teachers receive high ratings with little differentiation in areas for growth. This can be for some of our most-skilled teachers, who deserve to be recognized and rewarded for their superlative efforts and outcomes.
Given this lack of support and opportunity, it鈥檚 not surprising that the educator workforce is sometimes described as a with substantial turnover in many schools across the country, particularly in those serving our highest-need students. Alarmingly, reported half of teachers seriously considering quitting the profession.
Because of their reliance on the demonstration of discrete skills through the submission of evidence, micro-credentials may be just what we need to work our way out of this quagmire.
The Potential of Micro-Credentials
In every aspect, micro-credentials could change the check-the-box culture of teacher professional learning by focusing less on the act of gaining information and more on the act of implementing that information to better serve students. Instead of requiring every teacher to pursue the same micro-credential, educators have a myriad of online options to choose from, ideally based on need or area of relevant interest. Instead of being based on hours in a chair, micro-credentials require demonstration of competency (typically in teachers鈥 own classroom), vetted against a rubric. Educators who fall short of meeting the competency receive feedback explaining what they need to improve, and can continue to hone their practice until submitted evidence shows skill mastery. is one regional educational agency taking this approach.
What鈥檚 more, states and school districts can use micro-credentials to better define teacher roles and career pathways, and help retain teachers who would otherwise leave the field. For example, when Arkansas developed and designations, they provided the option for teachers to achieve them, at least in part, by earning a specific set, or 鈥渟tack,鈥 of micro-credentials that align with the respective roles. For example, the 鈥淢aster Professional Educator Foundations鈥 stack of seven micro-credentials offered by Bloomboard includes one on 鈥淓ngaging Families in the Learning Process鈥 and another on 鈥淯sing Modeling to Support Adult Learning.鈥 The Lead Professional Educator designation is further delineated by role, with tailored micro-credential stacks for instructional coach, interventionist, mentor, multi-classroom lead and professional learning specialist.
As of early 2020, at least 14 states in addition to Arkansas (and many more districts) have begun to experiment with micro-credentials for educators to meet requirements for certification, professional development, license renewal, and advancement. Some of these are still being piloted, while others are fully established in statute or regulation.
What Comes Next
Momentum is building for micro-credentials to help move educator professional development and advancement away from inefficient, compliance-focused, blanket approaches toward impactful, individualized, empowering systems. But along with optimism comes the. When decision-makers first included PD as part of expectations for educators, they thought it would improve job satisfaction and the quality of teaching. Outside of a few exemplars, the promise and potential of teacher PD is largely wasted due to inadequate content, processes, and oversight. Without thoughtful guidance, the same could happen for micro-credentials. Already there is vast variability in the depth and rigor of the associated resources, evidence requested, and rubrics used to assess that evidence鈥攊n part because of the lack of consensus among stakeholders on the proper requirements for (or even definition of) a micro-credential.
Micro-credentials and progress professionally. But if the successes and failures of current pilots and programs aren鈥檛 used as opportunities to learn and improve, micro-credentials won鈥檛 fulfill the vast potential they hold for PreK鈥12 education. 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Education Policy program is conducting national research on the implementation of teacher micro-credentials to determine what is and isn鈥檛 working, and to help inform how micro-credentials continue to evolve and be embedded within educator policies and practices. Look for early takeaways this fall, with a more in-depth report to follow this winter.
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