Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Gabbard Revokes Security Clearances of 37 Current, Former US Intelligence Members

8 hours ago

Trump Escalates Attacks Against the Smithsonian Institution

9 hours ago

California Republicans File Suit Seeking to Block Newsom Redistricting Plan

10 hours ago

Revised Congressional Maps Target Valadao, Boost Gray in the Valley

12 hours ago

Dollar Slips as Traders Wait on Jackson Hole

13 hours ago

Tesla Drivers Can Pursue Class Action Over Self-Driving Claims, Judge Rules

13 hours ago

Trump Eyes Reclassification to Make Cannabis Easier to Buy and Sell

1 day ago

America’s Wildfire Fighters, Unmasked in Toxic Smoke, Are Getting Sick and Dying

1 day ago

US Offers Up to $50,000 Bonus for New ICE Deportation Officers

2 days ago
Teachers Face Tough Grades as California Rethinks Charter Schools
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 6 years ago on
July 9, 2019

Share

Heather Williams knew as a kid that she wanted to be a piano teacher. She earned her music degree with a piano emphasis from Brigham Young University and spent decades honing her craft.


Ricardo Cano
CALmatters
Today she not only runs her own academy near Sacramento, offering private lessons with a special certification in the Suzuki Method of instruction, but also teaches in public schools, though she lacks a state teaching credential.
How? Via a loophole that lets charter schools skip some of the credentialing required of teachers in traditional public school classrooms. The exception has allowed Williams to offer music instruction to homeschool charter students and to group classes in brick-and-mortar charters such as the Sacramento-based California Montessori Project network.
Proponents say it encourages enrichment in that privately-run sector of the public school system. In recent months, however — like many state rules that apply to charters — it has drawn legislative attention. And influential lawmakers say it could be on its way out.
Whether all teachers should need a state credential to teach has long been debated. In California, the answer has been “yes” for teachers in traditional public schools.
But California law grants charter schools “flexibility” in credentialing requirements for teachers assigned to classes outside of the “core” subjects of math, reading, science and social studies, as well as “college prep” courses such as Advanced Placement.

Charter School Critics Say Exception Abused

Charter advocates and local school officials say the ability to expand limited applicant pools to include, say, professional artists, helps ensure a breadth of course offerings in areas such as dance, theater and music.
But charter school critics say the exception has been abused, and that standards need to be clarified to ensure that every student attending California public schools has a fully prepared teacher. They point to new data showing some charters have high proportions of teachers who don’t meet state credentialing standards even for core courses for which the credentialing flexibility is not applicable.
“When I entered the chair of the Assembly Education Committee, I assumed all school districts and charter schools believed that it was imperative that they have a credentialed teacher in their classrooms. And unfortunately, that’s not the case,” said Democratic Assemblyman Patrick O’Donnell of Long Beach, who heads the Assembly’s education panel.
“It’s about kids,” O’Donnell said. “The goal here is to ensure that every student attending a California school funded with public money has a qualified teacher in the classroom.”
To do that, O’Donnell has tucked language to toughen credentialing standards into a high-profile effort to regulate California’s 1,300 charter schools more closely. Intensely lobbied by teachers’ unions, school boards and charter advocates, the push has focused most publicly on sweeping governance changes that could curb the growth of charters. But a key piece of legislation also includes a proposal to change who is allowed to teach in the mostly non-union schools.
Assembly Bill 1505, which narrowly passed the Assembly in May, would require that all California public school teachers hired after Jan. 1, 2020, whether district or charter, hold the proper credentials for the classes that they are teaching. If passed, the proposal would also affect how the state tracks teachers whose credentials don’t match the specific classes to which they’re assigned.

Credentialing Mandates Can Rule out Good Teachers

Though the proposed language essentially grandfathers in teachers currently leading non-core classes in charters, some charter advocates and local school officials oppose the effort, saying it goes against the state’s intent that charter schools be innovative in their curriculum and instruction. They note that charter teachers already comply with many aspects of the credentialing process, such as fingerprinting and background checks.

“I would love to continue teaching music in the charter schools because I’m good at it and I love it, and I’d be very sad if I was limited because I don’t have those credentials. But what I do have is 30 years of teaching experience.” — Heather Williams, piano teacher
Charter arts teachers, meanwhile, say that in their fields, credentialing mandates can rule out good teachers.
Williams, the piano teacher, says she is as qualified to teach music as someone who is credentialed through the state, “if not more, because my experience compounds on top of my training and education.”
“I would love to continue teaching music in the charter schools because I’m good at it and I love it, and I’d be very sad if I was limited because I don’t have those credentials,” she said. “But what I do have is 30 years of teaching experience.  What I do have is a long life of experience, and with my (academy) already up and running, I wouldn’t have time to go and get my credentials at this point.”
In California, appropriately credentialed teachers have obtained a college degree, completed a formal training program, proved mastery over the subject matter they’re going to be teaching and have finished or are in the process of completing professional development specifically aimed at rookie teachers.
Carlos Marquez, the chief lobbyist for the California Charter Schools Association, said it’s “not unusual” for charters to hire teachers who are not credentialed but have specific professional expertise, such as artists or professional dancers or actors with Broadway experience.
Fernando Aguilar, principal of Creative Arts K-8, a San Francisco charter school, said the flexibility in current law has allowed his school to staff teachers in arts, theater, dance, music and visual arts—subjects he said don’t always fully align with the state’s credentialing structure. For example, he said, a person with professional experience as a dancer would be required to hold a credential in physical education under the traditional requirements.

Much of the Fight Over Charters Linked to AB 1505

Aguilar said he tries to hire teachers who have the appropriate credentials, and provides rigorous professional development for teachers who are not. Creative Arts K-8, he noted, has been recognized by the state for its arts programs as well as its efforts to narrow the achievement gap with the help of the credentialing flexibility.
“If you are able to prove that this is working for students, that they are being able to thrive in a situation like this,” he said, “then I wonder why you want to stop that or hinder that at this point.”
If the state were to remove the credentialing flexibility for non-core charter teachers, Aguilar added, “my concern would be, are we going to be able to run the same innovative program at this high level moving forward?”
Kathy Warren, a high school English teacher in the Novato School District, said professional expertise alone, even for teachers of non-core subjects, is not enough to successfully navigate “a very complex and oftentimes brutal profession.”
“Just because someone can wake up in the middle of the night and get an artistic inspiration and create a Van Gogh, doesn’t mean that he or she can then turn around into a classroom and successfully get kids to create the same level of mastery,” Warren said.
Much of this year’s legislative fight over charters has had to do with AB 1505 — the sweeping push from teachers’ unions and large, urban districts to give local school boards more autonomy in approving and overseeing charter schools. Another proposal, AB 1507, prohibiting districts from authorizing charters outside of their geographic boundaries, passed the Assembly in May. Two other bills that would have capped and temporarily halted new charter schools fizzled out.

53% of Charter Teachers Leading ‘Core’ Classes Misassigned

However, other proposals introduced this session would affect oversight of the teaching profession. One, discouraging school districts from contracting with third-party providers such as Teach For America, passed the Assembly Education Committee after a lengthy debate before it stalled until next year.
Another, related to the credentialing issue, would expand a statewide program that tracks teacher misassignments — an effort initially born out of a 2004 settlement of a landmark lawsuit that alleged California failed to provide thousands of predominantly disadvantaged students with access to adequate facilities and qualified teachers.
Whether California continues to allow flexibility in teacher credentialing requirements at charters will impact how the state counts misassignments — say, an English-credentialed high school teacher teaching math, or a teacher leading a special education classroom without the proper training.
Currently, the state annually examines such mismatches for only the lowest-performing schools, while monitoring the majority of district schools’ misassignments on four-year cycles—and not monitoring charter schools for this at all.
O’Donnell points to data from this monitoring program in arguing for stronger credentialing requirements at charters. An analysis of the misassignment bill, AB 1219, included data showing that in one unnamed district, 53% of charter teachers leading “core” classes were misassigned.
Of those misassigned charter teachers, about half held an Adult Education Teaching Credential, the most common type of which only requires a high school diploma.

These Numbers Matter

Collected by the state’s Commission on Teacher Credentialing, the data represented only that one district’s charters. But O’Donnell believes charter schools have altogether misinterpreted the state’s credentialing exception, saying at a hearing for AB 1219 “that flexibility was meant for guest speakers and things of the like, but not for a teacher who is in the classroom every day.”

“Does that mean somebody who is not fully credentialed properly can’t do that? No. But the chances are if they are fully credentialed versus walking in without anything, they’re obviously going to have more tools in their belt.” Michele Perrault, Commission on Teacher Credentialing
Too many charters, he said, are “trying to get around something that might take some time and might take up some resources, but ultimately is in the best interest of child safety and student learning.”
report by the commission, which regulates teacher certification statewide, last year found a 16% increase in teacher misassignments in 2016-17 from the prior school year—with special education making up the largest share. Even so, misassignments accounted for less than 3% of the pool of nearly 70,000 teachers checked.
Michele Perrault, the commission’s director for the division of administrative services, said wherever the debate lands, these numbers matter.
“The idea is that every student in California classrooms should have a teacher who’s properly assigned, that is fully ready to meet their child’s needs the day they walk into that classroom,” Perrault said.
“Does that mean somebody who is not fully credentialed properly can’t do that? No. But the chances are if they are fully credentialed versus walking in without anything, they’re obviously going to have more tools in their belt.”
CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.
[activecampaign form=19]

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Supervisors End Lease for Free Needle Exchange Clinic

DON'T MISS

Porterville Police Make DUI Arrest, Issue 13 Citations in Weekend Checkpoint

DON'T MISS

Trump Claims Powell ‘Hurting’ the Housing Industry in Latest Attack on Fed Chair

DON'T MISS

Everything Tennis Fans Need to Know About the 2025 U.S. Open

DON'T MISS

Madera County Warns of Contagious Canine Virus Outbreak

DON'T MISS

ESPN Won’t Air Spike Lee’s Docuseries on Colin Kaepernick, Citing ‘Creative Differences’

DON'T MISS

White House Launches Official TikTok Account

DON'T MISS

CMAC Will Award Cash Prizes at 72-Hour Film Race Screening

DON'T MISS

Fresno Unified Error Skews State Teacher Data, Analysis Shows

DON'T MISS

Gabbard Revokes Security Clearances of 37 Current, Former US Intelligence Members

UP NEXT

Trump’s Domestic Deployments Are Dangerous. For the Military

UP NEXT

How Do We Bridge America’s New Segregation?

UP NEXT

California Legislature’s Final Weeks Could Decide Delta Water Tunnel’s Fate

UP NEXT

Outside Lands 2025: Where Music, Love, and Community Collide

UP NEXT

California Was a Model for Transparency. Now the Capitol Operates in the Dark

UP NEXT

It’s Not Too Late for Islas and Levine to ‘Get in Good Trouble’

UP NEXT

Newsom’s Congressional Redistricting Drive in California Faces Tall Hurdles

UP NEXT

The Trump Administration Tried to Silence Mahmoud Khalil, So I Asked Him to Talk

UP NEXT

Sen. Klobuchar Is a Democratic Bellwether, and She’s Changing Her Tune on Israel

UP NEXT

Donald Trump and John Roberts Have a Lot in Common

Everything Tennis Fans Need to Know About the 2025 U.S. Open

5 hours ago

Madera County Warns of Contagious Canine Virus Outbreak

6 hours ago

ESPN Won’t Air Spike Lee’s Docuseries on Colin Kaepernick, Citing ‘Creative Differences’

6 hours ago

White House Launches Official TikTok Account

6 hours ago

CMAC Will Award Cash Prizes at 72-Hour Film Race Screening

7 hours ago

Fresno Unified Error Skews State Teacher Data, Analysis Shows

8 hours ago

Gabbard Revokes Security Clearances of 37 Current, Former US Intelligence Members

8 hours ago

Immigrant Students Shape California’s Future. Don’t Close the Door on Them

8 hours ago

Fresno County Boardroom Will Now Display ‘In God We Trust’

9 hours ago

Founders of This New Development Say You Must Be White to Live There

9 hours ago

Fresno Supervisors End Lease for Free Needle Exchange Clinic

Fresno County Supervisors on Tuesday all agreed that the San Joaquin Valley Free Medical Clinic in downtown Fresno helps many of those harde...

4 hours ago

4 hours ago

Fresno Supervisors End Lease for Free Needle Exchange Clinic

4 hours ago

Porterville Police Make DUI Arrest, Issue 13 Citations in Weekend Checkpoint

President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speak during a tour of the Federal Reserve Board building, which is currently undergoing renovations, in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 24, 2025. (Reuters File)
5 hours ago

Trump Claims Powell ‘Hurting’ the Housing Industry in Latest Attack on Fed Chair

Time Lapse Image of Tennis Star Coco Gauff
5 hours ago

Everything Tennis Fans Need to Know About the 2025 U.S. Open

Madera County Animal Services is warning pet owners about an outbreak of highly contagious canine distemper virus confirmed in the City of Madera’s riverbed area. (Shutterstock)
6 hours ago

Madera County Warns of Contagious Canine Virus Outbreak

Colin Kaepernick in 2019 workout for NFL teams
6 hours ago

ESPN Won’t Air Spike Lee’s Docuseries on Colin Kaepernick, Citing ‘Creative Differences’

President Donald Trump delivers remarks, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., August 14, 2025. (Reuters File)
6 hours ago

White House Launches Official TikTok Account

CMAC 72-Hour Film Race screening
7 hours ago

CMAC Will Award Cash Prizes at 72-Hour Film Race Screening

Search

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Send this to a friend