“Too much.” Teachers weigh in on HB 3 Reading Academies requirement
Educator Preparation | Certification Texas Legislature Curriculum | Instruction TEA | Commissioner | SBOE Educator Compensation | Benefits
Date Posted: 1/13/2022 | Author: Andrea Chevalier
Since the Texas Legislature passed a 2019 law requiring many educators to attend a Reading Academy, ATPE has received considerable feedback from concerned educators, and we conducted a survey of our members to gather more detail. Between Dec. 1-17, 2021, nearly 1,000 K-3 teachers and administrators completed the survey to share their experiences, allowing us to provide a picture of implementation and implications for policy change.
Background
In 2019, the 86th Texas Legislature passed House Bill (HB) 3 by Rep. Dan Huberty (R-Kingwood). The bill required that every K-3 classroom teacher and principal attend a Reading Academy “not later than” the 2021-22 school year, which was extended to “not later than” the 2022-23 school year by HB 1525 subsequently passed by the 87th Legislature in 2021.
There are few exemptions for educators required to complete the Reading Academies, and there is no “test-out” option. All K-3 teachers, including special education teachers, librarians who provide core instruction or intervention to K-3 students, and literacy specialists who see students in small groups are required to receive the training. Assistant principals, instructional coaches, educators who completed the requirements of the 2018-19 READ Grant, and “specials” teachers who hold an “all-level certification in art, health education, music, physical education, speech communication and theatre arts, or theatre” may be exempted.
The Texas Education Agency (TEA) suggests that school districts can use a variety of funding sources, such as the Early Education Allotment, to pay for the Reading Academies training and compensate teachers for their time. According to TEA, the training is designed to be 60 hours and completed in no more than 10 full days over an 11-month period.
Additionally, as of January 2021, all aspiring PK-6 teachers must pass the new Science of Teaching Reading (STR) exam for certification. TEA asserts that the Reading Academies content is meant to build upon the STR content a new teacher learns in their educator preparation program (EPP). Thus, teachers who took the STR exam and began employment in the 2021-22 school year would have to complete the Reading Academies training by the end of their second year of teaching in 2022-23.
ATPE’s Survey
ATPE’s Reading Academies survey was completed by 975 educators who indicated they serve students in grades K-3. Respondents included all core subjects, special education, gifted and talented, ESL, Pre-K, and specials teachers, as well as dyslexia therapists, reading interventionists, principals, assistant principals, instructional coaches, librarians, social and life skills teachers, and other educators.ATPE asked a variety of questions about the Reading Academies and analyzed the results based on whether the respondent had completed the training, was still working on it, or had not started yet. Approximately 20% of respondents had completed the training, 65% were still in the process, and 15% had not yet started.
Here are the highlights of the survey results:
Questionable value and not enough money for the time it takes to complete:
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Sixty-five percent of those who had completed the Reading Academies training and 54% of the partial completers found the content of the training valuable. However, the value was hindered by the volume of content included, an online format that restricted collaboration, and its duplicative or repetitive nature for a veteran teacher or those with a master’s degree in similar content.
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Of completers, nearly half (48%) reported that the training took more than 120 hours to complete; only 18% reported that the training took them between 60-80 hours; and 95% said they worked after hours or weekends to finish the training.
- Fifty-eight percent of completers said they were not paid for their time, and of those who were paid, stipends ranged from $200 to $7,600. Others said they were allowed substitutes for a given number of days. Sixty-seven percent of partial completers said they were not being paid for their time, and those who were paid experienced a similar range to those who had already completed the training.
- Partial completers or those who had not yet started the Reading Academies training typically reported that their school district expected completion by Spring/Summer 2022, while some of those who hadn’t started yet reported a district-expected completion by Spring/Summer 2023.
- ATPE’s survey indicates that only 11 of our 975 K-3 educator respondents hold an all-level certification in a “specials” subject (art, health, etc.) and could therefore be exempt from the training requirement. Unfortunately, this suggests that many “specials” teachers are being asked to spend valuable teaching and planning time completing the Reading Academies with likely little effect on student reading outcomes, since they are teachers who do not focus on teaching reading or literacy concepts.
- As expected, only 85 respondents had taken the STR exam, as that requirement has only been in effect since January 2021. Of those who took the STR exam and also completed the Reading Academies training, 51% reported that the Reading Academies content was the same as what they had already mastered, and 40% reported that the Reading Academies content was more rigorous and/or in-depth.
Turning Feedback into Action
ATPE’s survey sheds light on how educators are experiencing the Reading Academies requirement. While many respondents shared that they found the content of the training very valuable and helpful, the volume and expectations of the training overshadowed its usefulness and created immense stress that has undoubtedly had a negative impact on students. Based on the feedback from our members, ATPE offers the following policy recommendations:
- Timing. The 120+ hours required to complete the Reading Academies (equivalent to at least three full-time, five-day work weeks) experienced by many respondents, combined with the widespread lack of compensation and questioning of the training’s value, is disappointing many educators. Districts should allow educators the full statutory timeline through the 2022-23 school year to satisfy the Reading Academies requirement.
- Compensation. As many educators as possible should be paid for their time, whether by additional state funding or grants and/or by guidance and best practices shared by TEA.
- Value. A differentiation structure is needed to ensure that the Reading Academies are a good use of time for all educators, both new and veteran. Prior content knowledge should determine the depth and extent of Reading Academies training an educator must take.
- Specials. Any educator who teaches specials should be exempt from the Reading Academy requirements, particularly since some the “all-level” certifications have only been in existence since 2008. This means a 15-year specials teacher may have to attend a Reading Academy simply because an all-level certification wasn’t available at the time of their certification.
For additional information, contact ATPE Governmental Relations at government@atpe.org or (512) 467-0071.
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I finished Reading Academies on Christmas Eve. I completed a reading program in another state with my Master''s Degree. It was very similar and probably helped with the quizzes. I was baffled that there was no way for that to count. I took well over 120 hours. There were parts that I zoomed through and others that were slow going. Some of the quizzes were ridiculous. Also having 2 artifacts took a considerable amount of time. I also would like to see all of those who were instrumental in passing this HB complete this course on there own time and not get paid. I already do not have a conference 90% of the time and my lunch is with a student(s) many times. Other teachers at my district are going through the same thing. It makes me wonder how many more courses like this will be required. Texas is a very weird state. I''d rather know I helped students learn to read proficiently than collect certificates.
I am on Module 10. It is valuable. I do think it takes way more than 60 hours. To me, the threat of losing one''s job due to not completing this program in a certain time...is mind-blowing!
I, too, challenge the legislators and TEA staff to complete this Reading Academy during their lunch hour, and after hours, with no pay. I just started Module 1 and this program will take 100+ hours. It is as if they are brainstorming "How can we make teaching an even less desirable career?" My son is leaving after 11 successful years, and I would never choose this career again. Public Education is in crisis.
I have a master''s degree in reading and am a CALP. I just completed Module 10, and it took me 30 hours and 13 minutes. TEA said it should take 9 hours. I did most of it during Christmas vacation and the rest outside of contract hours. My district isn''t paying us and has only given us a few hours during summer inservice to work on it. Every module so far has taken me at least double the amount of time that TEA says it should take. I already work 15- 20 hours beyond my contract hours each week to prepare lessons, grade and write testing summaries, etc. The Reading Academy requires even more time to be spent outside my contract hours. I am exhausted.
I, like most of those commenting here am a teacher, with a Master''s degree and am bilingual certified. I also spent the last 5 years and lots of my own money studying to become a CALT, which I now am. I work as a Dyslexia Specialist in AISD and am trained in 5 programs that the district implements as intervention for children with dyslexia. I have 8 groups that I see per day. I work at 2 campuses and have 30 minutes to eat lunch and travel between campuses. I also have a 45 minute planning period during the day. THis is the time I can catch up on emails and do a little planning. I do not have time to do Reading Academy. When I asked my cohort leader when I was supposed to fit it in, she suggested the following: before school, after school, during lunch/planning and on the nights and weekends. I am also a mother of 2 school-age children. So I ask you, when is there time for this? Those of us in Austin ISD have been given no paid time to complete this training. I find the modules worthwhile and chock full of valuable information. They are, however, too long, too redundant and the quizzes are too hard. I challenge the legislators and the good folks at the TEA to do these 60 hours on their own time, without pay by the end of the school year.
This is information that my district already implements in the classroom, and the time it has taken to complete the program, all teachers should have a reading specialist endorsement on our certification. I’m my district we were fortunate enough to be compensated, but there were many who were not. It is an insult to teachers who have went through the education program in college, and pass the certification exams to be a teacher to have to do this course. I feel that the entities who implemented RA does not have knowledge of how reading is taught in the classroom. I have so much to say, but I will leave it at this!
I hear that it takes too much personal time and some teachers have been given deadlines or they will lose their job. The added stress is also giving some a reason to leave the profession. My campus is putting it off till next year. Your article states that the STR cannot be taken in its place. That was not my understanding. Now I will rethink my return next year as well. I just took and passed the STR.
While reading academy has some value, it is a punishment overall. The hours stated for completion are not accurate. Triple the time stated to be correct. Are my bachelor''s and master''s degrees as well as school district training not enough? Forcing us to take Reading Academy is an insult.
I hear very similar circumstances as I am out in the field.