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Teacher Performance Standards

The Hawaiʻi Teacher Standards Board approved adoption of the Interstate New Teacher Assessment Consortium (InTASC) Model Core Teaching Standards for Hawaiʻi’s Teacher Performance Standards on August 26, 2011, as New Business Item 11-06 (PDF). Hawaiʻi State Approved Teacher Education Programs (SATEP) have incorporated these Performance Standards into their programs as of July 1, 2014. These new standards replace the existing Teacher Performance Standards for teachers renewing their licenses that expire on or after July 1, 2014.

Introduction

The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) Interstate Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (InTASC) has developed new “core teaching standards,” which represent a major revision to the Model Standards for Beginning Teacher Assessment and Development, first developed nearly two decades ago. No longer limited to assessment and support of new teachers, the new standards define standards of professional practice for all teachers.

 

There are ten individual standards organized into four priority areas:

  • The Learner & Learning (Standards 1-3)
  • Content (Standards 4-5)
  • Instructional Practice (Standards 6-8)
  • Professional Responsibility (Standards 9-10)
Each standard is divided into three areas: performance, essential knowledge, and critical dispositions. The core teaching standards focus on 21st-century knowledge and skills, personalized learning for diverse learners, a collaborative professional culture, improved assessment literacy, and new leadership roles for teachers and administrators. The core teaching standards outline what teachers should know and be able to do in today’s learning context to ensure students achieve these learning goals, as well as encourage teachers to develop literacy and thinking skills across the curriculum, and help students consider multiple perspectives when exploring ideas and solving problems. The core teaching standards also address interdisciplinary themes (e.g., financial literacy, global awareness) and the teacher’s ability to build on content that draws upon multiple disciplines.

 

Hawaii Teacher Performance Standards (PDF version)