Practice placements
Every year we place about 500 interns and more than1200 teacher candidates in schools for practice work. As we place them, we want to make placements that will satisfy all, but we must balance a range of considerations described below. Teacher candidates should especially note that:
- We do not permit teacher candidates or interns to seek or arrange their own placements.
- We ask teacher candidates to express some of their preferences regarding placements, and
- We do attempt to satisfy those preferences, but we cannot guarantee to do so.
Placements:
- are subject to change.
- are made in partner schools.
- match the certificate.
- respond to urban need.
- protect the integrity of assessment and personal relationships.
- for TE 301 through 402 are in the Lansing area
- in the Detroit Area
- follow a planned sequence
- require the new intern to complete a placement report
Placements are subject to change
The teacher preparation program does not control, for example, school district decisions to re-assign teachers, or teachers' decisions or move or retire, or teachers getting ill or pregnant. So all placements are subject to change at any time due to circumstances beyond our control. Should this occur, we will make every attempt to find an alternative placement as soon as possible. Most teachers are off duty in the summer months, many go away for some period of time, and some desirable mentor teachers won't know their teaching assignments until August. So placement is likely to go slowly in June, July, and part of August, and early placements are not necessarily better placements.
Placements are made in partner schools
We place teacher candidates in schools where we have developed or are developing school-university partnerships for teacher education that offer better placement conditions. This means that whenever possible, teacher candidates are placed in groups within schools that are within a compact geographic area, rather than being distributed across many schools with only one or two teacher candidates in each. When teacher candidates are placed in groups in compact areas, MSU personnel can spend more of their time working with teacher candidates and developing strong partnerships with schools and teachers.
Placements match the certificate
We place teacher candidates in situations that match the teaching certificates that they want to earn. Placing all candidates in situations that match their intended certificates takes priority over placing any candidate in a preferred grade or situation.
Placements respond to urban need
We give high priority to placements in schools in urban centers that serve students who live in poverty, who live amidst substantial social problems, and/or who have special needs. We place teacher candidates where they can learn to teach diverse students in diverse settings. Michigan teaching certificates authorize the persons who hold them to teach all Michigan children in given grades and subject matters. When teacher candidates accept admission to our program, they accept the obligation to prepare themselves to teach all those children, in all those places.
Placements protect the integrity of assessment and personal relationships
We avoid placing teacher candidates in situations where they are already known or may already have close associations with school personnel or students. The operating principle here is that evaluations of performance should not be subject to bias arising from important relationships or prior associations. For example:
- We do not place teacher candidates in school districts they attended as K-12 students, unless the district was a large urban district (e.g., Lansing, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Flint, Pontiac). In this event, we do not place teacher candidates in the schools they attended as K-12 students.
- We avoid placement in districts (or, in the case of large districts, in schools) where a close relative of the teacher candidate is employed.
Placements or TE 301 through 402 are in the Lansing area
Prior to the internship, we place teacher candidates only in the Lansing area. Most teacher candidates are carrying a full academic program, only part of which is in teacher education. Therefore, we place teacher candidates, in TE 301, TE 401, and TE 402 only in schools within a 30-minute drive from MSU.
Placements in distant sites (including the Detroit area)
The teacher preparation program makes placements in the Detroit Area because that is a major population center with a large urban center. Also, we wish to help teacher candidates reduce the expense of the program by offer the possibility of serving their internships closer to home. In making placements in the Detroit area, we follow these guidelines:
Indicating a preference for a distant site does not guarantee placement in that site. When the number of requests for a distant site is greater than the number of placements available, a lottery system may be used to determine who will be placed in the distant site. Before resorting to a lottery, we will give preference to those teacher candidates who want placements in schools in urban centers or in schools that serve students who live in poverty, who live amidst substantial social problems, and/or who have special needs. Then, remaining teacher candidates who have requested a distant site area will be included in a lottery to determine who will get the remaining available placements.
If a particular placement is offered in a requested distant area, and a teacher candidate declines it, that teacher candidate will not be guaranteed another placement in that requested distant area. That is, if the initial placement is declined, the candidates will go to the bottom of the list of candidates desiring that distant site, and if there are not sufficient placements to accommodate everyone who prefers that site, candidates who declined their initial placement will be placed instead in the Lansing area.
Within the Detroit Area, we TRY to make placements that require commutes of no more than forty-five minutes, one way, but we cannot guarantee that.
Placements follow a sequence
Oct. - Nov. Teacher candidates who are on schedule for the internship complete the Internship Placement Request form. These forms are to be completed and returned to the Team office by December 1st.
Oct. - Nov. Teacher candidates who are on schedule for the internship write resumes to prospective mentor teachers. Guidelines for writing a resume are given to teacher candidates in October. These resumes will be given to the school at which the Team is suggesting a placement. The Team contacts schools to talk about the number of interns each school would like to have for the next year.
Feb. - Mar. The Team works with schools and teachers to arrange placements. Although we will try to accommodate a prospective intern’s first choice of grade level, we often have to look at second and third choices to match students with mentor teachers who are interested in working with an intern.
April - May. Students are informed of those placements that have been arranged and the procedure to follow to contact their prospective mentor teacher. The prospective intern and mentor teacher report back to the Team to confirm the placement. The Team continues to identify placements for any seniors who have not yet been placed.
June, July, August (and in a few cases September). Finish placements that could not be made on the intended schedule, and re-place prospective interns whose placements fell through.
Placements are not complete until the intern files a placement report
When prospective interns have visited the school and met the mentor teacher, they file an Internship Placement Report with the Team to confirm that they have done so.
7/3/2006