(b) Standards for approval of an educator preparation program must include requiring an educator preparation program to evaluate candidates using a framework approved by the commission that:
(A) Uses multiple measures to determine if a candidate’s knowledge, skills and competencies qualify the candidate for a teaching license; and
(B) Includes at least one measure that is locally determined and adopted by the educator preparation provider, and that is then approved by the commission.
(c) Standards for approval of an educator preparation program for early childhood education, elementary education, special education or reading must require that:
(A) The program provide instruction on dyslexia and other reading difficulties; and
(B) The instruction on dyslexia be consistent with the knowledge and practice standards of an international organization on dyslexia.
(2) The commission shall adopt rules that:
(a) Require approved educator preparation programs for early childhood education, elementary education, special education or reading to demonstrate that candidates enrolled in the programs receive training to provide instruction that enables students to meet or exceed third-grade reading standards and become proficient readers by the end of the third grade, as designated by the State Board of Education. For the purposes of this paragraph, an approved educator preparation program may make the demonstration through course curriculum, approved textbooks or other program requirements.
(b) Allow approved educator preparation programs leading to graduate degrees to commence prior to the candidate’s completion of baccalaureate degree requirements and to combine undergraduate and graduate level course work in achieving program completion.
(3) Whenever any educator preparation provider or educator preparation program is denied approved status or has such status withdrawn, the denial or withdrawal must be treated as a contested case under ORS chapter 183.
(4) Nothing in this section is intended to grant to the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission any authority relating to granting degrees or establishing degree requirements that are within the authority of the Higher Education Coordinating Commission or any of the public universities listed in ORS 352.002, or that are within the authority of the governing board of any private institution of higher education. [1973 c.270 §19; 1989 c.521 §2; 1989 c.690 §3; 1993 c.45 §159; 2011 c.637 §126; 2015 c.647 §§14,41,42; 2015 c.767 §§106,236,237,238,239; 2017 c.317 §1; 2021 c.637 §1]
Note: The amendments to 342.147 by section 8, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, become operative July 1, 2025. See section 2, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, as amended by section 9, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, and section 25, chapter 72, Oregon Laws 2018. The text that is operative on and after July 1, 2025, including amendments by section 2, chapter 317, Oregon Laws 2017, section 9, chapter 518, Oregon Laws 2021, and section 2, chapter 637, Oregon Laws 2021, is set forth for the user’s convenience.
(1) The Teacher Standards and Practices Commission shall establish by rule standards for approval of educator preparation providers and educator preparation programs.
(2) Standards for approval of an educator preparation provider may allow approval of an institution of higher education, a school district in this state, an education service district in this state or any other entity in this state that sponsors or provides an educator preparation program.
(3)(a) Standards for approval of an educator preparation program must include:
(A) Requiring an educator preparation program to be accredited by a national organization that represents teachers, policymakers and teacher educators and that provides accreditation based on nationally recognized standards and on evidence-based measures;
(B) Approving a public educator preparation program of more than four years’ duration only if educator preparation programs that are reasonably attainable in a four-year period, or the equivalent, are also available in the system of higher education and are designed to culminate in a baccalaureate degree that qualifies their graduates for entry-level teaching licenses; and
(C) Requiring an educator preparation program to evaluate candidates using a framework approved by the commission that:
(i) Uses multiple measures to determine if a candidate’s knowledge, skills and competencies qualify the candidate for a teaching license; and
(ii) Includes at least one measure that is locally determined and adopted by the educator preparation provider, and that is then approved by the commission.
(b) Standards for approval of an educator preparation program for early childhood education, elementary education, special education or reading must require that:
(A) The program provide instruction on dyslexia and other reading difficulties; and
(B) The instruction on dyslexia be consistent with the knowledge and practice standards of an international organization on dyslexia.
(4)(a) Notwithstanding subsection (3)(a)(A) of this section, standards for approval of an educator preparation program may allow an educator preparation program to operate provisionally without accreditation by a national organization if the educator preparation program is:
(A) Offered by an accredited educator preparation provider; or
(B) A nontraditional pathway to licensure program offered by an educator preparation provider, regardless of whether the educator preparation provider is accredited.
(b) A nontraditional pathway to licensure program shall be considered an approved educator preparation program if the nontraditional pathway to licensure program complies with standards established by the commission. The commission shall establish standards for nontraditional pathway to licensure programs that:
(A) Are substantially similar to the standards under subsection (3)(a) of this section;
(B) Require the commission to consider the current efforts of educator preparation programs to serve the same educator workforce as the proposed nontraditional pathway to licensure program; and
(C) Require the proposed nontraditional pathway to licensure program to submit to the commission a preoperational capacity review from a national accrediting organization that is approved by the commission.
(c)(A) Nothing in this subsection requires a nontraditional pathway to licensure program to:
(i) Culminate in the granting of a degree; or
(ii) Prohibit a candidate from being employed as an educator while participating in the program.
(B) Nothing in this subsection prevents an accredited educator preparation provider from offering a nontraditional pathway to licensure.
(d) An approved educator preparation program that operates provisionally as provided by this subsection may not operate provisionally for more than four years from the date that the educator preparation program first received approval to operate provisionally.
(5) The commission shall adopt rules that:
(a) Require approved educator preparation programs for early childhood education, elementary education, special education or reading to demonstrate that candidates enrolled in the programs receive training to provide instruction that enables students to meet or exceed third-grade reading standards and become proficient readers by the end of the third grade, as designated by the State Board of Education. For the purposes of this paragraph, an approved educator preparation program may make the demonstration through course curriculum, approved textbooks or other program requirements.
(b) Allow approved educator preparation programs leading to graduate degrees to commence prior to the candidate’s completion of baccalaureate degree requirements and to combine undergraduate and graduate level course work in achieving program completion.
(6) Whenever any educator preparation provider or educator preparation program is denied approved status or has such status withdrawn, the denial or withdrawal must be treated as a contested case under ORS chapter 183.
(7) Nothing in this section is intended to grant to the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission any authority relating to granting degrees or establishing degree requirements that are within the authority of the Higher Education Coordinating Commission or any of the public universities listed in ORS 352.002, or that are within the authority of the governing board of any private institution of higher education.
Note: Section 9a, chapter 518, Oregon Laws 2021, provides:
Sec. 9a. (1) Notwithstanding the operative date set forth in section 2, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, as amended by section 9, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, and section 25, chapter 72, Oregon Laws 2018, the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission may take any action before the operative date identified by this subsection that is necessary for the commission to exercise, on and after the operative date identified by this subsection, all of the duties, functions and powers conferred on the commission by the amendments to ORS 342.147 by section 9 of this 2021 Act.
(2) For the purpose of ensuring that the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission may exercise, on and after the operative date identified by subsection (1) of this section, all of the duties, functions and powers conferred on the commission by the amendments to ORS 342.147 by section 9 of this 2021 Act, the commission shall develop and implement a plan for the implementation of the amendments to ORS 342.147 by section 9 of this 2021 Act. The plan must:
(a) Be developed in collaboration with the Educator Advancement Council and the Department of Education; and
(b) Prioritize increasing:
(A) Participation by teacher candidates in nontraditional pathway to licensure programs;
(B) Educator diversity; and
(C) Educator retention.
(3) No later than January 1, 2023, the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission, in collaboration with the Educator Advancement Council and the Department of Education, shall report to the appropriate interim committees of the Legislative Assembly. The report shall address the progress on the plan required to be developed and implemented as provided by subsection (2) of this section. [2021 c.518 §9a]
Note: Sections 3 and 4, chapter 317, Oregon Laws 2017, provide:
Sec. 3. Implementation of standards and rules related to reading. (1) Notwithstanding ORS 342.147 (1)(c) and (2), the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission may not deny approval of an educator preparation program for failure to comply with standards or rules adopted under ORS 342.147 (1)(c) or (2) for three years from the date that the commission first adopts the standards or rules if the educator preparation program:
(a) Develops a plan to comply with the standards and rules; and
(b) Submits the plan to the commission within one year of the commission adopting the standards and rules.
(2) A plan submitted under this section may phase in implementation of the requirements if complete implementation is scheduled within three years of the commission first adopting the standards and rules under ORS 342.147 (1)(c) and (2). [2017 c.317 §3; 2021 c.637 §3]
Sec. 4. Repeal. Section 3 of this 2017 Act is repealed on June 30, 2022. [2017 c.317 §4]
Note: Sections 4 and 5, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, provide:
Sec. 4. Teacher Education Program Accreditation Account. (1) The Teacher Education Program Accreditation Account is established in the State Treasury, separate and distinct from the General Fund. Interest earned by the Teacher Education Program Accreditation Account shall be accredited to the account.
(2) Moneys in the Teacher Education Program Accreditation Account are continuously appropriated to the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission to award grants to educator preparation programs for the purpose of having the programs accredited by the organization described in ORS 342.147 (3)(a)(A), as amended by section 8, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, section 2, chapter 317, Oregon Laws 2017, and section 9 of this 2021 Act. [2015 c.756 §4; 2015 c.756 §10; 2021 c.518 §10]
Sec. 5. Abolishment of account. (1) The Teacher Education Program Accreditation Account established by section 4, chapter 756, Oregon Laws 2015, is abolished on July 1, 2025.
(2) Any moneys remaining in the account on July 1, 2025, that are unexpended, unobligated and not subject to any conditions shall be transferred to the General Fund on July 1, 2025.
[2015 c.756 §5; 2021 c.518 §11]