Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Licensing requirements may increase

Published (2/3/2012)
By Erin Schmidtke
Share on: 



Teachers-to-be might see an exam in their futures earlier than expected — and they would be the ones taking it.

State law currently allows those who have completed a teacher preparation program to receive up to three one-year licenses without passing a basic skills exam. On Jan. 26, the House Education Reform Committee approved HF1770, sponsored by Rep. Andrea Kieffer (R-Woodbury), and sent it to the House floor. It would require teaching candidates to produce a passing score on the exam before obtaining a license in Minnesota.

Kieffer is concerned that teachers are instructing children while being potentially unable to pass the basic skills test. She hopes the bill will increase the quality and rigor of teacher licensing. Rep. Sondra Erickson (R-Princeton) said that she expects all teachers to be at a passing level or above.

The committee also approved an amendment offered by Rep. Kory Kath (DFL-Owatonna). It would ensure those planning to attend a teaching program would not need to pass the test to gain admittance to a program, as the bill originally stated. They would only need to pass the skills test before obtaining a license.

Kath reasoned that taking the test before even starting a program would be too difficult for teacher candidates. He said colleges, and not the state, were the best determiners of who is fit to enter such a program. Kath further explained that allowing teacher candidates time to produce a passing score lets them address specific areas of the exam where they might have had difficulties.

Karen Balmer, executive director of the Minnesota Board of Teaching, urged a measured approach to increasing requirements for teacher licensing. However, she acknowledged that simply “loving kids does not a good teacher make.”

A companion, SF1493, sponsored by Sen. Ted Daley (R-Eagan), awaits action by the full Senate.

Session Weekly More...


Session Weekly Home



Related Stories


Waiting for the governor’s final grade
Omnibus education bill nears finish line
(view full story) Published 4/27/2012

Last in, first out … out or in?
Conference committee weighs benefits of changing teacher layoff practices
(view full story) Published 3/30/2012

Education advocate is moving on
Rep. Mindy Greiling announces she won’t seek re-election
(view full story) Published 2/3/2012

Withholding state funds from schools
Education finance law keeps $780 million for other General Fund spending
(view full story) Published 8/11/2011

First try at K-12 finance bill fails
Dayton says special education cuts ‘would create significant funding gaps’
(view full story) Published 7/15/2011

‘Bold and beautiful’ or full of inequities?
Confusion exists whether K-12 bill increases or cuts funding
(view full story) Published 5/20/2011

Minnesota Index: Teaching and learning
Facts and statistics about education in Minnesota
(view full story) Published 5/20/2011

Lands set apart
Permanent School Fund management, income potential explored
(view full story) Published 5/13/2011

‘Social promotion’ to promote literacy
Third-graders could repeat if they can’t read
(view full story) Published 4/29/2011

Historic St. Paul walkout
Illegal action changed teacher bargaining; a new debate rises over right to strike
(view full story) Published 4/15/2011

Changes in education
House approves omnibus education finance bill
(view full story) Published 4/1/2011

Education finance bill offers bold reforms
Quantity not as key as quality, says DFL
(view full story) Published 3/25/2011

A voucher by any other name
Bill would create limited scholarships for low-income students
(view full story) Published 3/18/2011

Fewer days, longer hours
Some districts find four-day school week works as a budget fix
(view full story) Published 2/18/2011

First Reading: ‘Pitting the good against the good’
Proposed lift of safe schools mandate is a tough call
(view full story) Published 2/4/2011

The goal: 25,000 new teachers
Bush Foundation commits big bucks to revamp teacher training
(view full story) Published 1/28/2011

First Reading: Alternative teacher mindset
Tackling the achievement gap one classroom at a time
(view full story) Published 1/21/2011