Internship Redesign
Project Overview
The Maryland PDS 2025 Project will review exemplars of teacher internships and residencies for the purposes of designing and piloting a Yearlong Teacher Internship. The project also explores the viability of a paid residency option for the Yearlong Teacher Internship. The paid residency option may provide an opportunity for local career changers to enter teaching while receiving financial support during their career transition. The paid residency option builds on the currently structured part-time paid internship model currently offered in a few MCPS schools. The current part-time paid internship model will serve as a starting point for development of the paid residency option of the Yearlong Teacher Residency.
Work Group Members
NAME |
ORGANIZATION |
TITLE |
---|---|---|
NAMELawrence Clark |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEAssistant Dean and Associate Professor (Project PI) |
NAMETracy Dunheimer |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEElementary Education Coordinator |
NAMELoren Jones |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEK-12 PDS Coordinator (Co-chair) |
NAMEDawn Martin |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEAssistant Clinical Professor |
NAMEJoel Miller |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEGraduate Assistant |
NAMEJulieta Perez |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLESupervising Mentor Teacher, PGCPS |
NAMEDalilah Gonzalez-Ocasio |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLEBuck Lodge Middle School, PDS Liaison |
NAMEEleanor White |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLEProgram Coordinator |
NAMEElisa Hong |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEIGEER II Innovative Support Teacher |
NAMEJennifer Hallmark |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEFarquhar Middle School Staff Development Teacher |
NAMESerenity Moore |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLECoordinator, New Employee Onboarding and Induction |
Project Overview
The Maryland PDS 2025 Project SMTA is a collaboratively designed and facilitated professional development experience for practicing and potential Supervising Mentor Teachers in four Maryland public schools: Buck Lodge Middle School and High Point High School (Prince George’s County Public Schools); Farquhar Middle School and Olney Elementary School (Montgomery County Public Schools).
A Supervising Mentor Teacher is defined as a practicing teacher who has one or more UMD educator preparation interns placed in their classroom as a component of the interns’ educator preparation certification program. Collaborators on the design and facilitation of the SMTA include Mentor Teachers, PGCPS and MCPS School Administrators, PGCPCS and MCPS Professional Development Specialists, and University of Maryland faculty.
Theory of Mentor Teacher Development and Impact
Supervising Mentor teachers are primary influences on Interns’ perceptions of teaching and Interns’ capacity to create meaningful learning environments in their early years of teaching. We contend that Supervising Mentor Teachers’ development and impact are driven by a system of interacting belief, relationships, roles, and capacities. Supervising Mentor teachers deepen their understanding of the relationship between Supervising Mentor Teachers’ belief systems, their mentoring practices, and their informal interactions with Interns. Our Theory of Supervising Mentor Teacher Development and Impact contends that, for high impact on Interns’ preparation to enter the profession, the following Supervising Mentor Teacher development activities should take place:
- Supervising Mentor teachers’ examination of their belief systems about the students they teach, their students’ families, and communities served by their school
- Supervising Mentor teachers’ examination and understanding of Interns' academic, family, and community histories
- Supervising Mentor teachers’ understanding of their critical role as teacher educators, including the realization that they are the primary ambassadors of the teaching profession.
- Self-awareness and cultural competency
- Speaking up and responding to prejudice, bias and stereotypes
- Building alliances
- Leading beyond the classroom
- Ongoing reflection and learning
- Supervising Mentor teachers’ understanding and capacity to employ a range of mentoring practices that can support intern capacity to employ critical practices associated with
- Planning, instruction and assessment
- Classroom culture
- Family and community engagement
- Supervising Mentor teachers employ tangible and relevant assessment tools to support their interns’ professional, social, and emotional growth on their path to becoming a teacher in contemporary schools.
Maryland PDS 2025 Supervising Mentor Teacher Academy Goals
- Critically examine their beliefs and knowledge about their PreK - 12 students’ ways of knowing and learning, families, communities, and histories
- Critically examine their beliefs and knowledge about teacher candidates' ways of knowing and learning, families, communities, and histories
- Examine and expand their beliefs and knowledge about how teacher candidates can and should be prepared for their first years of teaching
- Examine and expand their beliefs and understanding of the critical role of the Mentor Teacher in teacher education programs
- Demonstrate the capacity to support teacher candidates' development of their instructional practice
- Demonstrate the capacity to support teacher candidates' development of beliefs and practices in establishing a safe and inclusive classroom culture
- Demonstrate the capacity to support teacher candidates' development of beliefs and practices focused on family and community engagement
- Use data collected from a range of assessment tools to support teacher candidates' preparation
SMTA Module Schedule & Topics
- Includes ten 1.5 hour professional development workshops once a month between September 2022 and July 2023.
- Length: Up to 3 hours per month
- Date and Times: Second Tuesday of the Month from 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm
SMTA Module Schedule & Topics (2022-2023)
Session |
Topic |
---|---|
Session 1-9/20 |
Topic Introduction and Orientation |
Session 2-10/11 |
Topic The Supervising Mentor Teacher Role |
Session 3-11/15 |
Topic Mentoring with Social and Emotional Safety |
Session 4-12/13 |
Topic Mentoring by Example: A Safe & Inclusive Classroom Culture |
Session 5-1/10 |
Topic Mentoring by Example: Planning, Instructional, and Assessment Practices (Part 1) |
Session 6-2/21 |
Topic Mentoring by Example: Planning, Instructional, and Assessment Practices (Part 2) |
Session 7-3/14 |
Topic Mentoring by Example: Planning, Instructional, and Assessment Practices (Part 3) |
Session 8-4/18 |
Topic Mentoring by Example: Family and Community Engagement |
Session 9-5/9 |
Topic Mentoring through Courageous Conversations |
Session 10-6/6 |
Topic Mentoring through Ongoing Reflection |
Work Group Members
NAME |
ORGANIZATION |
TITLE |
---|---|---|
NAMELawrence Clark |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEAssistant Dean and Associate Professor (Project PI) |
NAMETracy Dunheimer |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEElementary Education Coordinator |
NAMEAlison Jovanovic |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLESocial Studies Education Program Coordinator |
NAMERossina Zamora Liu |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEAssistant Clinical Professor |
NAMETBD |
ORGANIZATIONUMD |
TITLEGraduate Assistant |
NAMEEleanor White |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLEProgram Coordinator |
NAMENicole Wall |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLEInstructional Specialist |
NAMEAlexander Schlegel |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLEHigh Point High School PDS Liaison |
NAMETracey Brown |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLESupervising Mentor Teacher |
NAMELaShelle Ferguson |
ORGANIZATIONPGCPS |
TITLESupervising Mentor Teacher |
NAMEYolanda Stanislaus |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEDirector of Dept. of Professional Growth Systems |
NAMEAsha Jackson |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEInstructional Specialist |
NAMEElisa Hong |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEGEER II Innovative Support Teacher |
NAMEAlison O’Connor |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEInstructional Specialist |
NAMEMary Hart |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLEConsulting Teacher |
NAMESerenity Moore |
ORGANIZATIONMCPS |
TITLECoordinator, New Employee Onboarding and Induction |