Or. Admin. Code § 584-430-0100 - Principal License: Program Standards
(1)
Purpose of the Program: To
prepare candidates for the Principal License. Program completers must
demonstrate the knowledge, skills, professional dispositions and cultural
competencies necessary to promote the academic, career, personal and social
development of pre-kindergarten to grade 12 students.
(2) To receive state recognition of a
Principal License Program, the program must include:
(a) Clinical practices as the foundation of
the program, with coursework as a support to the practical learning experience.
In addition, the EPP must meet the minimum Commission standards for clinical
practices, as provided in subsection (10) of this rule; and
(b) Practical experience and content that
will enable candidates to gain the knowledge, skills, abilities, professional
dispositions, and cultural competencies to meet the standards set forth in this
rule and the TSPC Program Review and Standards Handbook.
(c) A minimum of 40 quarter or 27 semester
hours.
(3)
Standard
1: Mission, Vision, and Core Values. Program completers who successfully
complete a Principal preparation program understand and demonstrate the
capability to promote the success and well-being of each student, teacher, and
leader by applying the knowledge, skills, commitments, and equity lens
necessary for:
1) an inclusive, shared
mission and vision;
2) a set of
core values of high-quality education, equity, and inclusion;
3) a support system;
4) a school improvement process designed to
prioritize addressing race and other group-based inequities; and
5) the development of partnerships between
schools, preschool and early childhood education programs, and postsecondary
education, which recognize their importance to successful student learning.
Program completers must understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a) (MISSION AND VISION) Develop, advocate
for, and implement a collaboratively developed, and data-informed mission and
vision for the school rooted in the values of equity and inclusion;
(b) (VALUES) Articulate, advocate, model, and
cultivate a set of core values that define the school's culture and stress the
imperative of child-centered education; high expectations and student support;
equity, inclusiveness, and social justice; openness, caring, and
trust;
(c) (SUPPORT SYSTEM) Build,
maintain, and evaluate a coherent, inclusive system of academic and social
supports, discipline, services, extracurricular activities, and accommodations
to meet the full range of needs of each student; and
(d) (IMPROVEMENT) Engage staff and school
community to develop, implement and evaluate a comprehensive, continuous,
responsive, sustainable, data-based school improvement process to achieve the
mission of the school and address gaps in resources, opportunities, and
outcomes for historically marginalized groups.
(4)
Standard 2: Ethics,
Professional Norms, and Sociopolitical Leadership. Program completers who
successfully complete a Principal preparation program understand and
demonstrate the capability to promote the success and well-being of each
student, teacher, and leader by applying the knowledge, skills, commitments,
and equity lens necessary for:
1)
professional norms;
2)
decision-making;
3) educational
values;
4) ethical behavior, and (5)
sociopolitical awareness. Program completers must understand and demonstrate
the ability to:
(a) (PROFESSIONAL NORMS) Enact
the professional norms of integrity, fairness, transparency, trust,
collaboration, perseverance, learning and continuous improvement in their
actions, decision making and relationships with other school personnel and
students, as provided in 584-020-0035, the Ethical
Educator;
(b)
(DECISION-MAKING) Evaluate the moral and legal consequences of
decisions;
(c) (VALUES) Model
essential educational values of democracy, community, individual freedom and
responsibility, equity, social justice, and diversity;
(d) (ETHICAL BEHAVIOR) Model ethical behavior
in their actions and relationships with other school personnel and students, as
provided in 584-020-0035, the Ethical Educator; and
(e) (SOCIOPOLITICAL) Understands, values, and
responds to the larger political, social, economic, legal, and cultural context
including the state of Oregon's and the local community's cultural, social,
intellectual, and political resources to promote student learning and school
improvement.
(5)
Standard 3: Equity and
Cultural Leadership. Program completers who successfully complete a Principal
preparation program understand and demonstrate the capability to promote the
success and well-being of each student, teacher, and leader by applying the
knowledge, skills, commitments, and equity lens necessary for:
1) equitable protocols;
2) equitable opportunity and access;
3) culturally responsive practices;
4) an inclusive school community;
and
5) promotion of cultural
pluralism. Program completers must understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a) (EQUITABLE PROTOCOLS) Develop, implement,
train and evaluate equitable guidelines, procedures and decisions that ensure
each student and stakeholder is treated fairly, respectfully, and with an
understanding of culture and context, including teacher and administrator
practices, procedures and decisions related to disciplinary referral,
discipline, suspension and expulsion of students and the effects and potential
for disproportionality of the discipline practices on marginalized
populations;
(b) (EQUITABLE
OPPORTUNITY AND ACCESS) Ensure that each student has equitable access to
effective teachers, learning opportunities, academic, social and behavioral
support, and other resources necessary for success;
(c) (RESPONSIVE PRACTICE) Develop responsive
practices among teachers and staff so they are able to recognize, confront, and
alter institutional biases that result in student marginalization,
deficit-based schooling, and low expectations associated with race, class,
culture and language, gender and sexual orientation, and disability or special
status;
(d) (INCLUSIVE SCHOOL
COMMUNITY) Build and maintain a school culture that ensures each student and
family is treated fairly, respectfully, in a responsive manner and free from
biases, including the capacity to name and address how power, privilege,
whiteness, racism, ableism, sexism, ageism, heterosexism, xenophobia and other
forms of "othering" operate to sustain inequities for historically marginalized
students and families; and
(e)
(PLURALISM) Promote the preparation of students to live productively in and
contribute to the diverse pluralistic cultural contexts of a global
society.
(6)
Standard 4: Instructional Leadership. Program completers who
successfully complete a Principal preparation program understand and
demonstrate the capability to promote the success and well-being of each
student, teacher, and leader by applying the knowledge, skills, commitments and
equity lens necessary for inclusive and culturally responsive:
1) learning systems;
2) instructional practices;
3) assessment systems; and
4) learning supports. Program completers must
understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a)
(LEARNING SYSTEM) Develop, align, and implement coherent and inclusive systems
of curriculum, instruction, and assessment that are responsive to student
needs, embody high expectations for student learning, align with academic
standards within and across grade levels, and promote academic success and
social emotional well-being for each student;
(b) (INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICE) Promote
challenging and engaging instructional practice consistent with knowledge of
learning theory, child development, and culturally responsive pedagogy and
practice;
(c) (ASSESSMENT SYSTEM)
Employ technically appropriate system of assessment and data collection,
management, analysis, and use to monitor student progress and improve
instruction with a focus on addressing the ways in which the learning and
organizational conditions of the school produce disparate outcomes for students
based on their race, class, culture and language, gender and sexual
orientation, and disability or special status; and
(d) (LEARNING SUPPORTS) Employ effective and
appropriate technologies, staffing, professional development, structures, and
communication to support equitable access to learning for each
student.
(7)
Standard 5: Community and External Leadership. Program completers
who successfully complete a Principal preparation program understand and
demonstrate the capability to promote the success and well-being of each
student, teacher, and leader by applying the knowledge, skills, commitments,
and equity lens necessary for meaningful, reciprocal, inclusive, and mutually
beneficial:
1) communication;
2) engagement;
3) partnerships, including, but not limited
to early childhood and postsecondary education providers; and
4) advocacy. Program completers must
understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a)
(COMMUNICATION) Maintain effective two-way communication with families and the
community;
(b) (ENGAGEMENT) Engage
and develop a welcoming environment for families, early learning partners,
community, and school personnel in strengthening student learning in and out of
school;
(c) (PARTNERSHIPS) Build
and sustain productive partnerships with communities and public and private
sectors to promote school improvement and student development; and
(d) (ADVOCACY) Identify needs of the school,
district, students, families, and the community, with a focus on prioritizing
groups whose needs have historically gone unmet due to their race, class,
culture and language, gender and sexual orientation, and disability or special
status.
(8)
Standard 6: Operations and Management. Program completers who
successfully complete a Principal preparation program understand and
demonstrate the capability to promote the success and well-being of each
student, teacher, and leader by applying the knowledge, skills, commitments,
and equity lens necessary for:
1) management
and operation;
2) equitable
distribution of resources;
3)
communication systems; and
4) legal
compliance. Program completers must understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a) (MANAGEMENT AND OPERATION SYSTEMS)
Develop, monitor, and evaluate school management and operation systems to
address and support each student's learning needs;
(b) (EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF RESOURCES)
Plan for, seek, acquire, and manage resources, including the planning and
responsibility for school budgeting; physical resources; technological
resources; data; and other resources to support student learning, collective
professional capability and community, and family engagement with attention to
equitably distributing resources to students who have been historically
marginalized;
(c) (COMMUNICATION
SYSTEMS) Develop and coordinate communication systems to deliver actionable
information for classroom, school improvement, and community engagement;
and
(d) (LEGAL COMPLIANCE) Comply
with applicable laws, rights, policies, and regulations as appropriate so as to
promote student and adult success, including the principal's responsibility to:
(A) Assure proper assignment of licensed
teachers, administrators and other licensed school personnel within their
school;
(B) Supervise the conduct
of all school personnel volunteers, who have direct contact with students in
their school;
(C) Monitor and
supervise the utilization of volunteers for school functions;
(D) Monitor and supervise the access of
non-school personnel and visitors to the school campus;
(E) Properly authorize out-of-school
suspension and expulsions of the students under their authority;
(F) Properly authorize the expenditure of
public funds under their authority; and
(G) Properly conduct investigations of
complaints and employee misconduct to assure the safety of Oregon school
children.
(9)
Standard 7: Human Resource
Leadership. Program completers who successfully complete a Principal
preparation program understand and demonstrate the capability to promote the
success and well-being of each student, teacher, and leader by applying the
knowledge, skills, commitments, and equity lens necessary for:
1) human resources;
2) professional culture;
3) workplace conditions; and
4) supervision and evaluation. Program
completers must understand and demonstrate the ability to:
(a) (HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT) Develop and
implement a human resource management system that recruits, hires, and
supports, develops, and retains effective, culturally responsive, caring, and
diverse educational personnel and creates leadership pathways for effective
succession;
(b) (PROFESSIONAL
CULTURE) Develop and sustain a professional culture of engagement, trust,
equity, inclusion, and commitment to shared vision, goals, and objectives
pertaining to the education of the whole child;
(c) (WORKPLACE CONDITIONS) Develop workplace
conditions that promote employee leadership, well-being, and professional
growth; and
(d) (SUPERVISION AND
EVALUATION) Implement research-anchored, equity-focused systems of supervision
and evaluation, including mentorship and support of newly-assigned educators,
that provide actionable feedback about instruction and culturally responsive
and other professional practices, promoting collective
accountability.
(10)
Standard 8: Clinical
Practice Program completers who successfully complete a Principal preparation
program engaged in a substantial and sustained educational leadership clinical
practices experience that developed their ability to promote the success and
well-being of each student, teacher and leader through clinical practice within
a building setting, monitored and evaluated by a qualified, on-site mentor.
(a) (FIELD EXPERIENCES) Candidates are
provided coherent, authentic, experiences that provide opportunities to
synthesize and apply the content knowledge, develop and refine the professional
skills, and demonstrate their capabilities as articulated in each of the
elements included in Principal License Program Standards (1) through
(7).
(b) (AUTHENTIC) Candidates are
provided a minimum of 2 semester or 3 quarter credits of concentrated (10-15
hours per week) Principal clinical experiences, with a minimum of 300 hours of
total clinical practice experiences provided throughout the program. The
clinical practice experience must include authentic leadership activities
within a building setting and must include experience in both the elementary
and secondary levels.
(c) (MENTOR)
Candidates are provided a mentor who has demonstrated effectiveness as an
educational leader within a building setting; understands the specific school
context; is present for a significant portion of the clinical practice; is
selected collaboratively by the candidate, a representative of the school
and/or district, and program faculty; and is provided with training by the
supervising institution.
(d)
(OBSERVATIONS AND EVALUATIONS) Candidates are provided a minimum number of
observations and evaluations, as provided:
(A)
Faculty Supervisor: The faculty supervisor must conduct
evaluations and observations of the administrator candidate during their
clinical practice, including:
(i) At least two
formal observations of the candidate, which include
information on the administrator's performance from the mentor; and
(ii) At least one formal
evaluation of the candidate.
NOTE: The faculty supervisor must meet Commission requirements, as provided in 584-400-0140, Clinical Practices.
(B)
Mentor: The mentor must
conduct evaluations and observations of the administrator candidate during the
clinical practice, including:
(i) At least two
formal observations of the candidate; and
(ii) At least one formal
evaluation of the candidate.
(11)
Implementation of
Standards: The Commission may not deny approval of a Principal License
program for failure to comply with the standards until August 1, 2022 if the
EPP:
(a) Develops a plan to comply with the
standards; and
(b) Submits the plan
to the Commission prior to August 1, 2021.
(12) A plan submitted under this section may
phase in implementation of the requirements if implementation is completed by
August 1, 2022, which is the beginning of the fourth academic year following
the date the Commission first adopts the Principal License
standards.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 342
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 342.120 - 342.430 & 342.455 - 342.495; 342.553
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