CalTPA

CalTPA Website

Dr. Barsh and Dr. Bachrach have established the CalTPA Support Site.

CalTPA Guidelines for Acceptable Support

https://www.ctcexams.nesinc.com/TestView.aspx?f=CACBT_Faculty_CalTPA.html

This document outlines policies and guidelines for supporting candidates during their completion of the CalTPA. These guidelines apply to all support providers including faculty, supervisors, cooperating teachers, master and/or mentor teachers, peers, and others who may provide assistance (e.g., tutors). Consistent with research on student learning, programs are encouraged to help candidates examine in meaningful ways the Teaching Performance Expectations (TPEs) evaluated by the CalTPA, and to discuss how they will demonstrate their performance in relation to those expectations. Since the CalTPA is to be embedded within a preparation program, it is expected that candidates will engage in professional conversations with faculty and district or school support providers about teaching and learning associated with the outcomes assessed by the CalTPA. Faculty and support providers are encouraged to review with the candidate the language, structure, and progression of a candidate's submission against the CalTPA rubrics, and to provide formative feedback and guidance to the candidate as part of the preparation program experience.

The following activities constitute required forms of support for candidates completing the CalTPA:

The following activities constitute acceptable forms of support for candidates completing the CalTPA:

Although there may be many opportunities for support providers to encourage a candidate's deeper understanding and demonstration of pedagogy, other supports are not acceptable within the CalTPA process. These unacceptable forms of support will undermine the use of the assessment as a determinant of a candidate's status with respect to the TPEs and as an indicator of preparation program quality and effectiveness. Engaging in these activities could lead to a candidate's loss of the credential and jeopardize a program's accreditation status.

The following activities constitute unacceptable forms of support for candidates completing the CalTPA:

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