Getting Started with TIA
Local Designation System Requirements
House Bill 3 provides districts with local control and flexibility in choosing how to evaluate teachers and assign designations. Developing a local teacher designation system requires significant planning, robust stakeholder engagement, adequate time to prepare all necessary materials for rollout and a strong communication plan prior to the first implementation year. Once a local designation system is approved, districts may recommend their effective teachers for designation. There is no limit to the number of teachers that a district may designate as long as their teachers meet the district’s designation criteria and the eligibility requirements under the rules defined by TEA.
At a minimum, the designation system must include both a teacher observation and a student performance component:
Teacher observation based on T-TESS; a third-party rubric, such as the NIET TAP, Marzano, or Danielson rubric. District application must show evidence of validity and reliability.
Student growth measures determined by district. Can include pre-and post-tests, value-added measures, student learning objectives (SLOs), and portfolios. District application must show evidence of validity and reliability.
Districts can use other factors in determining the teachers eligible to receive a designation, such as student surveys, teacher leadership responsibilities, teacher mentorship responsibilities, family surveys, demonstration of district core values, teacher peer surveys, and contributions to the broader school community.
The systems must be submitted to TEA for approval and undergo a data-validation process, which will be conducted by Texas Tech University. As part of the validation process, Texas Tech will:
Review alignment between teacher observation ratings and student performance ratings.
Review alignment between student performance ratings and value-added ratings for applicable teachers.
Review data validity by appraiser/rater, by campus, across campuses in a district, and by teaching assignment.
Compare district data to state data by comparing the percentage of teachers a district puts forth for designation to overall district performance.
Step 1
Submit your application for a local teacher designation system to TEA
Step 2
Use the resources below to complete the step 2 data submission process. The documents currently reflect the process and requirements for 2023 data submission and validation.
Step 3
TEA will review the results of the data validation process and the system application to determine a district's final approval status for the Teacher Incentive Allotment.
For approved districts, teacher designations are awarded and placed on certificates and TEA notifies districts of the allotment for that school year.
3 Essential Decisions for TIA District
Who?
Determine the eligible teaching assignments that will be included in your first application. Remember, this can be expanded and modified later.
How?
Determine the student growth measure that will accompany each eligible teaching assignment. What weight will you choose to give to student growth and T-TESS observations?
Compensation?
What percentage of the funds will be allocated to the teacher? At least 90% of funds must go to instructional-facing staff at the campus where the designated teacher is assigned. The district may retain 10% of the funds to support TIA development.
Districts receive the TIA allotment funding and must abide by the spending requirements by August 31st of each year.