N.H. Admin. Code § Ed 507.11

Current through Register No. 45, November 7, 2024
Section Ed 507.11 - Elementary Education Teacher
(a) To be certified as an elementary education teacher for grades K-6, the candidate shall:
(1) Have at least a bachelor's degree;
(2) Qualify for certification under one of the alternatives in Ed 505.01 - Ed 505.05; and
(3) Complete the requirements in (c) below.
(b) To be certified as an elementary education teacher for grades K-8 the candidate shall:
(1) Have at least a bachelor's degree;
(2) Have a content concentration in English/language arts, mathematics, social studies or general science;
(3) Have a passing middle school content Praxis II score in the given content area listed in (2);
(4) Qualify for certification under one of the alternatives in Ed 505.01 - Ed 505.05; and
(5) Complete the requirements in (c) below.
(c) A candidate for certification as an elementary education teacher for grades K-6 or K-8 shall have the following skills, competencies and knowledge developed through a combination of academic and supervised practical experiences in the following areas:
(1) In the area of curriculum and assessment, demonstrate the ability to promote student learning in:
a. Literacy and language arts across media, genres and content areas through knowledge and application of:
1. Five components of basic early literacy:
(i) Phonemic awareness;
(ii) Phonics;
(iii) Fluency;
(iv) Vocabulary; and
(v) Comprehension;
2. Text complexity measures, qualitative, quantitative and reader and task, and other strategies to identify and select appropriate text;
3. The writing process to compose a variety of text types and structures including informational, opinion, research and narrative, in print and digital formats on and off-line;
4. Standard English and English language conventions to speaking and writing including:
(i) Usage;
(ii) Spelling;
(iii) Grammar;
(iv) Mechanics;
(v) Syntax; and
(vi) Semantics;
5. Speaking and listening skills through the use of effective communication, collaboration, and presentation skills demonstrated in diverse formats, for varied audiences and purposes;
6. Gross motor, fine motor and graphomotor skills and their relationship to reading, writing, handwriting and other literacy learning; and
7. Characteristics of the 3 tiers of words, every-day language, general academic words, and domain-specific words;
b. Mathematics across content areas through knowledge and application of:
1. Conceptual and procedural knowledge with:
(i) Counting and cardinality;
(ii) Operations and algebraic thinking;
(iii) Number and operations;
(iv) Measurement and data;
(v) Geometry;
(vi) Ratios and proportional relationships;
(vii) Number systems;
(viii) Expressions and equations; and
(ix) Statistics and probability; and
2. Mathematical practices to include:
(i) Solving to mastery;
(ii) Abstract and quantitative reasoning;
(iii) Constructing arguments and critiquing student reasoning;
(iv) Modeling and strategic use of mathematical tools and manipulatives;
(v) Attention to precision;
(vi) Finding and making use of structure; and
(vii) Expressing regularity in repeated reasoning;
c. Social studies through knowledge and application of:
1. Basic concepts in the 5 strands of social studies:
(i) Civics;
(ii) Economics;
(iii) Geography;
(iv) NH, US and world history; and
(v) Contemporary issues;
2. The 10 themes of social studies:
(i) Culture;
(ii) Time/continuity/change;
(iii) People/places/environments;
(iv) Individual development and identity;
(v) Individuals/groups/institutions;
(vi) Power/authority/governance;
(vii) Production/distribution/consumption;
(viii) Science/technology/society;
(ix) Global connections and civic ideals/practices; and
(x) Their interdisciplinary nature;
d. Science through knowledge and application of:
1. Basic concepts, structure of knowledge, and history in the 4 domains of science:
(i) Earth and space science;
(ii) Life science;
(iii) Physical science; and
(iv) Engineering, technology and applications of science; and
2. The scientific method through the use of the observation and inquiry processes; and
e. Technology and information literacy through knowledge and application of:
1. The ability to develop and use spreadsheets, data systems, analysis tools and statistical measures;
2. Digital citizenship, ethics and internet safety; and
3. How to use changing instructional technologies in daily instruction;
(2) In the area of communication and collaboration, demonstrate the ability to promote student learning through:
a. Knowledge of the roles, responsibilities, and interdependency of personnel indigenous to elementary schools; and
b. Application of technology as a tool to communicate with members of the professional community and parents; and
(3) In the area of integration across content areas, demonstrate the ability to promote student learning through knowledge and application of:
a. Visual arts, music, theatre, dance and media arts; and
b. Health, wellness and safety.

N.H. Admin. Code § Ed 507.11

Adopted by Volume XXXIV Number 16, Filed April 17, 2014, Proposed by #10558, Effective 3/27/2014, Expires3/27/2024.

The amended version of this section by New Hampshire Register Number 37, eff. 8/15/2024 is not yet available.