National Council of Teachers of English

Recognizing Teacher Experts and Their Paths to Expertise

Overview

Teacher experts are teachers who have continued teaching in a P–12 classroom while also serving the field and growing their educational knowledge and pedagogy continually throughout their long careers. Teacher experts have many roles within their schools and the greater education community. They are often called upon as formal mentors to early career teachers, and, informally, their colleagues seek their wisdom and expertise throughout the school day. They are asked to serve on school, district, and state committees for curriculum development and educational reform. They seek out professional development opportunities to attend, and they often present at conferences. They are longtime, active members of professional organizations, and they serve on boards and committees within these organizations. Teacher experts often author professional articles and books and are constantly sought out to join educational research projects. Teacher experts serve children and families in their classrooms while also serving their professional communities and the field at large with the work they do outside of their classrooms. The journeys to becoming a teacher expert are varied and wide. And because so much of the work that teacher experts are called to do happens outside their classrooms but during the school day, they need support from their schools and professional communities so that they can engage in the work that makes our field richer and more knowledgeable because they are included.

Background

In the current climate, which deprofessionalizes P–12 classroom teachers, many are leaving the profession (García & Weiss, 2019). One important reason is the failure to recognize classroom teachers as experts equal to their peers in higher education, administrators, and stakeholders outside the field. The specialized knowledge of classroom teacher experts (including but not limited to content knowledge, pedagogical knowledge, pedagogical content knowledge, relationship building, classroom management, culturally responsive and sustaining pedagogy, social-emotional learning, and information and communication technology), which can only be obtained from sustained professional learning throughout a teacher’s career, is often absent from curriculum development teams, professional communities, and leadership groups.

The National Council of Teachers of English has recognized the specialized role of teacher knowledge and expertise in past statements and policies:

The specialized knowledge needed by classroom teachers is a core component of who teacher experts are. However, teacher experts also pursue further professional learning, growth, and leadership opportunities that extend beyond the teaching and learning inside their classrooms and into their schools, districts, communities, and profession at large.

Statement

NCTE considers teacher experts to be practicing classroom teachers who develop, refine, and cultivate their practice while also serving in collaborative roles and leadership positions. Further, NCTE encourages other professional organizations, administrators and policymakers, and higher education professionals to promote the role of teacher expert as an aspiration; to support teacher experts with opportunities to learn, grow, and lead while fairly compensating them for their time and energy; and to celebrate valuable educators who have earned the classification of teacher expert.

Definition of Teacher Expert

While NCTE celebrates veteran teachers who have given decades to their classroom teaching careers, being a veteran teacher is not the sole definition of a teacher expert. Instead, teacher experts can be defined as teachers who continue teaching in their P–12 classrooms while also making a commitment to intentional professional growth that is sustained over time and years of practice (in and beyond classroom spaces). They

However, beyond exhibiting these components of excellent teaching, teacher experts chart a pathway that pursues further professional learning and growth that impacts their teaching and learning inside the classroom and in their profession at large.

Pathways to Teacher Expertise

Pathways to becoming a teacher expert are individual and varied. An educator who is committed to sustained professional learning and reflective practice, whether through formal or informal design, may be a teacher expert. Some examples of pathways to teacher expertise include but are not limited to

The keystone of a teacher expert is their impact on teaching and learning with students directly and more generally in the profession while remaining active in their classroom.

Contributions of Teacher Experts

We recognize teacher experts as contributors and leaders in the school sites and local communities, as well as at district, state, and national levels. Teacher experts, while continuing to teach in P–12 classrooms, can additionally serve in a variety of roles that demonstrate their curricular leadership and expertise, including

While teacher experts can serve in a variety of roles, including those listed above, it is critical to recognize the strength and importance of creating sustainable structures that allow teacher experts to remain teaching in P–12 classrooms for at least part of their professional work. This might involve creative partnerships with teacher educators or colleagues including job-sharing, administrative or curricular leadership roles that come with partial course releases, and compensation/funding for professional learning opportunities.

Teacher experts can also share their leadership in a variety of ways, including

In supporting teacher experts in leading within and from their classrooms, we challenge notions that expertise necessitates an exit from ongoing P–12 teaching and recognize the power and continued relevance of classroom teaching to developing professional expertise.

Supporting and Sustaining Teacher Experts

Teachers are the key to school communities. Specifically, teacher experts engage in continuous professional learning and growth that supports the foundation of the school community and educational community at large. With this, the educational field must recognize their essential role in supporting and sustaining teacher experts within the community. Furthermore, the field must understand their responsibility to dismantle oppressive structures to provide sustaining, affirming, and nurturing environments for the celebration and growth of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) teacher experts along the course of their careers—from recruitment into teacher education; through preservice and entry into the profession; and in early, mid, and late stages of their careers.

A vital part of supporting teacher expertise is creating sustainable structures that promote teachers staying in classrooms to develop their expertise. This requires efforts not only to recruit teachers into the field but to retain them. Efforts must be made particularly both to recruit and retain Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian American, Pasifika, and multiracial teachers given research that indicates their greater effectiveness with all students (Cherng & Halpin, 2016) and the increased rate of push-out for these teachers beginning as early as teacher education (Mawhinney & Rinke, 2019).

Therefore, teacher experts call upon the field of education to dismantle current structures that create barriers to the development and well-being of teacher experts and co-develop the following:

NCTE and Other Professional Organizations

Administrators and Policymakers

Districts/Educational Systems

Teacher Educators

Note: These partnerships/collaborations can be particularly powerful if teacher educators who keep their P–12 credentials current can serve as co-teachers/substitute teachers/collaborators with classroom-based teacher experts to allow the teacher experts time to engage in scholarly work while providing a consistent, cohesive learning experience for students.

Teacher Educator Programs in Colleges/Universities

RESEARCH SUPPORTING THIS STATEMENT

Berliner, D. (1993). Teacher expertise. In A. Pollard & J. Bourne (Eds.), Teaching and learning in the primary school (pp. 83–89). Routledge.

Berry, B., Johnson, D., & Montgomery, D. (2005). The power of teacher leadership. Educational Leadership, 62(5), 56–60.

Cherng, H.-Y. S., & Halpin, P. F. (2016). The importance of minority teachers: Student perceptions of minority versus white teachers. Educational Researcher, 45(7), 407–420.

Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. L. (1999). Chapter 8: Relationships of knowledge and practice: Teacher learning in communities. Review of Research in Education, 24(1), 249–305.

Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. L. (2015). Inquiry as stance: Practitioner research for the next generation. Teachers College Press.

Crowther, F., Ferguson, M., & Hann, L. (2009). Developing teacher leaders: How teacher leadership enhances school success. Corwin.

Dana, N. F., & Yendol-Hoppey, D. (2019). The reflective educator’s guide to classroom research: Learning to teach and teaching to learn through practitioner inquiry. Corwin.

Feiman-Nemser, S. (2012). Teachers as learners. Harvard Education Press.

García, E., & Weiss, E. (2019, March 26). The teacher shortage is real, large and growing, and worse than we thought. Economic Policy Institute. https://www.epi.org/publication/the-teacher-shortage-is-real-large-and-growing-and-worse-than-we-thought-the-first-report-in-the-perfect-storm-in-the-teacher-labor-market-series/ [3]

Harris, A., & Muijs, D. (2004). Improving schools through teacher leadership. McGraw-Hill.

Lambert, L. (2003). Leadership redefined: An evocative context for teacher leadership. School Leadership & Management, 23(4), 421–430.

Mawhinney, L., & Rinke, C. R. (2019). There has to be a better way. Rutgers University Press.

Muijs, D., & Harris, A. (2003). Teacher leadership—Improvement through empowerment? An overview of the literature. Educational Management & Administration, 31(4), 437–448.

Pine, G. J. (2008). Teacher action research: Building knowledge democracies. SAGE.

York-Barr, J., & Duke, K. (2004). What do we know about teacher leadership? Findings from two decades of scholarship. Review of Educational Research, 74(3), 255–316.


STATEMENT AUTHORS

This document was composed by the following working committee:

Tiana Silvas, chair, New York City Public Schools, NY

Melissa Guerrette, Oxford Elementary School, MSAD 17, Oxford, ME

Betina Hsieh, California State University Long Beach, CA

Jennifer Ochoa, New York City Public Schools, NY

Islah Tauheed, New York City Public Schools, NY

Deborah Vriend Van Duinen, Hope College, Holland, MI

Teacher Reviewers

Ella Farinas, Pasadena Unified School District, CA

Stephany Garcia, Long Beach Unified School District, CA

Shiela Lee, New York City Public Schools, NY

Karen Maria Rowe, Black River Public School, Holland, MI

Nekia Wise, New York City Public Schools, NY

This position statement may be printed, copied, and disseminated without permission from NCTE.