Dr. Cheryl Holcomb-McCoy
The American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE) and the National Center for Teacher Residencies (NCTR), joined by 102 other education groups, sent a letter to congressional leadership expressing "deep concern" over the termination of three critical federal programs: Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED), Teacher Quality Partnership (TQP), and the Teacher and School Leader Incentive Program (TSL).
"Every child in our nation deserves access to highly prepared educators, and it is essential that every educator be prepared in a manner that equips them for modern classrooms," said Dr. Cheryl Holcomb-McCoy, AACTE president and CEO. "The cancellation of these grants hinders active solutions to addressing the educator workforce and improving student outcomes in PK-12 schools."
The cancellations come at a time when many communities are experiencing severe teacher shortages while students remain approximately half a grade level behind pre-pandemic achievement levels in reading and math. The affected programs specifically addressed critical shortage areas including science, mathematics, career and technical education, early childhood education, special education, and instruction for English language learners.
The Department of Education has not fully disclosed how many programs have been terminated, but the coalition reports that all SEED grants and most TQP grants have been canceled. These terminations have affected educational institutions across the country, including large research universities, small private colleges, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and alternative teacher preparation pathways.
What makes the situation particularly problematic is the timing of these cancellations, which occurred in the middle of the academic year. Students who are only months away from becoming fully licensed teachers have suddenly lost scholarships and paid internships that made their career path possible.
"There's a ripple effect that must be addressed now," said Dr. Kathlene Campbell, NCTR CEO. "While the cancellation of the grants impacts students and teacher residents currently in a teacher preparation program who are uncertain on how they can continue in the program without financial support, it also impacts prospective students and teacher residents who now may have second thoughts about entering a teacher prep program."