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DOE Awards UTEP $4.3M to Strengthen Teacher Pipeline in West Texas

Two projects will use partner-driven efforts in teacher recruitment and high-quality preparation

EL PASO, Texas (Feb. 16, 2023) – ÀÇÓÑÊÓƵ’s College of Education recently received two grants from the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) totaling more than $4.3 million. The first grant will establish a center that will recruit and prepare individuals to enter the teaching profession. A second grant will fund an initiative to increase the number of K-12 teachers who are qualified to work more effectively with English learners.

ÀÇÓÑÊÓƵ’s College of Education received a grant of more than $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Education to recruit and prepare a predominantly Hispanic teacher pipeline in the El Paso region to serve in high-need PK-12 school districts. The project is titled the Augustus F. Hawkins Center of Excellence in Hispanic Teacher Preparation at UTEP. The research team includes (clockwise from top left) Clifton Tanabe, Ph.D., J.D., dean of the college of education; Dan Heiman, Ph.D., assistant professor of bilingual education; Erika Mein, Ph.D., UTEP associate dean of educator preparation; Josie Tinajero, Ph.D., professor of bilingual education; and Alyse Hachey, Ph.D., co-chair of the department of teacher education (not pictured).
ÀÇÓÑÊÓƵ’s College of Education received a grant of more than $1.5 million from the U.S. Department of Education to recruit and prepare a predominantly Hispanic teacher pipeline in the El Paso region to serve in high-need PK-12 school districts. The project is titled the Augustus F. Hawkins Center of Excellence in Hispanic Teacher Preparation at UTEP. The research team includes (clockwise from top left) Clifton Tanabe, Ph.D., J.D., dean of the college of education; Dan Heiman, Ph.D., assistant professor of bilingual education; Erika Mein, Ph.D., UTEP associate dean of educator preparation; Josie Tinajero, Ph.D., professor of bilingual education; and Alyse Hachey, Ph.D., co-chair of the department of teacher education (not pictured).

“This work is vital because UTEP produces 70% of the teachers in local schools,” said Clifton Tanabe, Ph.D., J.D., dean of the College of Education. “This support from the Department of Education will enable UTEP to accelerate and elevate the transformational teacher preparation work we are pursuing here in El Paso.”

The Augustus F. Hawkins Center

A grant of more than $1.5 million from the DOE will establish the Augustus F. Hawkins Center of Excellence in Hispanic Teacher Preparation (CEHTP) at UTEP. This is part of an $18 million initiative announced this week by the DOE.

At UTEP, the project will implement a research-based, competency-driven curriculum to target education students who are currently pursuing their bachelor’s degree as well as those who already have a degree and are now interested in obtaining the certifications needed to become a teacher.

The project also seeks to bolster the availability of bilingual teachers in the Paso del Norte region.

Anticipated objectives include increasing enrollment of prospective teachers into UTEP’s undergraduate teacher preparation program and into high-needs certification areas. This will be done by implementing strategic recruitment efforts with high school Education and Training programs and among school support staff, including instructional aides, who want to be certified to teach.

UTEP will work with seven regional school districts to execute the project’s objectives: Canutillo ISD, Clint ISD, El Paso ISD, Fabens ISD, Socorro ISD, Tornillo ISD and Ysleta ISD.

“This support will help us enhance and take the already strong partnerships we have with school districts in the region and the El Paso Community College to the next level,” said Erika Mein, Ph.D., UTEP associate dean of educator preparation and principal investigator for the DOE grant. “This will create pathways toward education for prospective teachers – individuals interested in making a difference in kids’ lives.”

Those selected for the program will participate in UTEP’s Miner Teacher Residency, a paid program involving a full year of hands-on preparation in an elementary, middle or high school classroom alongside a trained mentor teacher.

Learning, Encouraging, and Planning to Uplift Performance

The second DOE grant, worth more than $2.8 million, will support an initiative called Learning, Encouraging, and Planning to Uplift Performance (LEAP UP).

LEAP UP will seek to recruit current teachers to pursue the Bilingual Education/Dual Language or ESL Graduate Certificates and, ultimately, gain the skills and knowledge necessary to teach more effectively in dual language, bilingual education and English as a Second Language (ESL) K-12 classroom settings.

UTEP researchers will collaborate with multiple partners in the Paso del Norte region’s PK-12 education ecosystem including the Texas State Education Agency, the Texas Association for Bilingual Education, the Center for Applied Linguistics, Head Start and Early Head Start El Paso, Education Service Center Region 19, as well as the Canutillo, El Paso and Ysleta independent school districts.

Photo Description” Photo: UTEP Communications
Learning, Encouraging, and Planning to Uplift Performance (LEAP UP) will seek to recruit current teachers to pursue the Bilingual Education/Dual Language or ESL Graduate Certificates and, ultimately, gain the skills and knowledge necessary to teach more effectively in dual language, bilingual education and English as a Second Language (ESL) K-12 classroom settings.
Photo: UTEP Marketing and Communications

“We are thankful to all the partners who sent their letters of support and will be involved; they made it possible for UTEP to apply its expertise in preparing classroom-ready bilingual educators through this grant.” said Josefina V. Tinajero, Ed.D., professor of bilingual education in the UTEP College of Education of LEAP UP’s principal investigator.

About the University of Texas at El Paso

ÀÇÓÑÊÓƵ is America’s leading Hispanic-serving university. Located at the westernmost tip of Texas, where three states and two countries converge along the Rio Grande, 84% of our 24,000 students are Hispanic, and half are the first in their families to go to college. UTEP offers 169 bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree programs at the only open-access, top-tier research university in America.

Last Updated on February 16, 2023 at 12:00 AM | Originally published February 16, 2023

By MC Staff UTEP Marketing and Communications