Table of Contents
Dispositions in Teacher Education: Old Tricks, New Name

The Spring 2007 issue of features an . Authored by Kent State Professor Laurie Moses Hines, the article details how todayās ādispositionsā are an updated version of the āmental hygieneā requirements widely utilized in teacher education between the 1930s and 1960s.
Hinesās article provides a useful historical context to Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās ongoing battle against the disposition-based assessments currently employed in teacher education. Hines writes:
The screening of prospective teachers for maladjustment 50 years ago and the dispositions assessments going on today have remarkable similarities. As William Damon of Stanford has noted, dispositions assessment āopens virtually all of a candidateās thoughts and actions to scrutiny...[and] brings under the examinerās purview a key element of the candidateās very personality.ā The same underlying assumptionāthat scientific means of selection and training could guarantee good teachersāheld sway at mid-century with respect to mental hygiene. Teacher educators who guarded entry to the profession used the techniques of science to study, measure, and evaluate the teacher candidate as do those who guard entry today. Only the specific values and attitudes they appraise have changed. Advocates of dispositions assessment claim that their methods are āstandards-basedā and provide āaccountabilityāāscientific-sounding catchwords that hold considerable weight in the current political climate.
Hinesās analysis focuses on several Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS cases involving the use of dispositions. The article opens by recounting Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās successful intervention on behalf of Washington State University graduate student Ed Swan, whom Torch readers will remember for being disciplined and threatened with dismissal for his conservative political viewpoints because they failed to satisfy the schoolās disposition requirements. Hines also details Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās victorious campaign against the inclusion of a āsocial justiceā disposition by the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE), a governmentally authorized accreditor of education schools, as well as Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās most recent dispositions challenge at Columbia Universityās Teachers College.
By locating todayās reliance on politically loaded dispositions in a larger historical context, Hinesās article helps isolate and reveal the dangers of mandating a particular worldview for our nationās teachers. By requiring that prospective teachers be evaluated by their commitment to vague ideals like āsocial justice,ā todayās schools repeat yesterdayās mistakes, when teachers were graded according to equally amorphous standards, like āattainments and attitudes.ā Hinesās research demonstrates that both then and now, teachersā schools err grievously when they substitute personality tests and political allegiances for more practical, relevant considerations, such as student performance in the classroom. Hinesās conclusion is precisely correct: āThose committed to academic freedom within higher education should be concerned when professional socialization trumps freedom of conscience in teacher education programs.ā
In need of First Amendment resources for teachers? The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education has you covered. Our "First Things First" First Amendment textbook for college undergraduates explores the fundamentals of modern American free speech law. Meanwhile, our K-12 First Amendment curriculum modules help educators enrich and supplement their existing instruction on First Amendment and freedom of expression issues in middle and high school classrooms. Explore thefire.org for even more First Amendment educational resources.
Recent Articles
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Brendan Carrās Bizarro World FCC

Day 100! Abridging the First Amendment: Zick releases major resource report on Trumpās executive orders ā First Amendment News 468Ā

Detaining Ćztürk over an op-ed is unlawful and un-American
