Updating Your License
Class 2 to Class 1
Online Application--New! Class 5 to Class 1, 2, 3 or 6
Name/Address Change
I Want a New License
Online Application--New!
Change of Address
Duplicate License
Online Application--New!
Duplicate License Request ($6)
Loan forgiveness Programs
Montana Loan Forgiveness
Federal Loan Forgiveness
Application Materials
Renewal Application Forms For Educators
Renewal Requirements
Online Renewal (Class 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6)--New!
Class 1, 2. 3, 4, 6 or 8(Paper Application)
Class 7 (Paper Application)
Traffic Education (Paper Application)
Application Forms for Renewal Providers
I Provide Multiple Events throughout the year
Online Approval & Reporting
I want to provide a single event
Application
Completion Report
Lapsed License
| Fingerprinting | Print Instructions for Law Enforcement Request Fingerprint Packet Redissemination Request |
| I have earned the credits | On-Line Application--New! Reinstatement Application (Paper Application) |
| I have NOT earned the credits | On-Line Application--New! Class 5 Application(Paper Application) |
Adding Endorsements
| With Internship | If your school district has an opening in an area outside of your existing endorsement(s), you may be eligible to participate in an internship. The internship is an agreement between the licensee, their school district and a Montana university's accredited educator preparation program. The licensee has 3 years to complete the requirements for the endorsement. The school district can report the intern as the "educator of record" for purposes of the Annual Data Collection (accreditation report). |
| Without Internship | Follow these steps to add an endorsement without an internship: |
Recommendation and Experience Forms
Map to Educator Licensure
Montana Educator Preparation Programs
Montana PEPPS Standards & Procedures Manual
Institutional Report .docx version
Montana has 9 post-secondary campuses offering teacher education programs that have been approved by the Montana Board of Education for teacher, administrator, specialist certification in Montana. Each institution offers its own combination of programs. Both historical and current combinations of programs can be accessed through this site.
Instructions:
- Select the institution.
- Current approved programs will have a "yes" in the "if still approved" column and/or a date of last on-site review.
- Historical (discontinued) programs will have the last year of approval in the "if still approved" column and may or may not have a date of last on-site review.
- If a program is still current as a major but not as a minor (and vice versa), "minor 19--" will be in the "if still approved" column (the last year it was approved as a minor) and a date will be in the last on-site review column (last review of the current major program.)
- If you have specific questions regarding the institutions' education programs, please contact the certification official for the respective institution(s). Contact information is provided.
- On-site reviews occur on a rotating schedule with every campus being reviewed every five years. Provisional approval may be awarded by the Board of Public Education on recommendation from the Teacher Education Division of the Office of Public Instruction for programs instituted between on-site reviews.
Sec. 207. ACCOUNTABILITY FOR PROGRAMS THAT PREPARE TEACHERS
This legislation calls for a State Report Card on the Quality of Teacher Preparation. It requests states to provide a description of the teacher certification and licensure assessments, and any other certification and licensure requirements, used by the State. It asks for the percentage of teaching candidates who passed each of the assessments used by the State for teacher certification and licensure, disaggregated and ranked, by the teacher preparation program in that State from which the teacher candidate received the candidate's most recent degree, which shall be made available widely and publicly. It asks for information on the extent to which teachers in the State are given waivers of State certification or licensure requirements, including the proportion of such teachers distributed across high- and low-poverty school districts and across subject areas.
An initial report was due April 7, 1999, giving basic information about the state's certification, which in Montana includes the only state mandated testing requirement. Following this, the state was to establish (with the cooperation of appropriate institutions) a procedures report which was due October 7, 2000.
An unexpected complication with the law was the absence of definitions and the unanticipated variety of state rules, laws and assessments (varying from none to many). It took nearly a year of meetings to determine how the desired goal of the legislation might be collected. A set of guidelines for implementing Title II was not available until January 2000.
The act includes penalties for states and institution for failure to comply. "Fines.--In addition to the actions authorized in section 487(c), the Secretary may impose a fine not to exceed $25,000 on an institution of higher education for failure to provide the information described in this subsection in a timely or accurate manner."
'In order to receive funds under this Act, a State, not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of the Higher Education Amendments of 1998, shall have in place a procedure to identify, and assist, through the provision of technical assistance, low-performing programs of teacher preparation within institutions of higher education..." This is the context for the attached report, dated October 5, 2000.
