INVEST IN TEACHER DEVELOPMENT

Program | Practice | Policy

Overview

High-quality advanced coursework depends on high-quality teaching. Teachers require not only strong content knowledge but also specialized training to deliver rigorous instruction, scaffold effectively, and assess student performance fairly. Purposeful professional learning—such as course-specific institutes, collaborative planning, and ongoing coaching—helps build the capacity to expand advanced course offerings without compromising quality. 

For AP courses, AP Summer Institutes provide intensive, course-specific training that equips teachers with strategies and content knowledge aligned to AP standards. For IB, the International Baccalaureate Professional Development program offers workshops and online training tailored to IB pedagogy and philosophy. For dual credit, Kentucky has set clear expectations around faculty credentials and oversight through the Council on Postsecondary Education Dual Credit Policy, which also aligns with national quality frameworks such as the NACEP Standards. 

Investing in teacher development helps expand access. Districts can increase the number of available advanced courses by supporting teachers in meeting credential requirements, funding attendance at professional learning programs, and creating professional learning communities (PLCs) that align curriculum across grades. Research shows that teachers who receive targeted professional learning are more likely to implement rigorous, engaging instruction that supports students in persisting and succeeding in advanced coursework. 

For Kentucky, such investments are critical as participation in advanced coursework continues to lag for historically underserved groups. Building a robust cadre of trained teachers ensures both equity and quality, supporting the state’s long-term goal of improving postsecondary attainment. 

EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION

Map current credentials and needs. Conduct an inventory of teacher qualifications relative to AP, IB, and dual credit standards. Identify priority areas for investment, using guidelines from AP Summer Institutes, IB PD, and NACEP Standards. 

Fund course-specific institutes. Provide financial support for teachers to attend AP Summer Institutes, IB workshops, or dual credit training programs, ensuring access is equitable across schools. 

Create mentoring systems. Pair new advanced coursework instructors with experienced mentors who can provide coaching and classroom observation feedback. 

Develop PLCs for alignment. Facilitate collaboration across grade levels so teachers align Pre-AP/MYP with AP/DP, and high school courses with college expectations. 

Use instructional coaching cycles. Focus on evidence-based practices such as inquiry-based learning, academic discourse, and scaffolding for diverse learners. 

Support dual credit quality. Align teacher qualifications and course syllabi with the CPE Dual Credit Policy and the NACEP Standards, ensuring rigorous alignment between high school and postsecondary expectations. 

Leverage state professional development structures. Use resources like the KDE Professional Development Guidance to embed ongoing learning into existing district PD systems. 

REQUIRED RESOURCES

Funding: Stipends, tuition/fees for institutes, and release time for teachers to attend trainings. 

Partnerships: Collaboration with universities for dual credit mentoring, and partnerships with AP and IB training providers. 

Structures: Protected PLC time within the master schedule, and district-provided instructional coaching. 

Materials: Updated course resources and training manuals from AP, IB, or partner colleges. 

Quality assurance: Regular review of course syllabi (AP course audit, IB verification, dual credit syllabus alignment) to ensure adherence to standards set by NACEP. 

So it's important.

How will we know if we are succeeding of failing?

Track both early signals and long-term outcomes.