A teacher of health is authorized to provide to students in grades 5 through 12 instruction that is designed to develop the knowledge and skills necessary to practice healthy behaviors.
A candidate for licensure to teach health to students in grades 5 through 12 shall:
hold a baccalaureate degree from a college or university that is regionally accredited by the association for the accreditation of colleges and secondary schools;
demonstrate the standards for effective practice for licensing of beginning teachers in part 8710.2000; and
show verification of completing a Board of Teaching preparation program approved under chapter 8705 leading to the licensure of teachers of health in subpart 3.
A candidate for licensure as a teacher of health must complete a preparation program under subpart 2, item C, that must include the candidate's demonstration of the knowledge and skills in items A to I.
A teacher of health understands behaviors and factors that:
prevent or reduce the risk of HIV infection and AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases, and unintentional pregnancy; and
A teacher of health understands concepts related to health promotion and disease prevention including:
A teacher of health understands how to access valid health information and health-promoting products and services including:
identifying and accessing appropriate and cost-effective school and community health services;
using or developing appropriate data gathering instruments to include national, state, or district level morbidity, mortality, behavioral risk, and needs assessment data; and
A teacher of health understands health-enhancing behaviors that reduce health risks including:
the relationship between and among the major health determinants of genetics, environments, health care, and personal behavior;
A teacher of health understands the effects of advertising, media, technology, and social norms on health behaviors.
A teacher of health understands how to use interpersonal communication skills to enhance health including:
models and strategies for teaching communication skills for expressing needs, wants, and feelings; communicating, care, consideration, and respect of self and others; conflict resolution; and refusal skills; and
A teacher of health understands how to use goal-setting and decision-making skills to enhance health including:
the components of and processes for the development and implementation of personal health plans; and
predicting the immediate and long-range impact of health decisions on the individual, family, and the community.
A teacher of health demonstrates an understanding of the teaching of health that integrates understanding of health with the understanding of pedagogy, students, learning, classroom management, and professional development. The teacher of health to preadolescent and adolescent students must:
understand and apply educational principles relevant to the physical, social, emotional, moral, and cognitive development of preadolescents and adolescents;
understand and apply the research base for and the best practices of middle and high school education;
develop curriculum goals and purposes based on the central concepts of health and know how to apply instructional strategies and materials for achieving student understanding of this discipline;
understand the role and alignment of district, school, and department mission and goals in program planning;
understand the need for and how to connect students' schooling experiences with everyday life, the workplace, and further educational opportunities;
know how to involve representatives of business, industry, and community organizations as active partners in creating educational opportunities; and
understand the role and purpose of cocurricular and extracurricular activities in the teaching and learning process.
A teacher of health must understand the content and methods for teaching reading including:
knowledge of reading processes and instruction including:
the relationships between and among print processing abilities and digital content, motivation, background, and discourse knowledge, cognitive abilities, and reader's interest and how those relationships impact comprehension; and
the complexities involved in the development of academic language and the impact of that development in school success; and
the ability to use a wide range of instructional practices, approaches, methods, and curriculum materials to support reading instruction including:
selection and implementation of a wide variety of before, during, and after reading strategies that develop reading and metacognitive abilities;
the ability to develop and implement effective vocabulary strategies that help students understand words including domain-specific content words;
the ability to develop critical literacy skills by encouraging students to question texts and analyze texts from multiple viewpoints or perspectives; and
the ability to identify instructional practices, approaches, and methods and match materials, both print and digital, to the cognitive levels of all readers, guided by an evidence-based rationale, which support the developmental, cultural, and linguistic differences of readers.
A candidate for licensure to teach health must have a broad range of targeted field-based experiences, of a minimum of 100 hours prior to student teaching, that provide opportunities to apply and demonstrate competency of professional dispositions and the required skills and knowledge under this part and part 8710.2000.
Across the combination of student teaching and other field-based placements, candidates must have experiences teaching the content at both the middle level, grades 5 through 8, and high school level, grades 9 through 12.
For initial teacher licensure, the student teaching period must be a minimum of 12 continuous weeks, full time, face-to-face, in which the candidate is supervised by a cooperating teacher, and evaluated at least twice by qualified faculty supervisors in collaboration with the cooperating teachers.
A continuing license shall be issued and renewed according to the rules of the Board of Teaching governing continuing licensure.
23 SR 1928; 34 SR 595; L 2015 c 21 art 1 s 110; 39 SR 822
January 14, 2016
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes