Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA)
Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA)


Frequently Asked Questions
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Eligibility is determined by state law, which requires each designated teacher to hold a teaching certificate, to be in a PEIMS role ID coded as 087 and to teach students directly for a full year at least 50% of the day in a way that impacts student growth. All teaching positions in CISD with a PEIMS role ID coded as 087 are eligible to receive a TIA designation.
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2022 - 2023: Pre-Application year
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2023 - 2024: System Application Submission
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2024 - 2025: Data Capture Year
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2025 - 2026: Data Submission (This is the year when Designations are awarded and allotments generated)
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2026 - 2027: Post - Approval

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The TIA designation is valid for 5 years and is indicated on the teachers State Board of Education teaching certificate.
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Yes, the designation and allocations received for the teacher’s designation follows the teacher.
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Yes, CHISD will receive TIA allocations for teachers who have a TIA designation regardless if they received it with another district. 90% of the allocations received are spent on teacher salaries.
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CHISD is in the process of creating a local teacher designation system that will include a measure of student growth, teacher observation and possibly other components. That system will be used to evaluate whether a teacher earns a designation and which designation they earn. TEA must approve the local designation system and Texas Tech University will approve the data CISD will submit is valid and reliable.
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There is no limit on how many teachers on a campus or in a school district can earn a designation.
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2022 - 2023: Pre-Application year
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2023 - 2024: System Application Submission
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2024 - 2025: Data Capture Year
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2025 - 2026: Data Submission (This is the year when Designations are awarded and allotments generated. Designated teachers may expect to receive the initial stipends in August 2026.)
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2026 - 2027: Post - Approval
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The amount of the stipend depends on the level of distinction and the campus’ socioeconomic and rural status.

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No, each secondary teacher will select one class from their schedule to measure student growth by creating a student learning objective (SLO).
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