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Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA)

Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA)

 

Poster promoting teaching opportunities with the text 'Teach Here! Earn More!'

A flyer lists subjects and salary information for Chapel Hill ISD.

Teacher Incentive Allotment

HB 3 established the Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA) to recognize effective teachers on three different levels: Recognized, Exemplary and Master. These teacher designations generate additional teacher-focused allotment funding for districts to reward their top performers.

Teachers earn designations through two different routes.  

  • Local Designation System 

  • National Board Certification 

The Teacher Incentive Allotment is not a merit-pay approach to compensation, and it will not replace or affect the District’s current pay structure.  For teachers who earn a distinction based on the local designation system or national board certification, the payment will be an additional stipend that is separate from the current Chapel Hill ISD pay structure.

Local Eligiblity

The approval process is multi-step and includes the submission of a system application to the Texas Education Agency (TEA) and then a data validation process through Texas Tech University. Developing a local teacher designation system requires significant planning, robust stakeholder engagement, adequate time to prepare all necessary materials for rollout and a strong communication plan prior to the first implementation year. Once our local designation system is approved, Chapel Hill ISD may recommend our effective teachers for designation. There is no limit to the number of teachers that a district may designate if their teachers meet the district’s designation criteria and the eligibility requirements under the rules defined by TEA.

Essential Requirements:

  1. ALL eligible teachers in a TIA category must be evaluated annually using the T-TESS Rubric

  2. Fall 45 min announced observation with pre/post conference, Spring 45 min unannounced observation with post conference, 3 T-TESS walkthroughs

  3. ALL T-TESS summatives must be signed electronically

  4. A teacher who receives a designation must continue to teach (087) at least 50% of their day to continue to receive funding

  5. Teacher rosters are verified at the beginning of the year and any adjustments must be reported for data validation purposes

  6. New hires who are TIA Designated Teachers must be employed at the end of Winter Roster for their funds to be requested from the state

  7. Designated teachers who leave the district prior to fund distribution will forfeit their funds for that school year

State Eligibility

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.  Because of this state requirement some positions may not be eligible for the Teacher Incentive Allotment.

National Board Certification

Teachers can attain a Recognized designation if they earn their National Board Certification.  National Board Certification takes an average of three years for a teacher to complete and costs approximately $1900.  Teachers must demonstrate advanced knowledge and skill in their certificate area and provide three portfolios and complete a computer-based assessment.  A candidate must have three years teaching experience prior to starting the certification process.  Learn more at  National Board Certification in Texas.

Available Funding

The funding available from the Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA) varies by the designation of the teacher and campus where the designated teacher works. The exact amount of allotment funding per teacher is determined by a formula that considers the level of socioeconomic need at a campus and whether the campus is rural.

Districts are required to spend at least 90% of their allotment funds on teacher compensation on the campus where the designated teacher works.

Districts may set aside up to 10% for cost associated with implementing a local designation system or supporting teachers in getting designated.

Resources

 

 

 

For more information or questions about TIA, contact 

Daniel Tice 

Accessment and Accountability Coordinator

 

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions

  • 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.

    • 2022 - 2023: Pre-Application year

    • 2023 - 2024: System Application Submission

    • 2024 - 2025: Data Capture Year

    • 2025 - 2026: Data Submission (This is the year when Designations are awarded and allotments generated)

    • 2026 - 2027: Post - Approval

    A flowchart outlines a multi-step process with icons and text labels.

  • The TIA designation is valid for 5 years and is indicated on the teachers State Board of Education teaching certificate. 

  • Yes, the designation and allocations received for the teacher’s designation follows the teacher.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • There is no limit on how many teachers on a campus or in a school district can earn a designation.

    • 2022 - 2023: Pre-Application year

    • 2023 - 2024: System Application Submission

    • 2024 - 2025: Data Capture Year

    • 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.)

    • 2026 - 2027: Post - Approval

  • The amount of the stipend depends on the level of distinction and the campus’ socioeconomic and rural status.

    Three hexagonal badges with the text 'TEA' and star ratings.

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

  • A timeline titled 'Application Timeline' displays dates and deadlines.