For decades, continuing education functioned as a mechanism for teachers to improve their teaching practice and increase their compensation: enroll in courses, accumulate credits, move up the salary schedule. Districts operated on the assumption that a credit issued by a university signaled meaningful professional growth. That premise has recently been challenged as questions about the rigor and oversight of some programs have forced districts to reconsider what, exactly, they have been paying for.
The scrutiny surrounding the Albion Center at Idaho State University crystallized the issue. What had long been a routine back-office process—submitting transcripts and adjusting pay—suddenly exposed a deeper vulnerability in the system. In response, some districts are moving beyond damage control. They are—or should be—reassessing continuing education not as an automatic line item, but as a strategic investment. One that, if structured intentionally, can strengthen teacher effectiveness, improve retention, and produce measurable gains in student outcomes.
The Red Flag: Issues With Idaho State
The alarm bells first rang when districts noticed an impossible surge in salary advancement requests. In Baltimore City Public Schools, more than 700 teachers submitted transcripts for salary increases within a single 12-month period, creating a permanent $1.9 million annual hit to the taxpayer-funded budget. In Illinois, those same types of salary adjustments are believed to be costing taxpayers more than $20 million.
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