Skip to main content

La Joya Independent School District

Educational Excellence the Right of Every Student

Teacher Incentive Allotment

Text reads 'Teacher Incentive Allotment' on a banner.

What Is the Teacher Incentive Allotment?

Logo for Teacher Incentive Allotment, featuring the Texas outline and text.


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 in order for them to reward their top performers.

The Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA) was created by the Texas Legislature as part of House Bill 3 to provide a realistic pathway for top teachers to earn six-figure salaries. The Texas Education Agency's Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA) Program is a dedicated to recruiting, rewarding, and retaining the best teachers across the state at traditionally hard to staff schools. 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 in order for them to reward their top performers. TIA was established with the goal of providing outstanding teachers an accessible pathway to a six-figure

La Joya ISD is dedicated to improving the abilities and impact of all teachers. The goal of the Teacher Incentive Allotment is to increase teacher retention and enhance teaching effectiveness. La Joya ISD TIA stakeholders and committee members have been working on and building a system since Spring of 2019. Our implementation began during the 2019 - 2020 school year with its first cohort of teachers.  Each year, the district will continue to collaborate with stakeholders and committee members to expand and refine the local designation system to ensure that our high-performing teachers receive appropriate designations

Designations

Designations are distinctions awarded to highly effective teachers. There are three levels of designation Recognized, Exemplary and Master.

Teachers can earn designations through two pathways:

  1. National Board Certified teachers
  2. Locally developed designation system
     

School districts who develop locally developed designation systems may designate their effective teachers when they are approved for a local teacher designation system. 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.
 

 TIA Contact Information

If you have questions, regarding TIA, please email: TIA@lajoyaisd.net

  • Local Designation System

     

    La Joya 25-26 TIA Guidebook 

    • Spending Plan

    La Joya ISD TIA Task Force

    FAQ

     TIA Allotments  Section

    Presentation/Webinars

  • Student Growth

     

    Student growth measured at the individual student level that can be linked to the applicable teacher. ​ District application must show evidence of validity & reliability of development, administration, and scoring

     

    Districts may choose from any of the four TIA recognized student growth measures, or a combination thereof, for each eligible teaching assignment:

    ·       Value-Added Measures (VAM)

    ·       Pre-Test and Post-Test

    ·       Student Learning Objectives (SLOs)

    ·       Portfolios

  • Teacher Observation

     

    The goal of the teacher observation component of a district’s local teacher designation system is to ensure that teacher observation ratings are…

    Valid:

    ·       Accurately reflect the true effectiveness of each teacher

    ·       Correlated with student growth data

    Reliable:

    Evaluations across the district are consistent regardless of the appraiser, campus, subject, or grade level

    Home T-TESS (teachfortexas.org) 

  • TIA Allotments

     

    All Texas school systems are eligible to receive TIA funds for designated teachers whom they employ. Districts are notified of the annual allotment amount in April and must spend the funds by August 31 of the same year.

    La Joya TIA 2023-2024 Allotments

    Average Campus Allotment

    Recognized      $6,666

    Exemplary        $13,333

    Master             $24,222

    TIA Funding Map:

    Funding Map - Teacher Incentive Allotment (tiatexas.org)

  • National Board Certification

     

    National Board Certification is an optional, high-level professional certification for PreK–12 educators that demonstrates teaching proficiency through a performance-based, peer-reviewed evaluation. The certification process spans 1-3 years, during which candidates submit four components providing evidence of their effective practice. This program aims to develop, retain, and recognize skilled teachers and enhance schools across the country. More than 125,000 teachers across all 50 states have achieved Board Certification.

    National Board Certification



Allotments

Districts receive an annual allotment for each eligible designated teacher they employ.   Allotments are based on the teacher’s designation level and campus of employment, with greater funding for high-needs and rural campuses.

Recognize and Reward Teachers

What Is a Designation?


Teacher designations generate additional teacher-focused allotment funding for districts to reward and retain their most effective teachers. Teachers earn designations through two different routes. First, National Board Certified teachers are eligible to earn a Recognized designation. Second, districts may designate their effective teachers when they are approved for a local teacher designation system. 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.

Texas Education Agency (TEA) logo, a green and blue badge.

$3K-$9K

Recognized designations represent the top 33% of Texas teachers

Texas Education Agency (TEA) Exemplary Teacher Incentive Allotment badge.

$6K-$18K 

Exemplary designations represent the top 20% of Texas teacher

Texas Education Agency (TEA) Master Teacher Incentive Allotment badge.

$12K-$32K

Master designations represent the top 5% of    Texas teachers