SAN FRANCISCO — Civil rights advocates oppose new federal legislation that allows states to classify teaching interns as “highly qualified’’ teachers and regularly assign them to schools with mostly poor, minority students.
The measure, which remains in effect until the end of the 2012-13 school year, was signed Dec. 22 by President Obama.
The legislation nullifies a Sept. 27 decision by the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which ruled that California illegally classified thousands of teachers in training as “highly qualified’’ in violation of the federal No Child Left Behind Act.
Under that law, all students are supposed to be taught by “highly qualified’’ teachers who have earned state teaching credentials, but a 2004 Bush administration policy allowed states to give that status to interns.
The San Francisco-based appeals court struck down that policy, siding with low-income families in Richmond, Hayward, and Los Angeles who contended that a disproportionate number of uncredentialed teachers were teaching in their schools.
That 2-1 ruling would have required districts to distribute teaching interns more evenly across schools.![]()



