Clarify Minnesota Indian Teacher Training Program (MITTP) Fund Uses – Key Takeaways From 2026-27 Minnesota Governor’s Biennial Budget

  • What’s proposed:
    Clarify state law so MITTP funds may only be used to prepare American Indian educators for K–12 schools.
  • Why this change is needed:
    • The program’s purpose is to address the shortage of American Indian teachers in K–12.
    • Some public inquiries questioned whether funds could be used for higher education, workforce training, or non–K–12 roles.
    • The statute is being clarified to prevent mission drift and ensure consistent use statewide.
  • What does NOT change:
    • No new funding
    • No funding cuts
    • Existing partnerships and grants continue
    • This is a policy clarification, not a program expansion
  • Who the program serves:
    • American Indian teacher candidates and support staff preparing for K–12 licensure
    • Joint partnerships between school districts and higher-education institutions, including:
      • UMN–Duluth / Duluth Public Schools
      • Bemidji State / Red Lake Schools
      • Moorhead State / White Earth–area schools
      • Augsburg / St. Paul & Minneapolis Public Schools
      • Plus competitive partnerships (e.g., SCSU, Fond du Lac Tribal & Community College, MSU Mankato)
  • Impact on students and families:
    • Increases the number of American Indian teachers in K–12 classrooms
    • Improves student outcomes by ensuring cultural representation and belonging
    • Strengthens recruitment in areas with chronic teacher shortages
  • Cost:
    Cost-neutral — no fiscal impact to the state.
  • Tribal position:
    • Tribal governments were consulted
    • Tribes identified this clarification as a priority
  • Bottom line:
    This change locks the program to its original K–12 mission, ensuring funds are used exactly as intended to grow the American Indian teaching workforce in Minnesota schools.

Response

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