teacher as input in the production function of quality education

27
THE ROLE OF T-E-A-C-H-E-R-S Amanda Frasier, Ji Hyun Kim, Iwan Syahril EAD942 - Feb 7, 2013

Upload: iwan-syahril

Post on 20-May-2015

617 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

THE ROLE OF T-E-A-C-H-E-R-S

Amanda Frasier, Ji Hyun Kim, Iwan SyahrilEAD942 - Feb 7, 2013

Page 2: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

GOOD TEACHING MATTERS!

Page 3: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Measures of Effective Teaching project Report 2013 by Bill and Melinda Gates foundation

Link: http://www.metproject.org/downloads/MET_Ensuring_Fair_and_Reliable_Measures_Practitioner_Brief.pdf

• Effective teaching is measureable(by classroom observation, students test score, students survey)

• Through the measurement, students achievement is predictable.

Page 5: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Central Questions

Page 6: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

• We think few would dispute that good teachers matter in students’ learning.

• What is the most efficient way “to produce” high quality teachers?

• Where does the production take place? Teacher Preparation, Teacher Induction, Teacher Professional Development.

TEACHERPREPARATION

TEACHER INDUCTION

TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

$$ $$$$

Page 7: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Teacher Preparation

Page 8: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

• How much does it cost to prepare teachers?

• Do teacher preparation programs make a difference?

• Can higher salaries attract higher quality teacher candidates?

Page 9: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Can teacher salaries attract high qualified teacher candidates?

Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/08/opinion/l08teach.html

Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/opinion/01eggers.html?_r=0

Page 10: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

• “We found that the average weekly pay of teachers in 2003 was nearly 14% below that of workers with similar education and work experience, a gap only minimally offset by the better nonwage benefits in teaching. Teacher earnings have fallen below that of the average college graduate in recent decades, losing considerable ground during the late 1990s, as earnings of college graduates grew 11% relative to the much lower 0.8% growth in teacher earnings.”

Link: http://www.epi.org/page/-/old/issuebriefs/IssueBrief298.pdf

Page 11: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education
Page 12: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education
Page 13: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education
Page 14: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Link: http://www.nea.org/home/12661.htm

Page 15: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Teacher Induction

Page 16: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

• How much does it cost to facilitate teacher induction?

• Do teacher induction programs make a difference?

Page 17: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

The high cost of teacher turnover

• Annual cost of teacher turnover in the US is $7.3 billion

• Teacher attrition rate in the past 15 year has grown more than 50%.

• US Teacher turnover rate: 16.8% (urban more than 20%).

Link: http://nctaf.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/NCTAF-Cost-of-Teacher-Turnover-2007-policy-brief.pdf

Page 19: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education
Page 20: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education
Page 21: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

The cost of teachers in the United States

Link: http://www.nea.org/home/49809.htm

Page 22: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Teacher Professional Development

Page 23: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

• How much does it cost to foster teacher professional development?

• Do teacher professional programs make a difference?

Page 24: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Central Question:Are highly qualified teachers

also highly effective?

Page 25: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

The Learning Curve (Pearson 2012 Report)

• Strong relationships are few between education inputs and outputs.

• Income matters, but culture may matter more.

• There is no substitute for GOOD TEACHERS.

• There is no single path to better labour market outcomes.

• An educational index can help highlight educational strength and weaknesses.

LINK: http://thelearningcurve.pearson.com/

the-report/executive-summary

Page 26: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

THE LINE GAME

Lessons Learned from High Performing Countries

• High-quality teacher education to all candidates, completely at government expense, including at least a year of practice teaching in a clinical school connected to the university;

• Mentoring from expert teachers for all beginners in their first years of teaching, coupled with other supports like a reduced teaching load and shared planning;

• Equitable salaries (often with additional stipends for hard-to-staff locations) which are competitive with other professions, such as engineering;

• Ongoing professional learning embedded in 15 to 25 hours a week of planning and professional development time.

AGREE ? ------------- or ----------- DISAGREE ?

Source: The Forum for Education and Democracy. Link: http://www.forumforeducation.org/sites/default/files/u48/Teaching_Brief_1009_v1.pdf

Page 27: Teacher as input in the production function of quality education

Summary of Resources

Good Teaching Matters!

Teacher Preparation

Teacher Salaries

Teacher Induction

Teacher Professional Development

The MET project: http://www.metproject.org/downloads/MET_Ensuring_Fair_and_Reliable_Measures_Practitioner_Brief.pdf

The Value-Added study: http://obs.rc.fas.harvard.edu/chetty/ value_added.html

The Learning Curve (Pearson Report 2012): http://thelearningcurve.pearson.com/the-report/executive-summary

The high cost of low teacher salaries (NYT article) : http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/opinion/01eggers.html?_r=0

The Teaching Penalty: http://www.epi.org/page/-/old/issuebriefs/IssueBrief298.pdf

Myths and Facts about Educator Pay NEA): http://www.nea.org/home/12661.htm

The high cost of teacher turnover (NCTAF): http://nctaf.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/NCTAF-Cost-of-Teacher-Turnover-2007-policy-brief.pdf

Effective Teachers, Higher Achievers (The Forum for Education and Democracy): http://www.forumforeducation.org/sites/default/files/u48/Teaching_Brief_1009_v1.pdf