Title: What the Research Says About Effective Pathways to Teaching
1What the Research Says About Effective Pathways
to Teaching
-
- Jim Wyckoff
- Curry School of Education,
- University of Virginia
- NCEI, NCAC Conference on Effective Pathways to
Teaching, April 6, 2009 - www.teacherpolicyresearch.org
2The Stakes are High
New York State Elementary Schools, 2000
3Teachers Matter But Why?
- Lots of evidence that teachers matter greatly in
gains in student achievement (Sanders Rivers,
1996 Aaronson et al, 2003 Rockoff, 2004
Rivkin et al, 2005 Kane et al, 2006). - But not clear there are individual attributes
that are important (Gordon et al, 2006) - Likely that many, difficult to observable
attributes distinguish more able teachers
4Characterizing Effective Pathways
- Selection Who enters and how does that matter?
- Preparation What preparation makes a
difference? - Timing Does it matter when teachers receive
preparation? - Retention How does retention vary?
5The Teacher Workforce and Student Outcomes
6Research Says Evidence
- Causality preparation leads to student
achievement - Teacher sorting to students problem is
important but difficult to measure factors - Experiments randomly assign preparation to
students - Statistical controls control for sorting and
other factors
7Alternative v. Traditional Paths
- Lots of good evidence that either pathway can
produce roughly equal achievement growth (Boyd et
al 2006 Kane et al 2008 Decker et al 2004,
Constantine et al 2009)
CR
TF
8Alternative Paths May Not Be Alternative, but
- Variation within exceeds variation across
- Achievement growth (Kane et al, 2008 Boyd et al
2006) - Features (Humphrey et. al. 2008 Walsh and
Jacobs, 2007 Feistritzer 2008 Boyd et al 2008) - Teachers (Boyd et al 2006 Humphrey et al 2008
Feistritzer 2008) - Often timing not, content differences (Peterson
and Nadler, 2009), but even here may not be that
different (Boyd et al 2008) - Nonetheless, alternative paths have changed the
discussion
9Selection Matters Some
- Academic ability (Boyd et al 2008, 2009
Clotfelter et al 2008) - Skills and practices (Pianta et al, 2007 Rockoff
et al 2008 Constantine et al 2009 Boyd et al
2009)
10Certification Exam Failure Rate of Entering NYC
Teachers by School Poverty, 2000-2005
11Math Achievement Resulting from Teacher
Qualifications, Rich and Poor Deciles, 2001 2005
12Preparation Probably Matters
- Many studies but few with designs that permit
causal inference. - Some recent work suggests that preparation in
some areas can make a difference - Opportunities to practice classroom activities
(Boyd et al 2008) - Probably not just coursework (Harris and Sass,
2008) - However, other work finds no significant effect
(Constantine et al 2009)
13Timing of Preparation?
- Effectiveness Improves with Experience (Rockoff,
2004 Rivkin et al, 2005 Kane et al, 2006)
14Timing of Preparation?
- Anecdotal reports of novice teachers overloaded
with coursework - Would a model that created a systematic
connection of pre-service and in-service
preparation/induction/mentoring be more
effective?
15Retention
- Preparation routes make a difference
Adjusted for grade School and Year
16Retention, but be careful
- Good evidence that many teachers who leave early
are less effective (Hanushek et al, 2005
Goldhaber et al, 2007 Boyd et al, 2008)
16
17MPR Comprehensive Teacher Induction Year 1 RCT
Impacts
- Control group received support
- but treatment group received more
- No impact on classroom practices
- No positive impact on test scores
- No impact on teacher retention
18MPR Teachers Trained Through Different Routes
Experimental Design
- Design Pairs of AC-TC novice teachers in same
grade and school, randomly assigned to students,
2600 students, 174 teachers, 63 schools low and
high coursework within each group. All of the AC
programs had to be less selective (min GPA not gt
3.0) - Findings
- Preparation substantial overlap between AC TC
- Timing most TC complete coursework prior to
teaching, - high coursework AC teachers receive 150 hours
(35 of total) prior to teaching
19Experimental Results AC Relative to TC
20Results for Subgroups
- Students in California with AC teachers scored
statistically lower in math than students of TC
counterparts (effect size -.13) - Students of AC teachers taking coursework scored
lower in math than students of TC counterparts
(effect size -.09) - No other subgroups showed statistically
significant differences
21Non-Experimental Results
- Differences in AC teachers' charactersitics,
practices, and training explained about 5 percent
of math scores and 1 percent of reading scores - Students of AC teachers taking coursework scored
lower than TC comparisons in reading - Students of AC teachers with master's degrees
scored lower than TC comparisons in reading - No other differences were statistically
significant
22MPR Teachers Trained Through Different Routes
- What the study does not address
- Whether different models of best practice are
more effective - Separates selection from preparation
- Does not account for differential selection to
schools
23Summary
- Increasingly good evidence that pathways to
teaching matter for student achievement - selection,
- preparation,
- timing (?) and
- retention
- The aptitudes of candidates, quality of their
preparation/induction probably matter much more
than the route. - What aptitudes? What preparation?
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