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The EDifier

July 29, 2010

Agreeing on teacher placement

Filed under: Pay for Performance,teachers — Jim Hull @ 4:37 pm

Among the many debates surrounding teacher hiring practices, mutual consent, the practice of requiring both principal and teacher to agree to the latter’s school assignment, especially in cases of transfers, is among the most contentious. EdWeek tackled the issue in an article earlier this month.

Administrators like it because it gives schools the power and flexibility to directly address their specialized needs.  For example, if a school is guided according to a certain vision, then “it’s really important that all members of the team…buy into that vision,” according to Tom Boasberg, superintendent of the Denver school district. If the principal is the leader behind such a vision, then who better to identify the right team members?

The message from unions appears to be mixed.  Randy Weil, Director of Field Programs at the American Federation of Teachers remarked in the EdWeek article that mutual consent is not supported as a matter of general policy by the AFT.  However, the school districts of the 3 largest cities in the U.S. (New York, Los Angeles and Chicago), all AFT school districts, have negotiated collective bargaining agreements with mutual consent provisions within the last 4 years.

On reason parent unions are less-than-ecstatic about mutual consent is that it does not guarantee job placement for veteran teachers who have been excessed from their current schools.  In DC, for example, if an excessed teacher cannot find a school that will hire him or her within 1 year, he or she can be rightfully terminated.   There is a pertinent question here of justice to teachers.

This shouldn’t be separated, however, from the question of equal educational opportunity.

Common practice allows senior teachers to bump junior teachers in their preference of transfer assignments, often regardless of a principal’s wishes.  These senior teachers usually choose suburban schools serving high-achievement students over urban schools, according to a study done by Frank Papa Jr. and Iris Baxter.  The reasons include the perception of difficult working conditions, unfavorable environmental factors, ineffective or unsupportive administrations, and a dearth of like-minded colleagues.  Because of this, schools with high concentrations of poor and minority students end up disproportionately staffed by inexperienced and uncertified teachers.

We know that teaching is the most important school-based factor to a child’s performance.  One prominent study noted that “teachers near the top of the quality distribution can get an entire year’s worth of additional learning out of their students compared to those near the bottom.”  If that’s the case, then serious consideration should be given to what tools principals are given to close achievement gaps.

Pay-for-performance (PFP) addresses the supply side of the equation.  While research is mixed, there is evidence that at a certain salary level, talented teachers who would otherwise avoid a disadvantaged school may be induced to apply or transfer there.  Of course, ineffective teachers are just as apt to supply their labor in such cases.  From the demand side, then, having no way for principals to choose between teachers of differing labor quality seriously diminishes the benefits of a higher quality applicant pool.  PFP could thus be rendered ineffective if seniority bumping rights remain too dominant within PFP frameworks.

It might be no coincidence, then, that mutual consent clauses correlate with incentive pay in its various forms in the teacher contracts of the cities mentioned above.  Los Angeles, New York and DC all reward teachers for either teaching hard-to-staff subjects, working in needy schools, or exceptional performance, and Chicago is piloting a standardized-test score-driven bonus pay system.

Mutual consent isn’t a panacea for optimally distributing teachers within school districts.  But it may give principals an effective tool for closing achievement gaps, especially when in used in combination with pay-for-performance measures. – David English






April 8, 2010

D.C. teachers get pay for performance

Yesterday, the Washington Post announced that, after two years of negotiation, D.C. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee and the Washington Teachers’ Union had reached tentative agreement on a new contract.

In that contract was an agreement for “a voluntary pay-for-performance program that will allow teachers to earn annual bonuses for student growth on standardized tests and other measures of academic success.”

I’m sure the program has yet to be developed, but two things are encouraging about that sentence. For one, it talks about student growth, not simply student test scores. Second, since it’s a voluntary program, it’s obvious that the program looks for teacher buy-in.

Pay-for-performance plans are a hot topic right now. The two features I mentioned above are two of the few things we know about what makes them successful. But how much more do we know about whether they really work? Read our full report, “Promise or peril? Teacher pay for performance.–Rebecca St. Andrie






March 18, 2010

Research the blueprint

The time has finally come. Earlier this week President Obama sent his “blueprint” to revise the No Child Left Behind Act up to Capital Hill. The major shift in accountability is the proposal to move from expecting students to be “proficient” by 2014 to the expectation students will be “college- and career-ready” by 2020.

Furthermore, the blueprint proposes schools be evaluated beyond the percent of students passing a test in a single year by allowing schools to be judged on the amount of growth their students have made over time as well as how many students earned a high school diploma. However, it isn’t clear if schools would receive credit for those students who take more than four years to graduate high school.

The blueprint also focused on teachers by significantly reworking  NCLB’s teacher quality provisions.  Instead of evaluating teachers based on qualifications, the blueprint would require states to develop an evaluation system to identify effective teachers. There is also a provision to provide incentives for states and districts to pay teachers based on their performance.

The blueprint is quite general, so it is far too early to determine if the proposed new federal accountability system will better, worse, or just different from NCLB. However, during these months as Congress and administration start putting the details together, check out the research behind many of their ideas so you can be an informed advocate for an accountability system that will help ensure more students are prepared for the 21st Century. Just click on the links above to get a quick summary of what the research says about these important educational areas. –Jim Hull






November 11, 2009

Grading states on their innovation

On Monday I attended the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s National Education and Workforce Summit, where they released the second installment of their Leaders and Laggards report. The Chamber released the first installment two years ago which graded states on their education achievement. This installment, however, graded each state on their educational innovation in eight categories using 47 indicators.

The categories include:

  1. School management
  2. Finance
  3. Staffing: Hiring and evaluation
  4. Staffing: Removing ineffective teachers
  5. Data
  6. Technology
  7. Pipeline to postsecondary
  8. State reform environment

For each of these categories states were given a grade (A – F), mainly on the basis of whether a state had implemented a policy or not. In most of the cases, it didn’t matter if the policy was effective, it just mattered if there was one in place.

For example, part of a state’s Finance grade was based on whether states allow teachers to be paid based on their performance. However, the Center’s Teacher pay for performance report shows that such pay for performance plans have shown only modest gains in student achievement and that there is little evidence yet on what type of rewards are most effective.

Furthermore, the Center’s Wanted: Good teachers report also points out that the impact of alternative certification programs are quite mixed. Yet, part of each state’s Staffing: Hiring and Evaluation grade is based on the percent of teachers who entered the profession through an alternative certification program regardless of its quality. So the grades in these areas do not necessarily represent how effective state policies are at improving student learning.

Yes, our schools do need to be innovative. But just implementing policies with no track record of improving student learning isn’t exactly innovative. As a matter of fact, it is something that has been done for far too long in education.

What would be truly innovative is if states were graded on how successful they were at scaling up successful programs and eliminating those programs that aren’t effective. Another truly innovative approach to grading states and our schools would be to grade them on how much they improved their student’s learning. The Chamber didn’t give grades for either of these measures in either installment of their report. –Jim Hull






September 10, 2009

It takes a teaching staff

Filed under: Pay for Performance,Report Summary,instruction,teachers — Tags: , — Jim Hull @ 8:53 am

What impact does the teacher in the classroom across the hall have on your child’s achievement? Not much you’re probably thinking. Actually, you may be surprised to learn you would be wrong. As a matter of fact, if the teacher across the hall is highly effective, that teacher is probably having a positive effect on your child’s teacher according to a new study reported in Education Week (registration required).

The study to be published in the American Economics Journal: Applied Economics in October found this: suppose you are an average teacher in a school with three other teachers in a grade. If one of those other teachers is replaced with a more effective teacher, it will have a significant impact on your students’ achievement. Stated another way, if a school hires an effective teacher to replace an ineffective teacher all students in the grade will likely benefit, not just the students of the new more effective teacher.

This “spillover” or “peer” effect is not a new phenomenon. It has been shown to happen in many other professions. For example, EdWeek highlights research that has found that supermarket checkers work faster when they are in the line of sight of a productive colleague. Before now researchers were unable to determine if this was  the case for teachers as well. It now appears that good teachers do make other teachers better. So not only is it important that your child has an effective teacher it is also important they go to a school with an effective teaching staff.

For more information on what impact teachers have on student achievement check out the Center’s Teacher quality and student achievement: At-a-glance. Of course effective teachers just don’t grow on trees, so to learn more on how your district can build and maintain a staff of effective teachers check out Wanted: Good teachers. And to learn more about merit pay programs check out Promise or peril? Teacher pay for performance. – Jim Hull






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