The Berean
Well-known member
Here's an interesting article on the difficulty finding excellent teachers. apparently, academic excellent is not an accurate predictor of future success as a teacher.
I completely agree. I meant to infer that in my cross check. That is, the reason for tracking students across the board is to get a sense of how a teacher is performing within a given context. If you don't do that you're going to have the best teachers staying far away from poorer areas.One has to be very careful when one uses student performance to determine if a teacher is effective or not...
You cannot reasonably evaluate a teacher without taking into account the socioeconomics of the neighborhood in which the school is located.
You just killed elementary schools.
I agree with Buzz about needing to value teachers more. They are so important but education doesn't always get the funding it deserves. So I'll say no to the topic, in general.
Eric Hanushek, an economist at Stanford, estimates that the students of a very bad teacher will learn, on average, half a year’s worth of material in one school year. The students in the class of a very good teacher will learn a year and a half’s worth of material. That difference amounts to a year’s worth of learning in a single year. Teacher effects dwarf school effects: your child is actually better off in a “bad” school with an excellent teacher than in an excellent school with a bad teacher. Teacher effects are also much stronger than class-size effects. You’d have to cut the average class almost in half to get the same boost that you’d get if you switched from an average teacher to a teacher in the eighty-fifth percentile. And remember that a good teacher costs as much as an average one, whereas halving class size would require that you build twice as many classrooms and hire twice as many teachers.
Hanushek recently did a back-of-the-envelope calculation about what even a rudimentary focus on teacher quality could mean for the United States. If you rank the countries of the world in terms of the academic performance of their schoolchildren, the U.S. is just below average, half a standard deviation below a clump of relatively high-performing countries like Canada and Belgium. According to Hanushek, the U.S. could close that gap simply by replacing the bottom six per cent to ten per cent of public-school teachers with teachers of average quality. After years of worrying about issues like school funding levels, class size, and curriculum design, many reformers have come to the conclusion that nothing matters more than finding people with the potential to be great teachers. But there’s a hitch: no one knows what a person with the potential to be a great teacher looks like. The school system has a quarterback problem.
A group of researchers—Thomas J. Kane, an economist at Harvard’s school of education; Douglas Staiger, an economist at Dartmouth; and Robert Gordon, a policy analyst at the Center for American Progress—have investigated whether it helps to have a teacher who has earned a teaching certification or a master’s degree. Both are expensive, time-consuming credentials that almost every district expects teachers to acquire; neither makes a difference in the classroom. Test scores, graduate degrees, and certifications—as much as they appear related to teaching prowess—turn out to be about as useful in predicting success as having a quarterback throw footballs into a bunch of garbage cans.
That's funny because the reason I tend not to value teachers more is because I had teachers who were teachers because they couldn't find a better job. My daughter had one of those, in second grade, too. That is why she ended up being homeschooled.
From the article I posted.
until we get rid of the unions
not one teacher deserves a raise in pay
until we get rid of the unions
not one teacher deserves a raise in pay
toldailytopic: Are public school teachers paid well enough?
This is true if and only if an education has no intrinsic value to society.
Show me the governments role is to do such a thing in the Bible.
School isn't only about having a career and supporting a family.Supplies for making tribal masks anyone? What does that have to do with developing a career and supporting a family?
What grade level are we talking about here?Here is some of the other stupid programs and classes I have seen while my son was in public school in Nebraska:
Because most of history is the history of men. Young men and women end up with the impression that there were no women making an impact on the world.Womens history - what happened to plain old US history or World history?
Too many people are insulated from other cultures. I don't have a problem with a multi-cultural day.Multicultural day.
What do you think environmental science actually is? I think you're the :dunce: here . . .Environmental Science class--what happened to Chemistry, Math, Algebra and Biology?
Maybe that explains the one page essay I received today that was exactly six broken sentences. lain:There was no English or language arts class to speak of in my son's curriculum.