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Beatriz Chu ClewellJane HannawayRobert I. Lerman
Austin NicholsKim RuebenMary Kopczynski Winkler

 

Publications on Education

Viewing 1-5 of 335. Most recent posts listed first.Next Page >>

Who Leaves? Teacher Attrition and Student Achievement (CALDER Working Paper)
Donald Boyd, Pamela Grossman, Hamilton Lankford, Susanna Loeb, James Wyckoff

Teacher attrition has attracted considerable attention as federal, state and local policies- intended to improve student outcomes, increasingly focus on recruiting and retaining more qualified and effective teachers. But policy makers are often frustrated by the seemingly high rates of attrition among teachers earlier on in their careers. This paper analyzes attrition patterns among teachers in New York City elementary and middle schools and explores whether teachers who transfer among schools, or leave teaching entirely, are more or less effective than those who remain. Findings show first-year teachers who are less effective in improving student math scores have higher attrition rates than do more effective teachers. This raises important questions about current retention and transfer policies.

Posted to Web: April 16, 2009Publication Date: March 01, 2009

Assessing the Potential of Using Value Added-Estimates of Teacher Job Performance for Making Tenure Decisions (CALDER Brief)
Dan Goldhaber, Michael Hansen

Using individual teacher and student-level longitudinal data from North Carolina, this research brief presents selected findings from work examining the stability of value-added model estimates of teacher effectiveness, focusing on their implication for teacher tenure policies and making high stakes personnel decisions. Findings show year-to-year correlations in teacher effects are modest, but pre-tenure estimates of teacher job performance do predict estimated post-tenure performance in both math and reading, and would therefore seem to be a reasonable metric to use as a factor in making substantive teacher selection decisions.

Posted to Web: April 15, 2009Publication Date: November 21, 2008

The Stability of Value-Added Measures of Teacher Quality and Implications for Teacher Compensation Policy (CALDER Brief)
Tim Sass

There is little doubt that teacher quality is a key determinant of student achievement, but finding ways to identify and reward the best teachers has proven illusive. This research brief considers the stability of value-added measures of teacher effectiveness over time and the resulting implications for the design and implementation of performance-based teacher compensation schemes.

Posted to Web: April 15, 2009Publication Date: November 21, 2008

The Texas FERPA Story (CALDER Brief)
Dan O'Brien

This research brief describes the legal and operational structure of the Texas longitudinal data system related to recent changes in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA)—which establishes the rights of parents to access their children's educational records and protects the confidentiality of student information—that more closely align law and practice. The U.S. Department of Education's FERPA Final Regulations Amendments took effect January 8, 2009.

Posted to Web: April 15, 2009Publication Date: November 21, 2008

The Narrowing Gap in New York City Teacher Qualifications and Implications for Student Achievement in High-Poverty Schools (CALDER Brief)
Donald Boyd, Hamilton Lankford, Susanna Loeb, Jonah Rockoff, James Wyckoff

This important research explores the effects of district policy interventions on the distribution of teacher qualifications and student achievement. Authors use a 5-year span of individual teacher- and student-level longitudinal data from New York City (NYC) from 2000 through 2005 to estimate the differences in the effectiveness of teachers entering NYC schools through different pathways to teaching. The study finds that the gap between the qualifications of NYC teachers in high-poverty and low-poverty NYC schools has narrowed substantially since 2000, mostly ensuing from the city's concentrated effort to match exceptionally capable teachers with very needy students and the virtual substitution of newly hired uncertified teachers in high-poverty schools with new hires from alternative certification routes: NYC Teaching Fellows and Teach for America.

Posted to Web: April 15, 2009Publication Date: November 21, 2008

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