Developing an Effective Teacher Education System The Debate on Teacher Education and Teacher Quality “There is little evidence that education school course work leads.

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Transcript Developing an Effective Teacher Education System The Debate on Teacher Education and Teacher Quality “There is little evidence that education school course work leads.

Developing an Effective
Teacher Education System
The Debate on Teacher
Education and Teacher Quality
“There is little evidence that education school course
work leads to improved student achievement…”
“Knowledge of pedagogy, degrees in education or
amount of time spent practice teaching,” which are
the “requirements that make up the bulk of current
teacher certification regimes,” is surrounded by a
“great deal of contention.”
“Virtually all” of the studies linking certification and
improved student outcomes are “not scientifically
rigorous.”
-- The Secretary’s Report on Teacher Quality, 2002
(How) Can We Develop Good
Teachers?
More complex learning goals and
More diverse pathways to learning
REQUIRE
Deeper and more flexible content knowledge
Knowledge of language and literacy development
Greater diagnosis of learning strategies and needs
More sophisticated scaffolding of the learning
process
A wide repertoire of practice
The KnowledgeBase for Teaching
Learners in Social Contexts
Curriculum and
Subject Matter
•Human development
Educational Goals and
•Learning
Purposes for skills,
•Language
content, subject matter
Vision
Teaching:
•Teaching Subject Matter
•Teaching Diverse Learners
•Assessment
•Classroom Management
Leading a Complex Profession in
Complex and Challenging Times
 Transforming Teacher
Education Programs
and Practice
Developing and Enforcing Appropriate
Accountability
Making for Universal Access to Quality
Preparation and Conditions of Practice
Historical Critiques of
Teacher Education
1. Inadequate time to learn subject matter, learning
theory, and effective teaching strategies.
2. Fragmentation of content and pedagogy, university
education and clinical training.
3. Weak curriculum relying too often on folklore rather
than up-to-date knowledge.
4. Uninspired teaching methods that do not model
effective teaching practices.
5. Ad hoc clinical training that is unevenly supervised
and does not represent good practice.
Current US policies do not
help address these issues
Elimination of nearly all funds for leveraging
improvement in teacher education
Funding for a wide range of alternatives without
standards
Few subsidies for teacher training costs
Voluntary accreditation, not tied to critical
features of preparation
Licensing tests unlinked to capacity to teach
Licensing standards that are malleable
Unequal funding, salaries, and working conditions
Effects of Underprepared Teachers
on Student Achievement
Fall-to-Spring Test Score Gains / Losses of Students Taught by
Alternative Route and Traditional Route Teachers
Reading
Math
2.5
1.89
2
Change in NCE Score
1.5
1.83
1.31
0.99
1
0.5
Low-Coursework AC
Low-Coursework TC Counterpart
0
High -Coursework AC
-0.5
-0.39
-0.78
-1
-1.07
-1.06
-1.5
Based on actual (unadjusted) fall and spring scores
High -Coursework TC Counterpart
Effects of Preparation on
Teacher Attrition
No Training
% of new teachers leaving after 1 year
Training
25
Practice Teaching
11.6
25.7
Feedback on Teaching
13
27.3
Observation of Other Classes
12.8
28.1
Training in Child Psych./Learning Theory
12
20.7
Training in Selection/Use of Materials
12.6
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Poor and Minority Children Get
the Least Qualified Teachers
A Range of Qualifications
Matter to Student Achievement
Large-scale studies in NC and NY found that student
achievement gains were related to teachers’
• Licensing test scores
Preparation prior to entry
Certification in the field taught
Experience (> 3 years)
National Board Certification (in NC)
In combination, these predict more of the difference
in student learning gains than race & parent
education combined (Clotfelter, Ladd, & Vigdor,
2008).
© Linda Darling-Hammond 2010
How can we
turn the
current
Race to the
Bottom into
a Race to
the Top for
Teacher
Education ?
Although expert teachers are the
greatest influence on learning,
the U.S. invests little in teaching
Preparation is uneven and largely unfunded
Salaries are unequal and noncompetitive
Well-prepared teachers are unequally
distributed
Mentoring for new teachers is uneven
Professional development is “hit & run”
Learning & collaboration time is scarce: US
teachers teach far more hours and have less
prep time than any other advanced country
What are High-Achieving and
Steeply-Improving Nations Doing?
• Substantial investments in initial
teacher education focused on
-- teaching a wide range of learners
-- learning to practice in practice
-- learning to assess learning to shape
teaching
-- learning from and for practicebased research
• Equitable salaries and placements
What kind of preparation
matters?
Features of Exemplary Teacher
Education Programs
 A tightly knit set of experiences based on a common,
clear vision of good teaching
 Well-defined standards of practice and performance;
 A rigorous core curriculum with emphasis on student
learning, assessment, and content pedagogy;
 Use of problem-based
teaching methods including
cases, action research, and
portfolios;
 Extended clinical experience
(30+ weeks) with expert
veterans, linked to coursework,
in partnership schools
Value-Added Gains of Students Whose
Teachers Graduated from Different
Teacher Education
Programs in NYC
ELA
Strong Gains in ELA, not math
0.08
Strong Gains in ELA and Math
0.06
0.04
0.02
Math
-0.120
-0.080
-0.040
0
0.000
0.040
0.080
-0.02
-0.04
Weak Gains in ELA and Math
Strong Gains in Math, not ELA
-0.06
0.120
Program Features Influencing
Teacher Effectiveness
Quality of student teaching
experience
Courses in content and content
pedagogy
Focus on learning specific practices
and applying them in clinical
experience
Study of local district curriculum
Portfolio or capstone project tying
theory to practice
How Might We Ensure Expert
Teachers for all Students?
Invest in teacher education reforms based on
features that matter for success
Build residencies and school partnerships
Underwrite high-quality teacher education for
capable candidates, especially for high-need
fields and areas
Create meaningful licensing and accreditation
standards that drive improvement
Develop and use performance-based
assessments
Supporting Clinical Training: The
Need for Professional Schools
As in medicine and other professions,
teachers need to see and enact good
practice while learning research and theory
Professional development school models can
support learning from expert veterans
while candidates are taking tightly linked
coursework. They can model state-of-the
art education for students and teachers as
well as opportunities for developing
curriculum, new practices, and research.
The Power of Performance
Assessments of Teaching
Teachers and programs learn from performance
assessments featuring portfolios of practice –
videos, lesson plans, student work, and commentary
-- showing how a prospective teacher:
Plans a unit of instruction around standards for
students and standards for teaching
Instructs, reflects, and revises in response to
students’ learning
Assesses and analyzes student learning
Reflects on the success of practice and on how it can
be improved
Develops academic language among all students.
© Linda Darling-Hammond 2010
PACT Scores by Teaching
Dimension and Institution
3.50
3.00
3.03
2.95
3.00
2.92
2.83
2.78
2.50
Score
2.00
1.50
1.00
0.50
0.00
Total MIS
Planning
Instruction
Assessment
Reflection
Acad Language
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
Estimates of High School Student Value-Added
Achievement for Graduates of
Teacher Education Programs / Pathways
0.1
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
Program D
0
-0.02
-0.04
-0.06
-0.08
-0.1
Program A
Program B
Program C
Outside of CA Intern Programs
Teacher Learning is Enhanced
I think for me the most valuable thing was
the sequencing of the lessons, teaching the
lesson, and evaluating what the kids were
getting, what the kids weren’t getting, and
having that be reflected in my next
lesson...the ‘teach-assess-teach-assessteach-assess’ process. And so you’re
constantly changing – you may have a plan
or a framework that you have together,
but knowing that that’s flexible and that it
has to be flexible, based on what the
children learn that day.
Teacher Educators Learn
This [scoring] experience…has forced
me to revisit the question of what
really matters in the assessment of
teachers, which – in turn – means
revisiting the question of what really
matters in the preparation of
teachers.
Cooperating Teachers
Reflect on Practice
[The scoring process] forces you to be
clear about “good teaching;” what it
looks like, sounds like. It enables you
to look at your own practice
critically/with new eyes.
Teacher Education
Can be Linked to Induction
As an induction program coordinator, I
have a much clearer picture of what
credential holders will bring to us and
of what they’ll be required to do. We
can build on this.
Faculty Learning &
Program Improvement
A more shared vision of teaching
Increased articulation across
courses, structures and roles
Changes in course content
Structural changes to support
coherence and connections
How do We Ensure Expert
Teachers for all Students?
Increase incentives to attract and retain
talented teachers
Intensify teacher learning for teaching
challenging content in ways that address
diverse pupil needs
Expand performance-based assessment that
shows how students & teachers are learning
Teaching Effectiveness
Depends on Many Factors
Teacher knowledge, skills, dispositions, and behaviors that
support the learning process.
Hanushek et al. estimate the individual teacher effects
component of measured student achievement is about 7% of
the total.
Resources for learning – Curriculum quality, materials, class
sizes, specialist supports, etc.
Coherence and continuity – The extent to which content & skills
are well organized and reinforced across grades and classes
Student availability for learning – Prior learning opportunities,
health, supportive home context, attendance, developed abilities
Teacher Effectiveness in
Context
Studies find that teachers’ value-added
“effectiveness” is variable & influenced by:
• The effectiveness of their peers
• Class size and time spent with students
• Tutoring and out-of-school learning
• Student characteristics and attendance
• The measure of achievement used and its
appropriateness for the content and students
© Linda Darling-Hammond 2010
A Teacher’s Measured
“Effectiveness” Can Vary Widely
Depending on these Factors
10
8
6
4
2
0
10
YEAR 1
YEAR 2
Same high school
Same course
(English I)
1
Decile Rank Y1
Not a beginning
teacher
Decile Rank Y2
Model controls for:
80
60
Y1
Y2
40
20
Prior
achievement
Demographics
0
% ELL
% Lowincome
%Hispanic
School fixed
effects
What Strategies would Support
Effective Teacher Evaluation?
Combine Evidence of Practice, Performance,
and Outcomes in an Integrated Evaluation
System that looks at:
Teaching practice in relation to standards,
curriculum goals, and student needs
Contributions to colleagues and the school,
and
Evidence about student learning / growth at
the classroom and school level in relation to
teaching practices, curriculum goals, and
student needs.
How Can Evaluation Support
Effective Teaching?
Create a career continuum in which
professional standards, assessment,
and learning are linked
Embed evaluation in sustained,
collegial professional development
Build professional learning
communities to guide curriculum,
instruction, and assessment
A goal for high-achieving 21st
century nations:
“Those who can, do. Those who
understand, teach.”
“Those who can, teach.
Those who can’t go into a less
significant line of work.”