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Is Teaching a Vocation: The Distribution of Higher Qualified New Teachers by Challenge of UK High Schools Dr John Brown Institute of Education.

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Presentation on theme: "Is Teaching a Vocation: The Distribution of Higher Qualified New Teachers by Challenge of UK High Schools Dr John Brown Institute of Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 Is Teaching a Vocation: The Distribution of Higher Qualified New Teachers by Challenge of UK High Schools Dr John Brown Institute of Education

2  Research Papers in Education (In press) Vol 30,1 2014

3  Quality of teachers determines the quality of education  Every child should have a fairly even chance of being taught by high quality teachers  “Every child taught by a high quality teacher” mandated legislation in US No Child Left Behind

4  Distribution of high quality teachers likely to be uneven across schools  High levels of geographic/social segregation in UK schools  concentrates disadvantaged pupils in some schools  creating conditions which may deter many teachers  Allen, Burgess, & Mayo, 2012  Experienced staff more likely to leave challenging schools  Challenging schools tend to employ younger teachers Higher quality teachers unlikely to be distributed evenly between schools

5  Aversion to challenging schools has always thought to be held in check by vocation motivation  Many teachers are thought to be attracted to challenging environments to provide fair educational opportunities  However, the extent teachers seek challenging schools has never been measured Vocational motivation never been tested

6  Measuring teacher effectiveness is highly problematic  Robust methods involve measuring the amount of progress pupils when taught by one teacher  No access to this arrangement of data  Next best available Proxy measure, something related to teaching quality  Teacher academic qualifications thought to be important in ability to teach How to identify higher quality teachers

7  United States studies:  The selectivity of the University attended - Summers & Wolfe, 1977; Ehrenberg & Brewer, 1994)  Grades achieved to enter university - Ferguson & Ladd, 1996; Ferguson R. F., 1991  Degrees subject taken and grade achieved - Aaronson, Barrow, & Sander, 2007; Clotfelter, Ladd, & Vigdor, 2007  All found significant impact of academic achievement on teacher effectiveness Teachers academic qualifications known to be related to teaching effectiveness

8  Effective Provision of Preschool Education (EPPE) age 4 level of qualification is among the most important factors predicting outcomes - Sylva, Melhuish, Sammons, Siraj-Blatchford, & Taggart, 2004

9  …importance of teachers academic qualifications…is reflected in the value education professionals place on qualifications in teacher hiring decisions,  “…a reasonable basis for documenting systematic inequity in the distribution of teacher quality” pp2 (Miller & Chait, 2008). Teacher Qualifications important in hiring decisions

10  “…one of the few features common to all the world’s most successful education systems are very high academic qualifications required to become a teacher” - Barber, 2007; OECD, 2003; Tikly, 2013; Auguste, Kihn, & Miller, 2010  So what kinds of schools do our higher qualified new teachers choose to work in? Other indications of the importance of teachers academic qualifications

11  All newly qualified teachers in England over three years 2006 to 2009 n = 37,039  First Degree subject and degree result grade  Employment history  Qualification Measure - Average entrance requirement (UCAS tariff) over three years to enter the teachers degree subject This study - Teachers Data

12  Multiplied by the grade they achieved in this degree.  Fourth Class Honours = 1,  Third Class Honours = 2,  Other Award Pass = 3,  Lower Second Class Honours = 4,  Upper Second Class Honours = 5,  First Class Honours = 6.  Emphasises teachers gaining high grades at university in subjects that have higher entrance requirements Taking into account teachers performance when at University

13  School Attainment at age 11 and 16:  average points score over three years  School Income Disadvantage:  average percentage of pupils eligible for state welfare benefits  School Progress (Value Added):  average point score improvement between age 11 and age 16 over three years  School Attainment progress accounting for pupils’ advantages and disadvantages (Contextual value added):  average point score improvement between age 11 and age 16 over three years adjusted for income disadvantage, ethnicity, Language Method - Schools Challenge

14  Teachers qualifications were significantly correlated with each school characteristic investigated Results

15 Correlations between New Teachers Qualifications and school characteristics

16  e.g. a strong attraction to one kind of schools may produce an overall correlation when there is equal attraction to other kinds of schools  Possibly new teachers are strongly attracted to the highest attaining schools, - but are equally attracted to schools with different levels attainment But correlations can be misleading

17  To test whether new teachers attraction to schools were consistent across all levels of characteristics  Characteristics divided into 20% groups (quintiles)  Analysis of variance was used to test whether there was any difference in the qualifications of new teacher working in schools with different levels of characteristic  To test whether qualifications differed between any quintile and another other quintile Tukeys Post Hoc tests were carried out

18 Significant differences in the qualifications of new teachers in schools with different quintiles of attainment at age 16

19 Significant differences in the qualifications of new teachers in schools with different quintiles of attainment at age 11

20 Significant differences in the qualifications of new teachers in schools with different quintiles of Income Deprivation

21 Significant differences in the qualifications of new teachers in schools with different quintiles of Progress age 11 to 16

22  Interpreting recruitment relating to school progress is problematic  As some schools achieve high progress with higher attainers  Others achieve high progress with lower attainers  very different kinds of schools will have the same progress The relationship between new teachers qualifications and schools progress

23  To test whether higher qualified teacher more often find employment in schools that different progress with different attainers  Schools categorised by high and low progress and attainment  High = >.5 SD above the average over three years  Low = <.-5 SD below the average over three years  High Progress with High Intake Attainment  Low Progress with High Intake Attainment  High Progress with Low Intake Attainment  Low Progress with Low Intake Attainment

24  ANOVA F (3, 15,083) = 133.5, p<.001,  Sig highest teacher quals - High Progress High Intake Attainment  Sig higher teacher quals - Low Progress High Intake Attainment  Than both  High Progress Low Intake Attainment  Low Progress Low Intake Attainment  No sig dif teacher quals between  High Progress Low Intake Attainment  Low Progress Low Intake Attainment Differences in qualifications of new teachers working in schools with high and low levels of attainment and progress

25  Higher qual teachers more often worked in schools with high progress with high attainers than any other kind of school  Higher qual teachers more often worked in schools with low progress with high attainers than high progress with low attainers  Suggesting that attainment levels of schools is more important to new teachers than the progress they achieve

26  contextual progress cannot distinguish between progress with advantaged or with disadvantaged  So, schools were categorised same way as progress  High Progress High Affluence  Low Progress High Affluence  High Progress Low Affluence  Low Progress Low Affluence Contextual progress

27  Sig highest teacher quals - High Progress High Affluence  Sig higher teacher quals - Low Progress High Affluence  Than both  High Progress Low Affluence  Low Progress Low Affluence  Sig higher teacher quals - High Progress Low Affluence than Low Progress Low Affluence Results

28  Higher qualified new teachers more often sort employment in schools that achieve high progress with advantaged pupils  i.e. some of the school that achieve some of the highest absolute academic standards  They are next most attracted to schools that achieve low progress with advantaged pupils  i.e. least challenging pedagogic and socio-economically deprived schools

29  Higher qualified teachers are more attracted to schools with the least demanding professional/pedagogic and socio-economic conditions than schools that reduce educational inequalities

30  Analysis so far is informative of the strength of association between qualifications and school characteristics  But does not tell us the size of the imbalance in terms of number of teachers over or under-represented in schools The size of recruitment imbalances between less challenging and more challenging schools

31  If the top quintile highest qualified teachers were distributed evenly between school quintiles, 20% of them would work in schools in each quintile  the percentage actually employed in each quintile was subtracted by the hypothetical amount (20%) if they were even distributed  To provide a measure of the total imbalance across all schools the difference in each quintile was summed The size of recruitment imbalance

32 The size of recruitment imbalances between schools with higher and lower attainment

33 Affluence

34 Progress and Contextual Progress

35  Top 20% highest qualified new teachers were  Over represented in higher attaining schools by 18.3%  Over represented in more affluent schools by 14%  Recruitment of higher qualified new teachers is imbalanced in favour of high attaining and affluent schools by around 1/5 and 1/6 of the new teachers workforce Size of recruitment imbalance

36  Challenging schools tend to hire more new teachers lose more of their experienced staff - Allen et al (2012)  Therefore estimate of overall imbalance in whole teaching profession likely to be underestimated by any perspective based on new teachers Discussion

37  Higher qualified new teachers more often seek and find employment in schools with higher levels of attainment that achieve the highest academic standards with some of most able and advantaged  They are more attracted to schools with the least challenging conditions, both pedagogically and socio- economically – than schools which narrow the gap Conclusion

38  Challenging schools recruit from a restricted pool of new teachers  The size of the imbalance is large– possibly around 20% of the teacher workforce  Insofar as we feel teacher academic qualifications are important indications of the quality of teachers…  … these results indicate it will not be possible for challenging schools to narrow the gap as challenging schools recruiting less able teachers will not catch up with school recruiting more able teachers


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