Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates

It is widely believed that the teacher is one of the most important factors influencing a student’s success at school. In many countries, teachers’ salaries and promotion prospects are determined by their students’ performance. Value-added models (VAMs) are increasingly used to measure teacher effec...

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Main Author: Ismail Aslantas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/10/12/390
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spelling doaj-e69893bd184a4ed984d8812a6b8d997f2020-12-19T00:04:23ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022020-12-011039039010.3390/educsci10120390Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness EstimatesIsmail Aslantas0School of Education, Durham University, Durham DH1 1TA, UKIt is widely believed that the teacher is one of the most important factors influencing a student’s success at school. In many countries, teachers’ salaries and promotion prospects are determined by their students’ performance. Value-added models (VAMs) are increasingly used to measure teacher effectiveness to reward or penalize teachers. The aim of this paper is to examine the relationship between teacher effectiveness and student academic performance, controlling for other contextual factors, such as student and school characteristics. The data are based on 7543 Grade 8 students matched with 230 teachers from one province in Turkey. To test how much progress in student academic achievement can be attributed to a teacher, a series of regression analyses were run including contextual predictors at the student, school and teacher/classroom level. The results show that approximately half of the differences in students’ math test scores can be explained by their prior attainment alone (47%). Other factors, such as teacher and school characteristics explain very little the variance in students’ test scores once the prior attainment is taken into account. This suggests that teachers add little to students’ later performance. The implication, therefore, is that any intervention to improve students’ achievement should be introduced much earlier in their school life. However, this does not mean that teachers are not important. Teachers are key to schools and student learning, even if they are not differentially effective from each other in the local (or any) school system. Therefore, systems that attempt to differentiate “effective” from “ineffective” teachers may not be fair to some teachers.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/10/12/390value-added modelteacher performance evaluationteacher accountabilityeffectivenesscontextual predictors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ismail Aslantas
spellingShingle Ismail Aslantas
Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
Education Sciences
value-added model
teacher performance evaluation
teacher accountability
effectiveness
contextual predictors
author_facet Ismail Aslantas
author_sort Ismail Aslantas
title Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
title_short Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
title_full Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
title_fullStr Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Contextual Predictors on Value-Added Teacher Effectiveness Estimates
title_sort impact of contextual predictors on value-added teacher effectiveness estimates
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2020-12-01
description It is widely believed that the teacher is one of the most important factors influencing a student’s success at school. In many countries, teachers’ salaries and promotion prospects are determined by their students’ performance. Value-added models (VAMs) are increasingly used to measure teacher effectiveness to reward or penalize teachers. The aim of this paper is to examine the relationship between teacher effectiveness and student academic performance, controlling for other contextual factors, such as student and school characteristics. The data are based on 7543 Grade 8 students matched with 230 teachers from one province in Turkey. To test how much progress in student academic achievement can be attributed to a teacher, a series of regression analyses were run including contextual predictors at the student, school and teacher/classroom level. The results show that approximately half of the differences in students’ math test scores can be explained by their prior attainment alone (47%). Other factors, such as teacher and school characteristics explain very little the variance in students’ test scores once the prior attainment is taken into account. This suggests that teachers add little to students’ later performance. The implication, therefore, is that any intervention to improve students’ achievement should be introduced much earlier in their school life. However, this does not mean that teachers are not important. Teachers are key to schools and student learning, even if they are not differentially effective from each other in the local (or any) school system. Therefore, systems that attempt to differentiate “effective” from “ineffective” teachers may not be fair to some teachers.
topic value-added model
teacher performance evaluation
teacher accountability
effectiveness
contextual predictors
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/10/12/390
work_keys_str_mv AT ismailaslantas impactofcontextualpredictorsonvalueaddedteachereffectivenessestimates
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