How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing

The No Child Left Behind Act directs states to establish annual assessments to measure student mastery of state-established learning expectations. American public school students in grades 3 through 8, with few exceptions, take a series of state-mandated assessments each year; students in grades 10...

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Main Author: Cameron, Allan Walter
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/718
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1013342019-05-10T07:36:30Z How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing Cameron, Allan Walter Text thesis 2008 Boston College English electronic application/pdf The No Child Left Behind Act directs states to establish annual assessments to measure student mastery of state-established learning expectations. American public school students in grades 3 through 8, with few exceptions, take a series of state-mandated assessments each year; students in grades 10 through 12 take a series of state-mandated assessments at least once during those years. NCLB and state laws mandate considerable consequences if students do not perform well on the assessments. Research suggests that the standardized tests associated with NCLB affect curricula and pedagogy. What is not known is the level of control teachers believe they have over the curricular and pedagogic changes, and how that level of perceived control affects teachers’ perceptions of their ability to prepare students for the state-mandated tests. The purpose of this research study was to examine how teachers’ perceptions of autonomy affect their perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing. Data were collected with the Teaching Autonomy Scale (Pearson & Hall, 1993) and follow-up interviews with teachers from a suburban Connecticut public school district. The findings of the study suggest that teacher perceptions of autonomy do not significantly affect their perceptions of efficacy regarding the state-mandated tests associated with NCLB. The findings also suggest that teacher perceptions of autonomy do affect how teachers view the state-mandated standardized tests. Teachers with high perceived autonomy tended to report that the state-mandated tests had less of an impact on their classroom practices; had some discretion regarding how to use curricular materials in their classes; said that their students performed well on the state-mandated tests because the students engaged in authentic learning exercises that taught the students the skills and concepts assessed by the tests; tended to view the state-tests as assessments of the reading, writing, and math curricula; and tended to report that the state-mandated tests had mostly positive effects on education. Implications for practice, public policy, and further research are presented. state-mandated testing elementary school teachers autonomy public schools Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Educational Administration and Higher Education. 104976 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/718
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic state-mandated testing
elementary school teachers
autonomy
public schools
spellingShingle state-mandated testing
elementary school teachers
autonomy
public schools
Cameron, Allan Walter
How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
description The No Child Left Behind Act directs states to establish annual assessments to measure student mastery of state-established learning expectations. American public school students in grades 3 through 8, with few exceptions, take a series of state-mandated assessments each year; students in grades 10 through 12 take a series of state-mandated assessments at least once during those years. NCLB and state laws mandate considerable consequences if students do not perform well on the assessments. Research suggests that the standardized tests associated with NCLB affect curricula and pedagogy. What is not known is the level of control teachers believe they have over the curricular and pedagogic changes, and how that level of perceived control affects teachers’ perceptions of their ability to prepare students for the state-mandated tests. The purpose of this research study was to examine how teachers’ perceptions of autonomy affect their perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing. Data were collected with the Teaching Autonomy Scale (Pearson & Hall, 1993) and follow-up interviews with teachers from a suburban Connecticut public school district. The findings of the study suggest that teacher perceptions of autonomy do not significantly affect their perceptions of efficacy regarding the state-mandated tests associated with NCLB. The findings also suggest that teacher perceptions of autonomy do affect how teachers view the state-mandated standardized tests. Teachers with high perceived autonomy tended to report that the state-mandated tests had less of an impact on their classroom practices; had some discretion regarding how to use curricular materials in their classes; said that their students performed well on the state-mandated tests because the students engaged in authentic learning exercises that taught the students the skills and concepts assessed by the tests; tended to view the state-tests as assessments of the reading, writing, and math curricula; and tended to report that the state-mandated tests had mostly positive effects on education. Implications for practice, public policy, and further research are presented. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Educational Administration and Higher Education.
author Cameron, Allan Walter
author_facet Cameron, Allan Walter
author_sort Cameron, Allan Walter
title How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
title_short How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
title_full How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
title_fullStr How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
title_full_unstemmed How perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
title_sort how perceptions of autonomy affect suburban elementary school teachers’ perceptions of efficacy regarding state-mandated testing
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/718
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