Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses

abstract: Teacher evaluation policies have recently shifted in the United States. For the first time in history, many states, districts, and administrators are now required to evaluate teachers by methods that are up to 50% based on their "value-added," as demonstrated at the classroom-lev...

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Other Authors: Holloway-Libell, Jessica (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27446
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-274462018-06-22T03:05:43Z Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses abstract: Teacher evaluation policies have recently shifted in the United States. For the first time in history, many states, districts, and administrators are now required to evaluate teachers by methods that are up to 50% based on their "value-added," as demonstrated at the classroom-level by growth on student achievement data over time. Other related instruments and methods, such as classroom observations and rubrics, have also become common practices in teacher evaluation systems. Such methods are consistent with the neoliberal discourse that has dominated the social and political sphere for the past three decades. Employing a discourse analytic approach that called upon a governmentality framework, the author used a complementary approach to understand how contemporary teacher evaluation polices, practices, and instruments work to discursively (re)define teachers and teacher quality in terms of their market value. For the first part of the analysis, the author collected and analyzed documents and field notes related to the teacher evaluation system at one urban middle school. The analysis included official policy documents, official White House speeches and press releases, evaluation system promotional materials, evaluator training materials, and the like. For the second part of the analysis, she interviewed teachers and their evaluators at the local middle school in order to understand how the participants had embodied the market-based discourse to define themselves as teachers and qualify their practice, quality, and worth accordingly. The findings of the study suggest that teacher evaluation policies, practices, and instruments make possible a variety of techniques, such as numericization, hierarchical surveillance, normalizing judgments, and audit, in order to first make teachers objects of knowledge and then act upon that knowledge to manage teachers' conduct. The author also found that teachers and their evaluators have taken up this discourse in order to think about and act upon themselves as responsibilized subjects. Ultimately, the author argues that while much of the attention related to teacher evaluations has focused on the instruments used to measure the construct of teacher quality, that teacher evaluation instruments work in a mutually constitutive ways to discursively shape the construct of teacher quality. Dissertation/Thesis Holloway-Libell, Jessica (Author) Amrein-Beardsley, Audrey (Advisor) Anderson, Kate T. (Advisor) Berliner, David C. (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Education policy Education Policy Market-based Discourse Neoliberalism Teacher Evaluation Value-Added Models eng 200 pages Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27446 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Education policy
Education Policy
Market-based Discourse
Neoliberalism
Teacher Evaluation
Value-Added Models
spellingShingle Education policy
Education Policy
Market-based Discourse
Neoliberalism
Teacher Evaluation
Value-Added Models
Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
description abstract: Teacher evaluation policies have recently shifted in the United States. For the first time in history, many states, districts, and administrators are now required to evaluate teachers by methods that are up to 50% based on their "value-added," as demonstrated at the classroom-level by growth on student achievement data over time. Other related instruments and methods, such as classroom observations and rubrics, have also become common practices in teacher evaluation systems. Such methods are consistent with the neoliberal discourse that has dominated the social and political sphere for the past three decades. Employing a discourse analytic approach that called upon a governmentality framework, the author used a complementary approach to understand how contemporary teacher evaluation polices, practices, and instruments work to discursively (re)define teachers and teacher quality in terms of their market value. For the first part of the analysis, the author collected and analyzed documents and field notes related to the teacher evaluation system at one urban middle school. The analysis included official policy documents, official White House speeches and press releases, evaluation system promotional materials, evaluator training materials, and the like. For the second part of the analysis, she interviewed teachers and their evaluators at the local middle school in order to understand how the participants had embodied the market-based discourse to define themselves as teachers and qualify their practice, quality, and worth accordingly. The findings of the study suggest that teacher evaluation policies, practices, and instruments make possible a variety of techniques, such as numericization, hierarchical surveillance, normalizing judgments, and audit, in order to first make teachers objects of knowledge and then act upon that knowledge to manage teachers' conduct. The author also found that teachers and their evaluators have taken up this discourse in order to think about and act upon themselves as responsibilized subjects. Ultimately, the author argues that while much of the attention related to teacher evaluations has focused on the instruments used to measure the construct of teacher quality, that teacher evaluation instruments work in a mutually constitutive ways to discursively shape the construct of teacher quality. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2014
author2 Holloway-Libell, Jessica (Author)
author_facet Holloway-Libell, Jessica (Author)
title Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
title_short Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
title_full Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
title_fullStr Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
title_full_unstemmed Teacher Evaluation Systems: How Teachers and Teacher Quality are (re)Defined by Market-Based Discourses
title_sort teacher evaluation systems: how teachers and teacher quality are (re)defined by market-based discourses
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27446
_version_ 1718700607516180480