Misdiagnosing the Teacher Quality Problem

R. Ingersoll
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Few educational issues have received more attention in recent times than the problem of ensuring that our nation's elementary and secondary classrooms are all staffed with quality teachers. There is consensus that the quality of teachers and teaching matter--and undoubtedly are among the most important factors shaping the learning and growth of students. Moreover, there is consensus that serious problems exist with the quality of teachers and teaching in the United States. Beyond that, however, there appears to be little consensus and much disagreement--especially over what teacher quality entails and what the sources of, and solutions to, the problem might be. This issue of CPRE Policy Briefs summarizes the findings on issues related to teacher quality in the chapter authored by me in the book, The State of Education Policy Research (Cohen, Fuhrman, Mosher, Eds., 2007). This report also draws on discussions that took place during a summer, 2006, policy briefing on teacher labormarket issues held in Chicago and sponsored by the Spencer Foundation. In this brief, I will briefly discuss three related diagnoses and their attendant prescriptions: restrictive occupational entry barriers; teacher shortages; and underqualified/underprepared teachers. These diagnoses are not the only explanations for the problem of low quality of teachers and teaching. Nor are these views universally held--indeed, each is the subject of much contention--and proponents of one are at times opponents of another. But all are prominent views, all are part of the conventional wisdom as to what ails teaching, and all have had an impact on research, reform, and policy. The thesis of this brief, however, is that each viewpoint is largely misinformed or misconstrued. My theoretical perspective is drawn from the sociology of organizations, occupations and work. My operating premise, drawn from this perspective, is that to fully understand issues of teacher quality requires examining the character of the teaching occupation and the nature of the organizations in which teachers work. A close look at the best data available from this perspective, I argue, shows that each of these views involves a wrong diagnosis and a wrong prescription. In the following sections, I review each of the above views and explain why each conveys an inaccurate explanation of--and solutions to-the problems of quality plaguing the teaching occupation. Disciplines Educational Sociology | Education Policy | Elementary Education and Teaching | Secondary Education and Teaching Comments View on the CPRE website. This policy brief is available at ScholarlyCommons: http://repository.upenn.edu/cpre_policybriefs/35
对教师素质问题的误判
近年来,没有什么教育问题比确保我们国家的中小学教室配备高质量的教师更受关注了。人们一致认为,教师和教学的质量很重要,而且无疑是影响学生学习和成长的最重要因素之一。此外,人们一致认为,美国的教师和教学质量存在严重问题。然而,除此之外,似乎几乎没有共识,分歧很大——尤其是在教师素质需要什么、问题的来源和解决方案可能是什么方面。本期CPRE政策简报总结了我在《教育政策研究现状》(科恩、福尔曼、莫舍主编)一书中撰写的章节中关于教师质量相关问题的发现。, 2007)。本报告还借鉴了2006年夏季在芝加哥举行的由斯宾塞基金会赞助的教师劳动力市场问题政策简报会上的讨论。在本文中,我将简要讨论三种相关的诊断及其伴随的处方:限制性职业进入壁垒;教师短缺;以及不合格/准备不足的教师。这些诊断并不是对教师和教学质量低下问题的唯一解释。这些观点也不是被普遍接受的——事实上,每一种观点都是很多争论的主题——一种观点的支持者有时是另一种观点的反对者。但所有这些都是杰出的观点,都是关于什么困扰着教学的传统智慧的一部分,都对研究、改革和政策产生了影响。然而,本文的论点是,每个观点在很大程度上都是错误的或被误解的。我的理论视角来源于组织社会学、职业社会学和工作社会学。从这个角度出发,我的工作前提是,要充分理解教师素质问题,需要考察教师职业的特征和教师所在组织的性质。我认为,从这个角度仔细研究一下现有的最佳数据,就会发现,这些观点中的每一种都涉及错误的诊断和错误的处方。在接下来的章节中,我将回顾以上每一种观点,并解释为什么每种观点都传达了对困扰教师职业的质量问题的不准确解释和解决方案。学科:教育社会学|教育政策|基础教育与教学|中等教育与教学评论这份政策简报可以在ScholarlyCommons网站上找到:http://repository.upenn.edu/cpre_policybriefs/35
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