主观控制的分类学:教师对教师评价体系的叙述

Aaron M. Pallas, Cami Touloukian
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引用次数: 0

摘要

联邦和各州的改革扩大了学区、学校和教师的问责制度。然而,几乎没有证据表明,以学生学习和教学实践为衡量标准的新教师评价体系的实施,以及有区别的绩效类别和奖惩措施,对教学实践和学生学习产生了广泛的积极影响。我们试图通过关注政策的目标--教师--以及他们如何体验评价体系,来帮助理解教师评价体系的适度影响。校长代理理论和控制价值理论都认为,教师对其绩效评估的控制会影响他们对评估的行为反应,我们借鉴这两种理论,对教师关于其对评估的主观控制的叙述进行了分类。2015-16 学年,我们对纽约市 27 所传统小学、初中和高中的 141 名教师进行了访谈,询问他们对纽约市年度教师评价系统 Advance 的体验。我们开发了一套主题分析系统,用于对访谈进行编码和分析,该系统从一组类别入手,这些类别反映了更大项目的研究问题,以及之前关于绩效评估,特别是教师评估的研究。总之,我们对 141 个教师访谈中的 4077 个摘录进行了编码,平均每个访谈约有 29 个摘录。在我们的抽样调查中,71%的教师表示,他们无法控制自己的教师评价等级中的某 些方面。教师们指出,在他们的评定中,有三个方面是他们无法控制的:其他人的行为, 特别是学生、教师、观察和评定他们课堂教学的管理者;教师评价的技术,特别是观 察评分标准和学生评价的特点,对一些教师来说,还有统计模型;学校更广泛的社会环 境,特别是支持教师和学生的资源,以及学生家庭生活的不确定性。少数教师指出,他们可以控制自己的教学实践,控制自己的思想和行为。这项研究是在纽约市进行的,当时许多教师都认为教师评价制度是惩罚性的。在这种情况下,教师对评价制度的反应取决于他们对学校领导的信任,以及他们 对自己在制度的设计和实施中有多少发言权的看法。如果教师相信校长能够准确、持续地观察他们的教学实践,这种信任感就会增强。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Taxonomy of Subjective Control: Teachers‘ Narrative Accounts of a Teacher Evaluation System
Federal and state reforms have expanded accountability systems for school districts, schools, and teachers. However, there is little evidence that the implementation of new teacher evaluation systems relying on measures of student learning and measures of teaching practice, with differentiated performance categories and rewards and sanctions, have had broad positive influences on teaching practice and student learning. We seek to contribute to an understanding of the modest influence of teacher evaluation systems by focusing on the targets of the policies—teachers—and how they experience the evaluation systems. Drawing on principal-agent theory and control-value theory, each of which suggests that teacher control over their performance evaluations influences their behavioral responses to them, we develop a taxonomy of teachers’ narratives of their subjective control of their evaluations. We interviewed 141 New York City teachers working in 27 traditional elementary, middle, and high schools in the 2015–16 school year, asking about their experiences with Advance, the New York City annual teacher evaluation system. We developed a thematic analysis system for coding and analyzing the interviews that began with a set of categories reflective of the larger project’s research questions and prior research on performance evaluation in general and teacher evaluation in particular. All told, we coded 4,077 excerpts from the 141 teacher interviews, an average of about 29 excerpts per interview. Seventy-one percent of the teachers in our sample indicated that they had no control over some aspect of their teacher evaluation ratings. Teachers noted three areas in their ratings that they deemed out of their control: other people’s behaviors, notably students, teachers, and the administrators observing and rating their classroom practice; the technology of teacher evaluation, especially the features of observation rubrics and student assessments, and for some teachers, statistical models; and the broader social context of the school, particularly the resources available to support teachers and students and the uncertainties of students’ home lives. A small number of teachers noted their control over their teaching practices and control over their own thoughts and behaviors. This study was situated in New York City at a time when many teachers believed the teacher evaluation system was designed to be punitive. Under these circumstances, teachers’ responses to the evaluation system hinge on their trust in school leadership and their perceptions of how much voice they have in the design and implementation of the system. This trust is enhanced when teachers have confidence that principals are able to observe their practice accurately and consistently.
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