Reflecting Hope Google Analytics

Monday, September 12, 2011

Teacher Pay Is Not Linked with Student Achievement

How irritated would you be to know that teachers are paid based on a standard that has no correlation to student performance as measured by standardized tests in math and reading?

What I mean  is that teachers are paid based on a combination of years of experience and educational level attained.  The more years you teach and the more college credits you earn, the more money you make.  Yet no connection has been made in research demonstrating that someone with a masters degree is definitely going to be a better teacher than someone with a bachelors degree.  Some research has shown that teachers do show some improvement in teaching performance between the first year and fifth year of teaching; however, research has been unable to demonstrate meaningful improvement after the fifth year in teacher quality.  Teachers are paid based on standards that have little to do with student performance.   

I mention all this because I saw that the Manhattan Institute for Policy research released a paper on a recent study supporting these findings.  The key measure that they used to demonstrate student achievement were standardized test scores.  A quick glance at the standardized tests used in Florida, the state covered by the study, finds that they only use multiple choice questions.  Multiple choice questions cannot effectively measure skills like creativity and the ability to create new material, both of which are considered higher order thinking skills. 

So that leads me to this question, are these research findings actually telling us years of teaching experience and college credits are worthless when it comes to predicting teacher performance or is it telling us that they are worthless when it comes to predicting student performance on imperfect multiple choice tests?              

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

As the amount of information grows, so does our need for eachother

We consume a lot of information in the course of our day.  More so now then at any other time in the history of man.  We need each other more than ever to help make sense of it.  

A recent theme that has come out of my small group is the idea that the Bible must be interpreted and understood as a group of believers and not as individuals.  I tend to agree with that sentiment because I gain a far deeper and nuanced understanding of stories and passages after hearing the perspective of others.  I think this same idea applies when exploring and trying to learn from the volumes of information that bombards us today. 

While watching West Wing the other night President Bartlet quoted Ephesians 5: 21, "Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ." This presents the idea that we should be serving one another or putting the needs of others before our own.  Again, I think this is very important today because so much information is out there.  We need to find the areas of knowledge that we care about and are knowledgeable in and we need to share our insights in those areas with others who are willing to do the same.  As Seth Godin puts it, we need to find a tribe.     

Couple this with a comment posted by an acquaintance from William and Mary.  He was asking if their is evidence supporting the idea that education can enhance the ability of the human mind to process information.  I think the enhancement comes from learning together.  Yes you can learn on your own, but I don't think you do it as well as when you do it in a group. That to me is the true value of education in a public context.  We provide each other with experiences and ideas that we would not otherwise interact with.  By learning together we learn more.   

If we take the idea of approaching learning in groups, connect that with the idea of serving one another found in Ephesians, and then share that learning with each other publicly in our areas of expertise we make all of us better.  

That is why I appreciate it when friends share items on their Google reader feeds, post articles on Facebook, and blog about their experiences.  I plan to keep doing the same.  Will you join me?