| Literature DB >> 25866426 |
Matthew A Kraft1, John P Papay1.
Abstract
Although wide variation in teacher effectiveness is well established, much less is known about differences in teacher improvement over time. We document that average returns to teaching experience mask large variation across individual teachers and across groups of teachers working in different schools. We examine the role of school context in explaining these differences using a measure of the professional environment constructed from teachers responses to state-wide surveys. Our analyses show that teachers working in more supportive professional environments improve their effectiveness more over time than teachers working in less supportive contexts. On average, teachers working in schools at the 75th percentile of professional environment ratings improved 38% more than teachers in schools at the 25th percentile after 10 years.Entities:
Keywords: professional development; professional environment; returns to experience; school context; teacher development
Year: 2014 PMID: 25866426 PMCID: PMC4392767 DOI: 10.3102/0162373713519496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Educ Eval Policy Anal ISSN: 0162-3737