14 November 2008

WANT BETTER SCHOOLS? HIRE BETTER TEACHERS
(Edward L. Glaeser, professor de Economia na Harvard University
e director do Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston)




"President-elect Barack Obama has declared that 'now is the time to finally meet our moral obligation - to provide every child a world-class education'. But how? Mindless increases in school spending will be an expensive fiasco that will generate more disillusionment than human capital. The clearest result from decades of education research is the importance of teacher quality. My colleague Tom Kane finds that students who are lucky enough to get a teacher in the top quarter of the teacher-quality distribution jump 10 percentile points in the student achievement distribution relative to children who end up with less able teachers. Improving teacher quality has about twice the impact on student outcomes as radically reducing class size. Just as the human capital of our citizens will determine the strength of our nation, the human capital of our teachers will determine the quality of our schools. The first step toward improving teacher quality is to attract more talented teachers. The second step is to improve teacher selection on the job, promoting the best and encouraging the worst to help society in some other way. (...)



The experience illustrates that it isn't easy to assess teacher quality with standard teaching credentials. If attracting a wave of good people into teaching is the first step, the second step is keeping the best teachers and redirecting the rest. Performance in the classroom is the best way to know if a teacher is a success. Teacher promotion and tenure needs to be based on clear performance measures, including student test scores. Perhaps teachers unions could start endorsing the use of test scores to evaluate their members and determine tenure. Even without formal performance metrics, principals are quite able to assess pedagogical talent. Several years ago, New York City School Chancellor Joel Klein championed a deal where principals received greatly enhanced authority in exchange for greater accountability. That sounds like a good deal for parents and children. Let the principals choose better-performing teachers and require the principals to leave if their school doesn't improve. Principals have inside knowledge. Like CEOs throughout our economy, they need to have the independent authority to use that knowledge.

This election marks a new beginning. Improving our schools may be the most important way that President-elect Obama can leave America stronger than he found it. He must avoid any small plans. America doesn't need an $18 billion Band-Aid. The country needs a massive education overhaul, and better teachers will be the most important element in that overhaul. Spending more and attracting able teachers is the best way to use resources to improve the human capital of our children and the future of our nation". (texto integral no Boston Globe)

(2008)

2 comments:

Táxi Pluvioso said...

São Oh!bama também vai salvar os professores, a educação e afins? Que bom, que bom. Pois ando muito preocupado com estudantes a atirar ovos. Pelas leis do mercado, maior procura, aumenta o preço da omoleta. Poderemos copiar este modelo salvador para Portugal, pagando direitos de autor, claro.

Acabei de ler que uma das propostas no G20 em Washington é a criação de uma "supervisão colegial" para as 30 maiores instituições financeiras. Que bela ideia. Mas qual é ela? O fim da História? Ou no final ficará apenas uma, a que venderá Soylent Green?

Pago bilhete para ver São Oh!bama recauchutar o capitalismo.

João Lisboa said...

"São Oh!bama também vai salvar os professores, a educação e afins? Que bom, que bom"

É-me alheia a fé nos santos. Ou a fé em geral. Já não fazer demasiados disparates e fazer, de vez em quando, meia dúzia de coisas certas, é perfeitamente possível.