Search Helium

Home > Education > Secondary School > Teachers & Administrators

Should teachers be held accountable for low student test scores?

Results so far:

Yes
46% 728 votes Total: 1593 votes
No
54% 865 votes

Yes

by Claire Ducker

Created on: March 14, 2009

Teacher accountability is a thorny issue that has increasingly come under discussion as student performance has declined relative both to the past and to the performance of students in other nations. It is opposed, understandably, by teacher unions, though not always by teachers themselves. Even among those who approve of accountability, the method for achieving it is not by any means clear.




Teacher performance is widely recognized as the single most important factor in student achievement, more important than class size, quality and availability of materials and resources, and physical plant. Yet standards of teacher performance are thought to be elusive or even nonexistent.
Scores on standardized tests are the only readily available means of assessing the effects of teaching on students, but these are subject to many variables outside the teacher's sphere of influence.




Teachers are in an unenviable position. They have large workloads with low pay. They must constantly juggle the competing demands of students, parents, and administration. They face an unending, but somehow always increasing, load of paperwork and extra duties.
It seems almost churlish to demand that their pay, or even their jobs, be made to depend on the performance of other people.




The fact is, though, that standardized achievement tests do provide a valid, if limited and imperfect, measure of student progress and, over time, of teacher effectiveness. Average teachers generally teach about a year's worth of academic progress in a school year. Really good teachers effect a year and a half or more of progress in their students. Poor teachers, on the other hand, teach only half a year or less of academic material.
These results can be demonstrated consistently over a three- or four-year period.




It is clear that the difference between excellent and poor teachers is enormous. It has been estimated that student performance could be enhanced significantly by getting rid of the poorest seven to ten percent of teachers, even if they could be replaced by merely mediocre ones. This could be done by measuring yearly student progress over a three-year period for every teacher.




This method would obviate the variability between different schools, classes, and grade levels, since students' progress would be measured only against their own yearly performance, not against that of other students. Measuring progress over several years would eliminate the possibility that poor student progress in a single year might be due to specific factors outside the students' or the teacher's control.




Most schools already have the data needed to perform these analyses. Those that do not could fairly easily implement procedures for obtaining this information. The results could be used to identify superior teachers and to provide feedback to all teachers to use to improve their performance; even poor teachers might be motivated to improve, especially knowing that their jobs might be on the line in a couple of years.




The question of "teaching the test" does arise. Since average teachers would not be affected by their students' test results, they would have no motivation to do so. Poor teachers might be inclined to do this, but being able to teach their classes to show a year's worth of progress on a standardized test would represent a significant improvement in their teaching! Teaching the test is at least teaching something.




Measuring student progress on testing can be an effective way to identify and remove poor teachers.
Use of this information should be strictly criterion-referenced; that is, it should require a specific level of performance, not a ranking of teachers. A school might seek to remove teachers whose students demonstrate a half a year or less of academic progress over a three-year period, not to remove the lowest performing seven to ten percent. The goal would be have all teachers achieving a year or more of academic progress, at which point there would be no need to remove any.




Though consistent academic progress can help to identify superior teachers, using the information to award bonus pay might be problematic. Teaching to the test might then become an issue where it does not represent a real improvement in teacher effectiveness. Being able to identify the best teachers could, however, enable a school to develop master teacher and mentoring programs, to which additional pay might be applied for additional or higher-level work.




Holding teachers accountable for their students' academic progress is not unreasonable, but it does need to be done fairly, using valid and reliable standards over time. The method described above could accomplish this goal without placing undue pressure on the vast majority of teachers who do a good job and deserve our support.

Learn more about this author, Claire Ducker.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No

by Author Name Withheld 135

Created on: June 19, 2009   Last Updated: July 05, 2009

Teachers are often the obvious scapegoat in a situation where a pupil is underperforming. Afterall, they are the visible faces of education. But actually, I really believe that what a teacher can achieve is always either limited or furthered by certain other aspects of the pupil's life.

Parents have to take their responsibility when a child underperforms. If a child achieves an amazing score, the parents are there praising, after all and any success a child attains is often attributed to a parent. Why then, by the same token, should a parent not also be responsible for less successful endeavours? Education and learning does not stop at the end of the school day. It should be a constant thing, which means the home environment and parenting play a crucial role. I strongly believe that parents absolutely must have a role in being aware of exactly what homework their son or daughter is assigned, etc., and to ensure that it is completed and that they see this homework! A parent ought to know what the child is studying at school at the moment and should be actively involved in their education.

The school at which the teacher works might also be a limiting factor. Budgets, budgets, budgets! Yes, even education has to make the numbers work out right and throughout the world, under funded schools let down students in a number of ways. The simple fact is that a teacher who cannot obtain the resources he or she needs has to do without and simply improvise. Of course this impacts on the results of the children. In addition, overcrowded classrooms mean more pupils per teacher and less attention for each student. This will always have a negative effect on results and the simple fact of the matter is that a teacher has to make do and achieve the best with whatever resources they are given. Unhappy with resources at a school? That is not a teacher's fault. Blame your government or education authority.

And of course social elements play a part. Children get in with the wrong crowd sometimes. Sometimes it isn't cool to do well. Problems outside the classroom can cause a downturn in the quality of results a child produces.

This is just intended to point out a number of other factors that contribute to results and school performance. Of course, a good teacher is essential if a student is to achieve good grades. After all, a teacher is at the forefront of motivation. I still remember to this day my favourite teachers and a certain Mr. Cook who lit up Romeo and Juliet in such a way that a bunch of reluctant teenagers were able to not only understand the play, but to appreciate and enjoy it. The difference between a good and bad teacher really can be the difference between a pass and fail. But teachers should not be held solely responsible for the poor grade on a test, at least not without considering other factors.

Learn more about this author, Author Name Withheld 135.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


CONNECT WITH US

Read
our blog
Helum for writers

Write and get published
Share with other writers
Polish your freelancing skills

Join our active writing community
Helium Content Source for Publishers

Quality articles from proven freelancers
Exclusive rights, fast turnaround
Brand engagement, business blogging -- our writers do it all

Get custom content today!

INFORMATION


Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA