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Who Enters Teaching? Encouraging Evidence That the Status of Teaching Is Improving

Authors :
Susanna Loeb
Luke C. Miller
Hamilton Lankford
James Wyckoff
Andrew McEachin
Source :
Educational Researcher. 43:444-453
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Educational Research Association (AERA), 2014.

Abstract

The relatively low status of teaching as a profession is often given as a factor contributing to the difficulty of recruiting teachers, the middling performance of American students on international assessments, and the well-documented decline in the relative academic ability of teachers through the 1990s. Since the turn of the 21st century, however, a number of federal, state, and local teacher accountability policies have been implemented toward improving teacher quality over the objections of some who argue the policies will decrease quality. In this article, we analyze 25 years of data on the academic ability of teachers in New York State and document that since 1999 the academic ability of both individuals certified and those entering teaching has steadily increased. These gains are widespread and have resulted in a substantial narrowing of the differences in teacher academic ability between high- and low-poverty schools and between White and minority teachers. We interpret these gains as evidence that the status of teaching is improving.

Details

ISSN :
1935102X and 0013189X
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Educational Researcher
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........70803aafb4ba26af9ee2adb24b77e614