Author : Richard M. Ingersoll
Publisher :
ISBN 13 :
Total Pages : 12 pages
Book Rating : 4.:/5 (16 download)
Book Synopsis Misdiagnosing the Teacher Quality Problem. CPRE Policy Briefs. RB-49 by : Richard M. Ingersoll
Download or read book Misdiagnosing the Teacher Quality Problem. CPRE Policy Briefs. RB-49 written by Richard M. Ingersoll and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 12 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This issue of CPRE Policy Briefs summarizes the findings on issues related to teacher quality in the chapter by the author in the book, "The State of Education Policy Research" (Cohen, Fuhrman, Mosher, Eds., 2007). This report also draws on discussions that took place during a summer, 2006, policy briefing on teacher labor-market issues held in Chicago and sponsored by the Spencer Foundation. In this brief, the author briefly discusses three related diagnoses and their attendant prescriptions: restrictive occupational entry barriers; teacher shortages; and underqualified/underprepared teachers. These diagnoses are not the only explanations for the problem of low quality of teachers and teaching. Nor are these views universally held--indeed, each is the subject of much contention--and proponents of one are at times opponents of another. But all are prominent views, all are part of the conventional wisdom as to what ails teaching, and all have had an impact on research, reform, and policy. The thesis of this brief, however, is that each viewpoint is largely misinformed or misconstrued. The author's theoretical perspective is drawn from the sociology of organizations, occupations and work. His operating premise, drawn from this perspective, is that to fully understand issues of teacher quality requires examining the character of the teaching occupation and the nature of the organizations in which teachers work. A close look at the best data available from this perspective, he argues, shows that each of these views involves a wrong diagnosis and a wrong prescription. In the sections of this report, he reviews each of the above views and explains why each conveys an inaccurate explanation of--and solutions to--the problems of quality plaguing the teaching occupation.