An experimental investigation of the determinants of teacher quality: risk, patience or altruism?

Autor(es): Dave, Chetan; Shami, Soha; Ridge, Natasha

Organisation(s): Sheikh Saud bin Saqr Al Qasimi Foundation for Policy Research (UAE)

Date: 2016

Pages: 24 p.

Serie: Working Paper

Series Volume: 12

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In seeking to develop a strong national workforce to support its long-term economic development, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has placed an exceptional amount of emphasis on improving the quality of education. Nevertheless, public school students continue to perform poorly compared to their counterparts in international assessments such as the Program on International Student Achievement (PISA), Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS), and Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) (International Association for the Evaluation of Education Achievement [IEA], 2011, Mullis, Martin, Foy, & Drucker, 2012, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development [OECD], 2013, Ridge, 2014). In addition, a segregated learning environment in which male, non-Emirati teachers teach boys and female, Emirati teachers teach girls has allowed for girls to outperform their male peers in every subject on both national and international school assessments (IEA, 2011, Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research [MOHESR], 2015). One possible factor that could account for these gendered differences in student achievement is widely believed to be teacher quality. However, existing research has found only weak or inconsistent relationships between traditional, observable measures of teacher quality, such as teacher content knowledge, years of experience, education levels, with student achievement (Darling-Hammond, 2000, Muñoz & Chang, 2007). To date there has been very little existing research that examines the impact of unobservable teacher characteristics such as teacher behavior on student achievement. This working paper therefore presents the results of research that extends the existing literature on the relationship between teacher characteristics and student achievement by exploring the impact of unobservable teacher characteristics (in this case behavioral traits) on student achievement in English.

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