1 / 29

New Approaches to Teacher Compensation: Research Results and Policy Applications

New Approaches to Teacher Compensation: Research Results and Policy Applications. Herb Heneman & Tony Milanowski Consortium for Policy Research in Education Wisconsin Center for Education Research University of Wisconsin-Madison. CPRE Work on Teacher Compensation Innovations.

Download Presentation

New Approaches to Teacher Compensation: Research Results and Policy Applications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Approaches to Teacher Compensation: Research Results and Policy Applications Herb Heneman & Tony Milanowski Consortium for Policy Research in Education Wisconsin Center for Education Research University of Wisconsin-Madison

  2. CPRE Work on Teacher Compensation Innovations • 1991: Odden & Conley, “A New Teacher Compensation System to Promote Productivity” • 1995-97: Exploratory design meetings with National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, leading edge states & districts, national teacher organizations • 1997: Odden & Kelley, Paying Teachers for What They Know and Can Do (2nd ed. 2002, Corwin Press) • 1996-2005: Research on school-based performance awards & knowledge & skill-based pay; National Conference. • 2007: Odden & Wallace, How to Create World Class Teacher Compensation (Freeload Press) • www.wcer.wisc.edu/cpre

  3. Waves of Teacher Compensation Innovation Since 1980 • “Merit Pay” • variable annual pay increases based on principal’s subjective evaluation of last year’s performance • Problems with evaluation, funding • Programs died out except in a few wealthy districts • Career ladders • Stipends or raises for taking on extra duties • Access restricted by some sort of selection process • 22 states at one time

  4. Waves of Teacher Compensation Innovation Since 1980 • School-based performance awards • Bonuses provided to all teachers (and others) in a school when that school achieves pre-established performance goals • Sometimes $ given to school for improvements • Knowledge & skill-based pay • Bonus or pay increase for participating in specified professional development • Bonus or pay increase for certification by National Board for Professional Teaching Standards • Bonus or base pay increase for demonstrating competencies in the classroom

  5. Next Wave of Teacher Compensation Innovations? • Incentives for teaching in high-need or hard to staff schools • Incentives for teaching in shortage areas • Differentiated pay for teacher leaders • Pay increases or bonuses for teachers with high classroom value-added

  6. School-based Performance Awards • School level performance pay plan • District or State establishes school-wide goals for student achievement (level or growth) and other performance indicators such as graduation, advanced placement, and attendance rates • Goals are annual or multi-year and require performance maintenance or improvement (relative to a base, relative to a standards, or value added) • There are pre-determined bonus amounts and payout criteria • Bonuses paid to teachers and other staff, or into a school activity fund • Full bonus (typically $500-$1,500) is paid to teachers and administrators; smaller (often half) bonus paid to other school staff • Single salary schedule remains intact

  7. Knowledge & Skill-based Pay • Base pay increase or bonus (typically $300 - $3,000) for competency demonstration • skill blocks – technology, student assessment, curriculum unit design, etc. • portfolio completion • dual certification • graduate degree in subject taught • Base pay increase or bonus for NBPTS certification ($1,000 - $15,000) • Base pay increase or bonus for classroom performance mastery (typically $1,000 - $3,000), as measured by standards-based teacher evaluation • May involve changes to single salary schedule • fewer steps • fewer or redefined lanes • performance-linked career ladder progression

  8. Combined Plans – Denver ProComp Additional pay on top of salary index amount ($34,200) for: • Knowledge and skills (up to $4,762) • professional development units • graduate degree/national certificates and license • tuition reimbursement • Standards-based teacher evaluation (up to $1,366) • Market incentives (up to $1,025) for hard-to-staff subjects and schools • Student growth (up to $2,052) • student success in meeting two annuallearning objectives • state test score growth • distinguished school • Funded in part by a $25 million referendum on the plan, not time-limited and inflation adjusted over time • Single salary schedule is replaced

  9. CPRE Research on School-based Performance Awards • Sites: Charlotte-Mecklenburg, Kentucky, Vaughn Charter School, Maryland • Timeframe: 1998-2002 • Methods: Interviews, surveys, analysis of motivation-achievement relationship

  10. Theoretical Framework - Teacher Motivation and Performance Awards School Teacher Effort Achievement Teacher IntensityGoals/Targets Consequences Persistence Positive FocusEnablersNegative Competencies Expectancy Instrumentality

  11. When do performance incentives motivate? • Teachers perceive that goal achievement leads to consequences they value (instrumentality) • Positive (rewards) • Avoiding negative consequences (sanctions) • The value of positive consequences must outweigh the negatives such as stress, less freedom, and working harder. • They understand and accept the goals • They perceive a strong link between their own efforts and achieving the goals (expectancy) • They believe they possess the competencies • They perceive the presence of performance enable

  12. Motivating Outcomes • Goal Attainment (e.g., bonus, public recognition) • Learning (e.g., seeing student achievement improve, working cooperatively with other teachers) • Sanctions (loss of pride, state or district intervention) • Demotivating Outcomes • more pressure & job stress • putting in more hours • less freedom to teach things unrelated to goals CPRE Research Findings

  13. Expectancy averages • CMS 62% • KY 53% • Instrumentality averages • CMS 73% • KY 54% CPRE Research Findings

  14. Low to moderate motivational impact • Small bonus amounts • Limited attention to ‘enablers’ & competencies • Uncertainty about effort-goal link • Uncertainty about funding • Schools in which teachers had higher levels of expectancy were more likely to meet performance goals (one std. dev. increase in expectancy associated with .2-.3 std. dev. increasein goal attainment) CPRE Research Findings

  15. Rewards helped focus performance by defining goals • Focus, but do not drive performance due to low to moderate motivational impact • May increase turnover in schools identified as low-performing CPRE Research Findings

  16. CPRE Research Findings on Knowledge & Skill-Based Pay Bonus or base pay increase for demonstrating competencies in the classroom via performance evaluation • Knowledge & skills defined by standards-based teacher performance evaluation systems based largely or in part on Framework for Teaching • Primary Sites: • Cincinnati Public Schools • Vaughn Next Century Learning Center (LA charter school) • Washoe County (NV) School District • Secondary : Anoka & La Crescent, MN, Coventry, RI, Newport News, VA

  17. Research Findings on Knowledge & Skill-Based Pay • Evaluation ratings predicted value added student achievement in reading and math • Teachers accepted the teaching standards used to evaluate performance, but had mixed reactions on the fairness and validity of evaluation ratings • Administrators accept the teaching standards, reported increased workload in implementing new system, & had difficulties providing sufficient feedback and coaching • Implementation glitches were frustrating to teachers and administrators

  18. Research Findings on Knowledge & Skill-Based Pay • Impacts on teaching practice were primarily on planning, classroom management, and attention to state and district standards • There was a lack of a broader strategy in the districts to use the pay system to drive teacher and student performance improvement • There was a lack of alignment of human resource systems (recruitment, selection, induction, mentoring, professional development, compensation, performance management, instructional leadership) to the teaching standards • Teachers resisted linking the teaching evaluation results to pay

  19. Research Findings on Knowledge & Skill-Based Pay Bonus or pay increase for certification by National Board for Professional Teaching Standards • Incentives increased applications for NBPTS certification • Students of National Board Certified Teachers (NBCT’s) had higher value-added achievement in reading and math than students of non NBCT’s in two studies; a third study showed fewer and smaller positive effects • NBCT’s are not used much differently than other teachers by most states & districts • Rewarding NBPTS certification can be expensive (teacher preparation time, cost of application, salary increases or bonuses for certification), raising questions of its cost-effectiveness.

  20. Research Findings on Knowledge & Skill-Based Pay Bonus or pay increase for participating in specified professional development • Little research on these plans; District experience suggests: • Teachers find them acceptable • They increase participation in targeted professional development • Increased participation builds a cadre of teachers with needed skills

  21. Guidelines for Policy & Practice • Guarantee Stable and Adequate Funding • One reason for teacher suspicion of new pay plans is tendency of states and districts to lose interest in bad budget times. • Funding need not be just external infusions of new dollars. Resource reallocation, teacher attrition and reduced back-loading of the single salary schedule (Odden & Wallace, 2007). • Provide Competitive Total Compensation • Build Strong Measurement Systems • Reliability • Fairness • Timeliness

  22. Guidelines for Policy & Practice • Gauge Likely Teacher Reactions to Performance Pay Plans • Acceptable degree of pay differentiation among teachers • Motivation to improve performance • Fairness of procedures and outcomes • Acceptance of overall plan

  23. Guidelines for Policy & Practice • Engage the Teachers' Association • Include Principals and Administrators • Build Capacity • Develop a Performance Improvement Strategy and Plan • Align Human Resource Systems to the Performance Improvement Strategy

  24. Strategic HR Alignment Student Achievement Goals Performance Improvement Strategy (Programs, Plans) Performance Competencies (What Teachers & Administrators Need to Know & Be Able to Do) Human Resource Programs Recruitment - Selection - Induction - Mentoring Prof. Development - Compensation - Performance Management - Leaders

  25. Guidelines for Policy & Practice: Implementing the Innovation • Identification of a designated "champion" and formal leader for the plan; • Continual engagement by top management with the plan; • Attention to details and "drill down" of plan requirements to all systems involved; • Constant communication with teachers and principals. • Conduct a Pilot of the Performance Pay Plan

  26. Looking Forward • Pay increases or bonuses for teachers whose individual classrooms show high value-added • Incentives for teaching in high-need or hard to staff schools • Incentives for teaching in shortage areas • Differentiated pay for teacher leaders

  27. Implications for Rewarding Teachers for Classroom Value-added • Motivational impacts: • Bonus sizes need to be valuable enough to balance increased job demands • Need to address teacher suspicions of achievement  reward link (instrumentality) • Many teachers don’t believe they can reach a higher standard of practice (expectancy) • Need to attend to performance enablers • Importance of smooth implementation & teacher fairness perceptions in maintaining acceptance • Need to address measurement reliability (e.g., small samples make classroom value-added estimates unstable)

  28. Implications for Incentives for Working in High-Need Schools • Motivational impacts: • Incentives need to be valuable enough to balance perceived negative working conditions • Need to provide enablers that help educators succeed in challenging schools • Reliable definition of “high need” or “hard to staff” • Need to align HR systems • Publicize incentives as recruiting tool • Select high potential teachers • Professional development tailored to skill needs

  29. Why do we know so little about teacher pay innovations? • Many didn’t get fully implemented, changed frequently, or disappeared quickly • No comparison groups, no randomization; before/after comparisons obscured by other simultaneous reforms • Policy makers have shown little interest in evaluation • Will TIF improve the situation?

More Related