ERIC Number: ED575353
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 2014-Jul
Pages: 40
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: N/A
EISSN: N/A
What Are the Effects of Teacher Education and Preparation on Beginning Teacher Attrition? CPRE Research Report. #RR-82
Ingersoll, Richard M.; Merrill, Lisa; May, Henry
Consortium for Policy Research in Education
This study addresses the question: Do the kinds and amounts of pre-service education and preparation that beginning teachers receive before they start teaching have any impact on whether they leave teaching? We examine a wide range of measures of teachers' subject-matter education and pedagogical preparation. We also compare different fields of teaching, with a particular focus on mathematics and science. Our data source is the National Center for Education Statistics' nationally representative 2003-04 Schools and Staffing Survey and its supplement, the 2004-05 Teacher Follow-up Survey. Our analyses show that beginning teachers widely varied in the pre-service education and preparation they received. In general, mathematics teachers and, especially, science teachers tended to have more subject-matter content education and more graduate-level education, and to have less pedagogical and methodological preparation than other teachers. Our analyses also show that, after controlling for the background characteristics of teachers and their schools, some aspects of the education and preparation that beginning teachers received were significantly associated with their attrition, while others were not. Specifically, the type of college, degree, entry route or certificate mattered little. What did matter was the substance and content of new teachers' pedagogical preparation. Those with more training in teaching methods and pedagogy--especially practice teaching, observation of other classroom teaching and feedback on their own teaching--were far less likely to leave teaching after their first year on the job.
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Labor Turnover, Elementary Secondary Education, National Surveys, Mathematics Instruction, Science Instruction, Teacher Competencies, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Teaching Skills, Teacher Characteristics, Graduate Study, Course Content, Experience, Feedback (Response), Observation, Educational Attainment, Correlation, Institutional Characteristics, Statistical Analysis, Probability
Consortium for Policy Research in Education. University of Pennsylvania, 3440 Market Street Suite 560, Philadelphia, PA 19104. Tel: 215-593-0700; Fax: 215-573-7914; e-mail: cpre@gse.upenn.edu; Web site: http://www.cpre.org
Publication Type: Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: National Science Foundation (NSF); Institute of Education Sciences (ED)
Authoring Institution: Consortium for Policy Research in Education
Identifiers - Assessments and Surveys: Schools and Staffing Survey (NCES)
IES Funded: Yes
Grant or Contract Numbers: 0814295; R305B090015