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Atteberry, Allison; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2017
Educators raise concerns about what happens to students when they are exposed to new or new-to-school teachers. However, even when teachers remain in the same school they can switch roles by moving grades and/or subjects. We use panel data from New York City to compare four ways in which teachers are new to assignment: new to teaching, new to…
Descriptors: Teacher Placement, Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Urban Schools
Loeb, Susanna; Miller, Luke C.; Wyckoff, James – Educational Researcher, 2015
Tenure is intended to protect teachers with demonstrated teaching skills against arbitrary or capricious dismissal. Critics of typical tenure processes argue that tenure assessments are superficial and rarely discern whether teachers in fact have the requisite teaching skills. A recent reform of the tenure process in New York City provides an…
Descriptors: Tenure, Urban Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Public School Teachers
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Dee, Thomas S.; Wyckoff, James – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2015
Teachers in the United States are compensated largely on the basis of fixed schedules that reward experience and credentials. However, there is a growing interest in whether performance-based incentives based on rigorous teacher evaluations can improve teacher retention and performance. The evidence available to date has been mixed at best. This…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Urban Schools, Teacher Evaluation, Incentives
Adnot, Melinda; Dee, Thomas; Katz, Veronica; Wyckoff, James – Grantee Submission, 2017
In practice, teacher turnover appears to have negative effects on school quality as measured by student performance. However, some simulations suggest that turnover can instead have large positive effects under a policy regime in which low-performing teachers can be accurately identified and replaced with more effective teachers. This study…
Descriptors: Labor Turnover, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Competencies, Academic Achievement
Master, Benjamin; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2017
Evidence that teachers' short-term instructional effects persist over time and predict substantial long-run impacts on students' lives provides much of the impetus for a wide range of educational reforms focused on identifying and responding to differences in teachers' value-added to student learning. However, relatively little research has…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness, Value Added Models
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Dee, Thomas S.; Wyckoff, James – Education Next, 2017
Teachers matter--and some matter more than others. That recognition has driven a tidal wave of controversial policy reforms over the past decade, rooted in new evaluation systems that link teachers' ratings and, in some cases, their pay and advancement to evidence of classroom practice and student learning. Two out of three U.S. states overhauled…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Teacher Salaries, Faculty Promotion, Incentives
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Boyd, Donald; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – Education Finance and Policy, 2011
School districts are confronting difficult choices in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Today, the financial imbalance in many school districts is so large that there may be few alternatives to teacher layoffs. In nearly all school districts, layoffs are currently determined by some version of teacher seniority. Yet, alternative approaches to…
Descriptors: Job Layoff, Teacher Effectiveness, Status, School Districts
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Ronfeldt, Matthew; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – American Educational Research Journal, 2013
Researchers and policymakers often assume that teacher turnover harms student achievement, though recent studies suggest this may not be the case. Using a unique identification strategy that employs school-by-grade level turnover and two classes of fixed-effects models, this study estimates the effects of teacher turnover on over 850,000 New York…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Teacher Effectiveness, Elementary School Students, Grade 5
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Boyd, Donald; Grossman, Pam; Ing, Marsha; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – American Educational Research Journal, 2011
This article explores the relationship between school contextual factors and teacher retention decisions in New York City. The methodological approach separates the effects of teacher characteristics from school characteristics by modeling the relationship between the assessments of school contextual factors by one set of teachers and the turnover…
Descriptors: Teacher Characteristics, Teacher Persistence, School Administration, Teacher Administrator Relationship
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Boyd, Donald; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Rockoff, Jonah; Wyckoff, James – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2008
Understanding what makes an effective teacher, as well as how teachers sort by their effectiveness across schools, is central to understanding and addressing student achievement gaps. Prior studies have found substantial sorting of teachers across schools, with the schools with the highest proportions of poor, non-white, and low-scoring students…
Descriptors: Teacher Qualifications, Teacher Distribution, Academic Achievement, Disadvantaged Schools
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Boyd, Donald; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2005
This paper explores a little-understood aspect of labor markets, their spatial geography. Using data from New York State, we find teacher labor markets to be geographically very small. Teachers express preferences to teach close to where they grew up and, controlling for proximity, they prefer areas with characteristics similar to their hometown.…
Descriptors: Recruitment, Proximity, Place of Residence, Geographic Location
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Boyd, Donald; Grossman, Pamela; Lankford, Hamilton; Loeb, Susanna; Wyckoff, James – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
We are in the midst of what amounts to a national experiment in how best to attract, prepare, and retain teachers, particularly for high-poverty urban schools. Using data on students and teachers in grades 3-8, this study assesses the effects of pathways into teaching in New York City on the teacher workforce and on student achievement. We ask…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Poverty, Teacher Education Programs, Academic Achievement