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Public Impact, 2014
In the U.S., STEM subjects--science, technology, engineering, and math--face urgent needs for great STEM teachers and well-educated students. An Opportunity Culture can help by extending the reach of excellent STEM teachers already in our schools and creating a teaching profession that attracts and retains these teachers through higher pay, within…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Demand Occupations, Labor Market, Supply and Demand
Barrett, Sharon Kebschul – Public Impact, 2014
Better-prepared new teachers, more adults in every classroom, more small-group instruction, more adults caring for every student--how can a school wrap all that up in one package? Three Metropolitan Nashville Opportunity Culture schools are trying a novel approach with paid, yearlong student teaching positions. The three schools are: (1) Buena…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Teacher Leadership, Student Teachers, Models
Public Impact, 2012
Public Impact asked a simple question: "Will our nation's boldest efforts to recruit more top teachers and remove the least effective teachers put an excellent teacher in every classroom?" They ran the numbers and discovered the disappointing answer: No. But that's not the end of the story. With a change in schools' strategies, they realized, 87…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Educational Finance, Teaching Conditions, Strategic Planning
Hassel, Emily Ayscue; Hassel, Bryan C. – Public Impact, 2013
Authors and co-directors of "Public Impact," Emily Ayscue Hassel and Bryan C. Hassel state that, looking back over the decades, no one is really getting what they want. Teachers are no closer to achieving the societal respect and substantial, sustainable rewards for their contributions that they deserve, and student achievement has…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Improvement, Educational Policy, Administrative Policy
Hassel, Bryan C.; Hassel, Emily Ayscue – Public Impact, 2010
Our nation is squandering one of its most important resources--our best teachers--and children are paying the price. Current policy initiatives overlook the most obvious, immediate source of improved teaching effectiveness: The great teachers we already have. The top 25 percent of U.S. teachers--more than 800,000 of them--already achieve results…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Effectiveness, Educational Finance, Teaching Conditions
Hassel, Bryan C.; Hassel, Emily Ayscue – Public Impact, 2010
Our nation is squandering one of its most important resources--our best teachers--and children are paying the price. We asked a simple question: "Will our nation's bold efforts to recruit more top teachers and remove the least effective teachers put a great teacher in every classroom?" We ran the numbers and discovered a disappointing…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Academic Achievement