NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
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
Public Impact, 2012
This brief shows how teachers in a Time-Technology swap school model may earn more, sustainably. In this model, schools use age-appropriate portions of digital learning (as little as about an hour daily per student) to free the time of excellent teachers to teach more students and potentially to collaborate with peers. By teaching more students,…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Elementary Secondary Education, Job Development, Models
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
Huerta, Luis A. – National Education Policy Center, 2012
The Fordham Institute's "Teachers in the Age of Digital Instruction" is an advocacy document outlining a vision for how technology might transform the teaching profession. The report's rationale is based on claims that the current education system lacks the capacity to support the revolutionary changes needed to unleash the technological…
Descriptors: Evidence, Electronic Learning, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Effectiveness
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Howe, Harold, II; And Others – Harvard Educational Review, 1984
Discusses a colloquium of Harvard University faculty, staff, alumni, and graduate students on the reports and studies published recently on the shortcomings of American education. The panelists identified questions that need to be asked, pinpointed what was missing from the reports, and responded from their particular perspective. (JOW)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Objectives, Educational Policy