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Supporting Teachers to Enrich the Lives of Children (page 4)

By Robert Brooks, Ph.D.
Dr. Robert Brooks

Wallis reports encouraging developments to level the field. For example, William Sanders, a statistician, has devised a technique using student test data to calculate an individual teacher's impact or "value added" to a student's progress. As Wallis describes, "He takes three or more years of student test results, projects a trajectory for each student based on past performance and then looks at whether, at the end of the year, the students in a given teacher's class tended to stay on course, soar above expectations or fall short. Sanders uses statistical methods to adjust for flaws and gaps in the data." Sanders contends, "Under the best circumstances we can reliably identify the top 10% to 30% of teachers."

Wallis cites the success of merit pay programs that actively incorporate teacher input and consider more than one measure of success. One such program is Denver's Professional Compensation or ProComp, which was borne out of a seven-year collaboration among the teachers' union, the school district, and city hall. The program includes nine ways for teachers to increase their earnings. New teachers are automatically placed in the ProComp system, while it is voluntary for teachers already working in the district. However, within one year, half of Denver's veteran 4,555 teachers elected to join. The system includes several noteworthy components of an incentive system such as: "a careful effort to earn teacher buy-in to the plan, clarity about how it works, multiple ways of measuring merit, rewards for teamwork and school-wide success, and reliable funding."

While it is still too early to measure the success of ProComp, the results of a pilot study indicated that students whose teachers enrolled on a trial basis achieved higher scores on standardized tests than other students. Also, there has been an increase in the number of teachers applying to work in Denver's more troubled schools.

Wallis identifies several characteristics of effective teachers. At the top of the list is "an unshakable belief in children's capacity to learn." I was delighted to see this attribute afforded such prominence. In my workshops I emphasize that if we are to reach and teach students we must be guided by the belief that from birth all children want to be successful and that all children are motivated to learn. I believe that when we describe students as "unmotivated" or "lazy" what we really mean is that these students are not doing what we would like them to do. Instead they are engaged in what has been called "avoidance motivation." Students will resort to avoidance motivation for a variety of reasons, including their perception that the learning task is beyond their abilities and/or their teachers do not care or have faith in them. Teachers who earn the confidence of such students subscribe to the belief that if students are not learning, it is the teacher's responsibility to ask, "What is it that I can do differently to help this student to learn and succeed?" These teachers recognize that to repeatedly use strategies that are not working is a prescription for failure.

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