National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement

Contemporary research on teaching indicates that teachers are powerful contributors to students’ academic achievement, though the set and interrelationships of characteristics that make for high-quality and effective teaching have yet to be satisfactorily determined. Nevertheless, on the basis of th...

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Main Authors: Leslie G. Vandevoort, Audrey Amrein-Beardsley, David C. Berliner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2004-09-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Online Access:http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/201
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spelling doaj-24627076e20e47469a0ba925c93c41e02020-11-25T01:23:56ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412004-09-011246National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' AchievementLeslie G. VandevoortAudrey Amrein-BeardsleyDavid C. BerlinerContemporary research on teaching indicates that teachers are powerful contributors to students’ academic achievement, though the set and interrelationships of characteristics that make for high-quality and effective teaching have yet to be satisfactorily determined. Nevertheless, on the basis of the extant research and a vision of exemplary teaching, the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards stipulated a definition of a superior teacher. The Board did this without empirical evidence to support their claim that teachers’ who meet the standards set by the Board were superior in promoting academic achievement to those who did not meet those standards. In the 17 years since the founding of the National Board, only a few empirical studies have addressed this important issue. In this study we compare the academic performance of students in the elementary classrooms of 35 National Board Certified teachers and their non-certified peers, in 14 Arizona school districts. Board Certified teachers and their principals provide additional information about these teachers and their schools. Four years of results from the Stanford Achievement Tests in reading, mathematics and language arts, in grades three through six, were analyzed. In the 48 comparisons (four grades, four years of data, three measures of academic performance), using gain scores adjusted for students’ entering ability, the students in the classes of National Board Certified Teachers surpassed students in the classrooms of non-Board certified teachers in almost threequarters of the comparisons. Almost one-third of these differences were statistically significant. In the cases where the students of non-Board certified teachers gained more in an academic year, none of the differences found were statistically significant. Effect size, translated into grade equivalents, informs us that the gains made by students of Board Certified teachers were over one month greater than the gains made by the students of non-Board certified peer teachers. Teachers identified through the assessments of the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards are, on average, more effective teachers in terms of academic achievement, one of the many outcomes of education for which teachers are responsible. This study does not address whether other, cheaper, or better alternatives to the National Boards exist, as some critics suggest. On the other hand, the results of this study provide support for the policies in many states that honor and provide extra remuneration for National Board Certified Teachers. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/201
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language English
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author Leslie G. Vandevoort
Audrey Amrein-Beardsley
David C. Berliner
spellingShingle Leslie G. Vandevoort
Audrey Amrein-Beardsley
David C. Berliner
National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
Education Policy Analysis Archives
author_facet Leslie G. Vandevoort
Audrey Amrein-Beardsley
David C. Berliner
author_sort Leslie G. Vandevoort
title National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
title_short National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
title_full National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
title_fullStr National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
title_full_unstemmed National Board Certified Teachers andTheir Students' Achievement
title_sort national board certified teachers andtheir students' achievement
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2004-09-01
description Contemporary research on teaching indicates that teachers are powerful contributors to students’ academic achievement, though the set and interrelationships of characteristics that make for high-quality and effective teaching have yet to be satisfactorily determined. Nevertheless, on the basis of the extant research and a vision of exemplary teaching, the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards stipulated a definition of a superior teacher. The Board did this without empirical evidence to support their claim that teachers’ who meet the standards set by the Board were superior in promoting academic achievement to those who did not meet those standards. In the 17 years since the founding of the National Board, only a few empirical studies have addressed this important issue. In this study we compare the academic performance of students in the elementary classrooms of 35 National Board Certified teachers and their non-certified peers, in 14 Arizona school districts. Board Certified teachers and their principals provide additional information about these teachers and their schools. Four years of results from the Stanford Achievement Tests in reading, mathematics and language arts, in grades three through six, were analyzed. In the 48 comparisons (four grades, four years of data, three measures of academic performance), using gain scores adjusted for students’ entering ability, the students in the classes of National Board Certified Teachers surpassed students in the classrooms of non-Board certified teachers in almost threequarters of the comparisons. Almost one-third of these differences were statistically significant. In the cases where the students of non-Board certified teachers gained more in an academic year, none of the differences found were statistically significant. Effect size, translated into grade equivalents, informs us that the gains made by students of Board Certified teachers were over one month greater than the gains made by the students of non-Board certified peer teachers. Teachers identified through the assessments of the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards are, on average, more effective teachers in terms of academic achievement, one of the many outcomes of education for which teachers are responsible. This study does not address whether other, cheaper, or better alternatives to the National Boards exist, as some critics suggest. On the other hand, the results of this study provide support for the policies in many states that honor and provide extra remuneration for National Board Certified Teachers.
url http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/201
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