Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?

Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University === Many urban schools struggle to retain their best teachers because of challenging work environments, poor salaries, and ineffective school leadership. The additional requirements of the No Child Left Behind legislation for teachers to be highly qualified and the...

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Main Author: Davis, Cove Johnstone
Language:en_US
Published: Boston University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/31965
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-319652019-12-07T03:03:03Z Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges? Davis, Cove Johnstone No Child Left Behind Urban schools Teacher retention Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University Many urban schools struggle to retain their best teachers because of challenging work environments, poor salaries, and ineffective school leadership. The additional requirements of the No Child Left Behind legislation for teachers to be highly qualified and the increased academic requirements of raising students to a proficient level in reading and mathematics mean that these schools face additional challenges to retaining teachers. Little research has been done on teacher retention in relation to NCLB in urban schools, but the few studies available have suggested that NCLB has had a negative impact on teacher morale and retention in urban schools. The research project was a paired case study that examined teacher retention in four urban schools, contrasting two schools that showed improvement under NCLB in terms of student achievement with two schools that did not show improvement. This study used human resource data, teacher and principal interviews, and school improvement plans to answer the following three research questions: 1) Does the teacher retention rate remain constant as schools improve? 2) Is there a pattern of teacher retention in improving schools? 3) What do improving schools do to attract, train, and retain teachers? The results showed that all schools had increased levels of teacher retention from the beginning of the study until the end. Improving schools had slightly higher rates of teacher retention, especially among teachers who were determined to be desirable. There was some evidence that as student achievement rates rose in improving schools, so did the rate of teacher retention. Lastly, the findings suggest that schools that were improving were also schools that embodied many of the factors that teachers are looking for in a school, including strong school leadership, positive working conditions, and other supports for teachers new and experienced, such as professional development and mentoring. This study has several limitations, such as a small sample size and a limited pool of human resource data. The findings have important implications for urban school districts that are trying to retain quality teachers. 2018-11-07T15:49:46Z 2010 2010 Thesis/Dissertation b34644611 https://hdl.handle.net/2144/31965 11719026825341 99191931570001161 en_US This work is being made available in OpenBU by permission of its author, and is available for research purposes only. All rights are reserved to the author. Boston University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic No Child Left Behind
Urban schools
Teacher retention
spellingShingle No Child Left Behind
Urban schools
Teacher retention
Davis, Cove Johnstone
Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
description Thesis (Ed.D.)--Boston University === Many urban schools struggle to retain their best teachers because of challenging work environments, poor salaries, and ineffective school leadership. The additional requirements of the No Child Left Behind legislation for teachers to be highly qualified and the increased academic requirements of raising students to a proficient level in reading and mathematics mean that these schools face additional challenges to retaining teachers. Little research has been done on teacher retention in relation to NCLB in urban schools, but the few studies available have suggested that NCLB has had a negative impact on teacher morale and retention in urban schools. The research project was a paired case study that examined teacher retention in four urban schools, contrasting two schools that showed improvement under NCLB in terms of student achievement with two schools that did not show improvement. This study used human resource data, teacher and principal interviews, and school improvement plans to answer the following three research questions: 1) Does the teacher retention rate remain constant as schools improve? 2) Is there a pattern of teacher retention in improving schools? 3) What do improving schools do to attract, train, and retain teachers? The results showed that all schools had increased levels of teacher retention from the beginning of the study until the end. Improving schools had slightly higher rates of teacher retention, especially among teachers who were determined to be desirable. There was some evidence that as student achievement rates rose in improving schools, so did the rate of teacher retention. Lastly, the findings suggest that schools that were improving were also schools that embodied many of the factors that teachers are looking for in a school, including strong school leadership, positive working conditions, and other supports for teachers new and experienced, such as professional development and mentoring. This study has several limitations, such as a small sample size and a limited pool of human resource data. The findings have important implications for urban school districts that are trying to retain quality teachers.
author Davis, Cove Johnstone
author_facet Davis, Cove Johnstone
author_sort Davis, Cove Johnstone
title Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
title_short Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
title_full Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
title_fullStr Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
title_full_unstemmed Retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: How do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
title_sort retaining effective urban teachers in the age of accountability: how do successful urban schools address staffing challenges?
publisher Boston University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/31965
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