Headlines Speaking
Debate/Åä·Ð Essay/¿µÀÛ
Àΰ­°úÁ¤ Misc
ÀÚ·á½Ç
WTS ½ÃÇ躸±â
[Debate/Åä·Ð] (NYT) How to Ensure and Improve Teacher Quality
ÃÖ°í°ü¸®ÀÚ  |  15-03-09 00:17


How to Ensure and Improve Teacher Quality
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has proposed major changes to teacher evaluations in New York. The changes emphasize student scores on standardized tests as a way to rate a teacher¡¯s performance. It is a trend that is popping up across the country, raising concerns among teachers, administrators and public school parents, some of whom are refusing to let their children take the exams. If this approach is not the way to go and yet American students are still academically behind their peers in other countries, how do we ensure and improve teacher quality such that student success is a given?
* evaluation = Æò°¡/ standardized test = Ç¥ÁØÈ­µÈ ½ÃÇè/ pop up = (ºÒ¾¦) ³ª¿À´Ù/ peer = ¶Ç·¡(µ¿¹è)   

 ¾î¶»°Ô ±³»çÀÇ ÀÚÁúÀ» º¸ÀåÇÏ°í Çâ»óÇÏ¿©¾ß ÇлýµéÀÇ ¼º°øÀÇ ±âÁ¤ »ç½ÇÀÌ µÇ³ª¿ä?

1. More Rigorous and Selective Teacher Colleges
If you elevate the teaching profession, people will trust teachers more and politicians will give them more autonomy — and even more pay.

2. Evaluation Linked to Retention and Reward
Gains in student achievement should be one element in identifying good teachers, along with assessments by supervisors and professional evaluators.

3. Stop Testing and Punishing Teachers
If you want good teachers, reduce class size and give us autonomy, respect and time to plan during the day and confer with our colleagues.

4. Treat Teacher Education Like a Medical Residency
Teacher tenure, now generally acquired after three years, would not be automatic: It would be more equivalent to making partner at a law firm.

5. Real Respect Is the Path to Great Teaching
We pay our teachers well, we train them, we make sure they have what they need, we celebrate them and we look to them for guidance.


Sample Essay

Stop Testing and Punishing Teachers

When I began teaching in 1991, the quality of a teacher would never have been reduced to a student's score on a standardized test. However, it is 2015, and standardized-test-driven education ¡°reform¡± dominates the political and business minds driving nationwide education policy. ¡°Quality¡± in the public education classroom has become synonymous with ¡°high test scores,¡± and a good teacher is the one who raises student scores on standardized tests.

As result, teachers are being forced to choose between viewing students as multifaceted human beings worthy of opportunities for well-rounded, healthy development via a dynamic teacher-student relationship and our professional self-preservation, gained by twisting our students¡¯ classroom lives into a largely dehumanizing, career-saving vehicle. Get those scores up, or lose your job.

I choose the healthy development of my students, without reservation. However, I understand the pressure teachers are under to put test scores ahead of students.

This school year is the second time in which I must ¡°prove my effectiveness¡± based on my students¡¯ test scores. Their performance is 50 percent of my rating. Classroom observations will count for the other 50 percent, unless my students¡¯ test scores are too low, in which case low test scores override any positive administrative rating.

Last year I was rated ¡°highly effective.¡± Many of my talented colleagues did not fare as well. For my "highly effective" rating, I received a "bonus" of $427.76. But since I don¡¯t control test selection nor test results, and since there is no selective admission into my classroom, this year¡¯s ¡°highly effective¡± rating could easily be next year¡¯s ¡°ineffective¡± one. And then what?

We are sailing a test-score-driven sea of professional uncertainty.

If this skewed thinking continues to drive educational policy, no smart person will want to be a teacher. And there will be no teaching profession, because dedicated classroom teachers will give up in the face of this insanity.

If we want to assess and retain good teachers, for starters we need to stop the test-and-punish ratings systems. A second step would be to ask teachers what they need to do their jobs effectively. I know, for instance, that if my classes exceed a certain size (around 20 students), it becomes difficult for me to work individually with students and to differentiate based on skill level. I also need time to plan during the day, talk to my colleagues and discuss what works in the classroom. And I need support and trust from administrators.

To thrive, the teaching profession must be afforded respect and autonomy. Teachers choose teaching because they desire to invest their lives in other human beings. No test score can capture the value of such an investment.