|
November 10, 2012Teacher Absence as a Leading Indicator of Student AchievementThe sun rises in the East. Grass is green. And teachers are the most important in-school factor in determining student achievement. This last truth has long guided the push for more robust teacher-preparation programs, heartier evaluation systems, and altered HR policies. This short report by Raegen Miller highlights another strategy, small but fruitful, for eking more out of today's instructional workforce: Ensure that teachers come to school each day. Using data from the Civil Rights Data Collection survey, Miller discovers that, on average, 36 percent of teachers were absent (whether for sick or disability leave or vacation time) ten or more days during the 2009-10 school year. Nationally, these missed school days cost taxpayers $4 billion.Posted by Jim Zellmer at November 10, 2012 1:41 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
Post a comment
|