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Do school accountability systems make it more difficult for low‐performing schools to attract and retain high‐quality teachers?
223
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
Teacher EducationPublic EducationElementary Education Education Workforce DevelopmentEducational PolicyEducational AccountabilitySchool Accountability SystemsTeacher EvaluationEducationAdverse EffectsEducational AdministrationTeacher QualityEducational LeadershipNorth CarolinaPrimitive Accountability SystemsHigh‐quality TeachersSchool OrganizationSchool FunctioningEducation Policy
Abstract Administrative data from North Carolina are used to explore the extent to which that state's relatively sophisticated school‐based accountability system has exacerbated the challenges that schools serving low‐performing students face in retaining and attracting high‐quality teachers. Most clear are the adverse effects on retention rates, and hence on teacher turnover, in such schools. Less clear is the extent to which that higher turnover has translated into a decline in the average qualifications of the teachers in the low‐performing schools. Other states with more primitive accountability systems can expect even greater adverse effects on teacher turnover in low‐performing schools. © 2004 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management.
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