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Veteran reporter Debra Viadero has written more than 1,400 stories for Education Week and most of them have been about research. Not bored yet, she translates, shares, and dissects research findings on schools and learning, along with news about education research, for audiences that extend far beyond the Ivory Tower.

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September 2, 2009

Study Identifies Positive 'Peer Effects' in Teaching

Studies in economics have long noted that highly productive workers seem to produce a "spillover" effect in their peers. Supermarket checkers, for instance, work faster when they're in the line of sight of a more productive co-worker, and berry-pickers tend to calibrate their work speed to that of friends laboring nearby.

In today's Web edition of EdWeek, I have a story on a study that documents these effects for the first time in teachers. (At least that's what the researchers tell me.) Using 11 years of data on North Carolina elementary schoolers, C. Kirabo Jackson and Elias Bruegmann find that teachers in the same grade apparently step up their performance when a more-effective teacher joins the staff. As a result, levels of student achievement rise for the entire grade of students.

The effects aren't huge, experts say, but they carry some serious implications for the way in which schools structure merit-pay programs for teachers. If teachers are already working together and learning from one another in constructive ways, introducing a pay plan that rewards individual teachers could turn colleagues into competitors. Offering bonuses at the school level, on the other hand, could conceivably enhance that team spirit.

If research on teachers is your thing, you might also want to check out my colleague Stephen Sawchuk's report yesterday on second-year findings from an ongoing Mathematica Policy Research study on comprehensive teacher-induction programs in 17 states. The bottom line from this rigorous, federally funded study is that, compared to business as usual, the programs aren't yet translating to any improvements in teacher-retention rates or student achievement.

Could that be because veteran teachers are already helping the rookies out?

September 1, 2009

Teachers Become the Researchers in New Journal Issue

I've always been fascinated by teachers who undertake their own research in the classroom. With a full day of teaching, lessons to plan, and homework to grade, I should think teaching would already be hard enough.

But it seems that some teachers find much to value in all the extra, painstaking effort involved in undertaking research. The August issue of Teachers College Record shows why. Devoted to the topic of teacher research, the volume contains seven studies by working teachers. The studies explore what happens when a troublesome student becomes a peer tutor, test out ways to encourage teenage students to become more reflective about their learning, probe the social aspects of a yearlong effort to create an "inclusive" classroom, and survey high school students for their thoughts on after-school programs, among other topics.

Granted, none of these studies would count as "scientifically based research." But the teachers all conduct their research in a thoughtful, systematic fashion, and their insights are illuminating. If conventional research gives us a view of the forest, I would argue, then teacher research like this provides a vivid, and very human, look at the trees.

DebbieViadero

Debbie Viadero
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