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Frederick M. Hess's BlogGates R&D Chief Tom Kane on the Nashville Merit Pay Study
by Frederick M. Hess • Sep 23, 2010 at 10:56 am http://www.frederickhess.org/2010/09/gates-r-d-chief-tom-kane-on-the-nashville-merit In response to Monday's post on the Nashville merit pay study, Gates Foundation research honcho and Harvard professor Tom Kane sent me a really thoughtful, incisive take on the study's limitations. Tom, a good friend and one of the smartest folks in the business, is currently heading up the massive Gates research effort into teacher performance, evaluation, and pay. Tom and I sometimes agree and sometimes have spirited disagreements on these issues, but on this one we're reading from a shared hymnal. In fact, I thought his take so razor-sharp and succinct that I asked if I could share it with the RHSU audience, and he genially agreed. Here's what Tom had to say: "It's a well-done study of a not-very-interesting question. Merit pay for teachers could impact student achievement via three distinct routes: by encouraging teachers to work harder, by encouraging talented and skilled teachers to remain in teaching, by enticing talented and skilled people to enter teaching. The study was designed to answer a narrow question: can you make the average teacher work harder with monetary incentives? They did not report any results on the likelihood that more effective teachers would remain in teaching. Nor did they design the study to study entry into teaching. receive the latest by email: subscribe to frederick m. hess's free mailing list |
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