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FORUM: Teachers for America
By Julie Mikuta and Arthur Wise
Catalysts for change or untrained temporaries?
Schools across the nation are confronting the
challenge to place an effective teacher in every classroom. In the
provisions of No Child Left Behind, alternative licensure programs, and
teacher pay plans, education reformers seek ways to improve the quality of
the nation’s teaching workforce. One landmark effort to tackle this
issue is Teach For America (TFA). The initiative famously launched by
22-year-old Wendy Kopp and a small cadre of allies in 1990 has brought
thousands of talented young people into teaching. In this forum, Education Next asks Julie Mikuta
and Arthur Wise whether Teach For America is a valuable strategy for
recruiting the best and brightest into education and energizing school
improvement, or a distraction and a device for sending ill-prepared
neophytes to serve some of the nation’s neediest students.
EDUCATION NEXT: Has Teach For America (TFA) improved the caliber of
candidates entering the teaching workforce or has it undermined teacher
professionalism?
ARTHUR WISE: Founder
Wendy Kopp’s call to public service has resonated with a generation
of graduates of the nation’s leading universities. She has designed
and implemented a program that 1) attracts additional talented young adults
to serve some of our lowest-performing schoolchildren, 2) places them in
hard-to-staff schools with two-year commitments, 3) prepares them for this
daunting task with a five-week summer institute, and 4) plays some role in
their induction. TFAers are a potentially valuable resource to our schools.
Whether TFA has in fact “improved the caliber of
candidates,” however, depends on the criterion used to make the
judgment. TFA was designed to help solve the “teacher shortage”
in “under-resourced” urban and rural schools and should be
measured against this objective.
Most well-off suburban school districts, and even
urban schools serving privileged students, generally manage to attract and
retain the teachers they need. With few exceptions (e.g., STEM [science,
engineering, and mathematics] fields and special education), these
districts hire only career-oriented, fully certified teachers, do not face
annual challenges in finding replacements, and do not turn to TFA.
High-needs urban and rural schools, on the other hand,
offer their teachers extremely challenging students, unusually poor working
conditions, and compensation unresponsive to market conditions even within
the teaching profession. At-risk children in these schools are taught year
after year by a passing parade of neophytes with varying degrees of
preparation. The absence of accomplished
veterans to guide beginners exacerbates the challenge: Students enter
school behind their peers. Their teachers have not yet learned to be
effective. Although TFA corps members do perform a short-term public
service by filling vacancies in hard-to-staff schools, they deflect
attention from the lack of trained and experienced teachers who should be
filling those seats. The problem of underresourced and underserved public
schools serving the underperforming students is a continuing national
tragedy, thus far unsolved by local, state, or national initiatives.
Professions normally have common programs of
preparation and extended terms of practice. TFA does not fit the
professional model of teaching; other professions do not assign novices
primary responsibility.
JULIE MIKUTA: One way to
measure whether TFA has improved the caliber of teaching candidates is to
take a close look at TFA’s own applicant pool. Traditionally,
education majors have had some of the lowest SAT and GRE (Graduate Record
Examination) scores, while the most-accomplished college students opted for
careers in medicine, law, finance, or technology. TFA’s reputation
for quality and selectivity has reversed this equation by creating a
mindset on college campuses that teaching in a high-needs school is a
highly desirable postcollege job. Roughly 10 percent of graduating seniors
at Duke University and the University of Chicago applied to TFA last fall,
as well as 11 percent of those at Spelman College, an historically black
liberal arts college. The average grade-point average of the 2,900 TFA
accepted corps members was 3.6; their average SAT score was above 1300.
Nearly all held leadership positions on campus. As Negar Azimi pointed out
in the New York Times (September 30, 2007), “Doing good has rarely been
this hip—or this competitive.”
In general, the traits that TFA
considers—including academic performance, verbal ability, and strong
records of early leadership—line up with the traits found to
correlate with teachers’ success. However, it has proved
frustratingly difficult to compare teachers’ actual effectiveness in
the classroom, because as a field, we too often rely on proxies like
certification and tenure instead of on data that quantify teachers’
impact on student achievement.
To address this challenge, TFA relentlessly collects,
analyzes, and uses data about the performance of the students in the
classes taught by individuals trained through the program and has found
that many of their teachers help students achieve at least a year’s
worth of growth every year.
EN: Studies have shown that most TFA teachers leave the classroom
after two to three years. Is that too short a time to have an impact in
TFA’s targeted, troubled districts?
AW: Although many recruits
with TFAers’ university backgrounds have great potential as teachers,
few of them stay in teaching long enough to realize any advantage from
those backgrounds. TFA recruits are a different “brand” of
recruit from those who have invested time and money to prepare for a career
of teaching. They seem to view their time in the classroom as community
service; studies by Boyd and Grossman and by Kane and Rockoff have found
that more than 80 percent are gone after three years.
The introduction of TFA recruits to teaching is not
easy. As a September 2007 Washingtonian article on the new D.C. superintendent of schools
Michelle Rhee (a TFA alumna) summarizes, “her first year of teaching
was a disaster…. ‘I did not do right by the kids…. It was
rough going.’ She says she couldn’t control the classroom; she
spent her time disciplining, not teaching; she finished the year
demoralized.”
Of course, every experienced teacher was once a
novice, so not every student can have an experienced instructor. But there
is almost universal agreement on the value of teacher experience, and
research indicates a multiplier effect on students’ performance when
they are taught by ineffective teachers over multiyear periods.
JM: Any measure of
TFA teachers’ impact must begin with the environments in which they
work. The 26 regions into which TFA places corps members include rural
communities that struggle to lure enough teachers and urban neighborhoods
that often lose their strongest teachers to the surrounding suburbs. This
is the gap that TFA corps members step into. When I taught high school
science as a TFA corps member in New Orleans, the science classroom next to
mine was staffed midyear with a former band instructor because the school
could not find a qualified science teacher to take the job.
Still, the question of how much impact any teacher can
have in just two to three years is valid, especially given the research
indicating that the largest growth in teacher effectiveness occurs during
the first three years of teaching. But the first few years in the classroom
can be ones of major impact. Yes, Michelle Rhee acknowledged that the
eight-year-olds she taught in her first year “ran right over”
her. However, as reported by the New
York Times, by the end of her second year,
students who had scored in the 13th percentile soared to grade level, with
some students scoring in the 90th percentile. Rhee isn’t unique: TFA
recruits many individuals who are able to figure out how to make those two
years matter greatly to the students they teach, and equips them to help
their students succeed academically.
EN: Is there any compelling evidence that TFA teachers are more or
less effective than traditionally certified teachers (see Figure 1)?
JM: External research has
validated TFA’s findings on teacher effectiveness: a June 2004 study
by Mathematica Policy Research found that TFA teachers perform at least as
well as traditionally prepared and certified teachers in similar schools,
while a 2006 study published in Education
Next (see Kane, Rockoff, and Staiger,
“Photo Finish,” research, Winter 2007) found the same to be true in New York City.
The Mathematica Policy Research study of the
effectiveness of TFA teachers was very sophisticated. Mathematica worked
across six different high-poverty areas (ranging from the rural Mississippi
Delta to urban Chicago) to randomly assign almost 2,000 students to 100 TFA
and non-TFA classrooms. They then used common pre- and post-tests to get
apples-to-apples results across these classrooms and geographies. The study
found that students with TFA teachers attained greater gains in math and
equal gains in reading compared with students of other teachers in the
study, even those with certified teachers and with veteran teachers.
The impact on student achievement is the most
important metric, but it is also instructive to consider the opinions of
TFA corps members’ employers, who observe their practices day to day.
Each year, TFA contracts with an external researcher to survey these
principals, and year after year the majority of principals rate TFA
teachers’ preparation and performance as at least as effective as
that of other beginning teachers, and in many cases as even better than the
overall teaching faculty. Additionally, some of the highest-achieving
charter schools, like Achievement First, choose to staff their schools with
TFA corps members. While these data are certainly subjective, they are yet
another indicator that TFA has built a track record of preparing successful
teachers.
AW: At least five studies
include data on TFA. The 2004 Mathematica study says that “TFA
teachers did not have an impact on average reading achievement. Students in
TFA and control classrooms experienced the same growth rate in reading
achievement—an increase equivalent to one percentile” [from the
14th to the 15th percentile]. In addition, many of the TFA teachers were
actually more prepared than over half in the novice control group:
“All TFA teachers had at least 4 weeks of student teaching, while
many of the control teachers (and over half the novice control teachers)
had no student teaching experience at all.” The abysmally low
percentage of students at the proficiency level in both reading and math in
this study demonstrates the results of the current policy of having
inexperienced, untrained recruits teaching the most-needy students.
As a group, the studies tend to show that the students
of uncertified TFA recruits underachieve when compared to students of new
certified teachers, but this gap tends to disappear as the TFA recruits
obtain professional knowledge through coursework and certification. Like
similar studies in other areas of educational controversy, however, these
results are indicative but not uniformly regarded as conclusive.
Whatever the relative performance of the two groups of
new teachers, I know of no school or district that has made a conscious
choice to hire TFA recruits instead of certified teachers. And the
districts do not retain any substantial number of them long enough for the
recruits to catch up to their peers. TFA recruits are placeholders in
troubled schools where an adult must staff the classroom and no one else
volunteers. They are hired because of the lack of certified applicants, not
because they are considered more desirable.
EN: If TFA-like programs are going to improve teacher quality across
the board, how should they be designed?
JM: When I was on the
board of education for the D.C. public schools, I asked the person in
charge of teacher induction how she determined which of the
district’s teachers had been successful during their first year of
teaching. She looked at me, somewhat incredulously, and said, “I ask
them if they had a good year.” Her answer felt like a punch in the
gut. Could it really be that the only way the district was assessing the
quality of its teachers was to ask them if they liked the teaching
experience? Is it possible that the experience of students didn’t
factor at all into this assessment? Reflecting back on that moment, I can
say with sad certainty that this response wasn’t unique to this
individual or that district.
Every year colleges of education train thousands of
teachers and send them into classrooms with very little understanding of
whether that training was effective and what sort of achievement results
these teachers will produce. Students would be much better off if
policymakers and education leaders were to focus on student achievement
results as a way to assess teacher quality overall, and to assess the
quality of teacher preparation programs supported by federal and state
dollars. TFA evaluates corps members’ performance by determining
which teachers produced student gains of 1.5 years of achievement growth
over the course of the school year. TFA has had to figure out how to assess
teachers’ performance in subjects and grades that aren’t tested
and how to compare results across state lines, where the quality and rigor
of tests vary dramatically. At the heart of this effort is a focus on
producing “significant gains” in student achievement and
creating support systems aligned with that goal. This model marks a huge
development in teacher assessment and support strategies.
TFA also regularly mines its data to figure out how it
can select the individuals most likely to produce that sought-after 1.5
years of growth per year and how to tailor its training to best support
teachers toward that end. TFA spends approximately $19,000 per corps member
for training and ongoing support and development. This covers a rigorous
five-week summer training institute with opportunities for practice,
observation, coaching, and study, as well as support on planning skills and
reflection toward a cycle of continuous improvement; a two-year program of
teacher support and professional development, including a formal cycle of
observations and feedback, and data-driven, student-achievement-focused
tool kits; and help with placement and ongoing coaching over the two years
from regional staff.
School districts hire TFA corps members through
state-approved alternative certification programs, which require that corps
members meet specific requirements. These vary by region and by position,
but in most cases they call for corps members to pass subject-area tests
before teaching and to take ongoing coursework during the school year.
Teach For America works with school districts, states, and schools of
education to ensure that corps members have access to coursework, test
information, and preparation tools to meet these requirements. In many
regions, TFA has established partnerships with graduate schools that enable
corps members to obtain their master’s degrees in education.
AW: The sad reality
is that our hard-to-staff schools will continue to have a disproportionate
number of new teachers until we stop the hemorrhaging of their staff. We
need a sharp break with tradition. Even certified teachers who have
completed education-school coursework and student teaching need a
structured induction program in order to become effective teachers. The
need for training and supervision is even greater for recruits entering the
field without any prior pedagogical training or experience, no matter how
smart, dedicated, or steeped in subject-matter knowledge they may be. To be
effective, all prospective teachers need a deep understanding of the
subject matter, child development, and language development and
sophisticated strategies for teaching content to diverse learners, managing
the classroom, and assessing both how children learn and what they are
learning.
I recommend a “teaching team strategy,”
that gives only experienced teachers primary student responsibility, but in
multiple classrooms and with the assistance of the novices. Senior
teachers, appropriately compensated, lead instructional teams of other
teachers, novices, and untrained personnel.
Since this very radical reform is unlikely to occur in
the near future, we must for now at least insist that TFA recruits not only
attend an intensive preservice summer institute but also receive structured
mentoring that is uniformly as good in practice as on paper. They should be
required to work toward certification while they are in the classroom.
In an ideal world, all new teachers would receive
their capstone preparation and induction in a professional development
school or an urban residency program. The National Council for
Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) has worked to improve
professional development schools, which provide preparation and teaching
experience. Three hundred of NCATE’s 650 accredited schools of
education have a total of 750 professional development schools, each
training 15 to 40 individuals each year. Studies published by NCATE (Teitel
2004) and by the American Educational Research Association (Cochran-Smith
and Zeichner 2005) indicate that structured student teaching and
internships in professional development schools increase the likelihood
that novices remain in teaching, even in urban schools, and improve the
performance of their students.
Recently, NCATE has begun working with urban
residency programs, which pursue a similar strategy for those who have not
been prepared as teachers. Existing programs include the Academy for Urban
School Leadership in Chicago (training 53 this year), the Boettcher
Teachers Program in Denver (16), and the Boston Teacher Residency, which
currently (2007–08) has 84 participants and plans to have 100 to 120
candidates next year. One-half of Boston candidates are people of color;
one-half of the candidates are in shortage fields of math and science.
Professional development schools currently provide
more new teachers than TFA does each year, and urban residency programs are
growing rapidly. These schools and programs should be receiving the
lion’s share of policy attention, but unfortunately neither has a
charismatic leader such as Wendy Kopp. These programs are not yet brought
to scale, with the exception of Maryland, which requires all of its
candidates to be trained in a professional development school. Other states
could follow Maryland’s example. We hope they do.
An intermediate step could be the New York City
Teaching Fellows program. Although this program does assign uncertified
recruits as teachers of record, it also requires them to enroll
concurrently in a master’s degree program focusing on teaching and
learning.
TFA currently invests approximately $20,000 per recruit
for a two-year teaching commitment. If the same amount were invested as a
full stipend for a one-year Master of Arts in
teaching program at a state university, America could reap more benefits
over a longer period of time.
EN: Many TFA supporters point to the spinoffs launched by TFA alums,
including The New Teacher Project (TNTP), the Knowledge Is Power Program
(KIPP), and YES Prep and argue that many of those who initially entered
education through TFA have gone on to become influential change agents. How
convincing is the evidence for this?
JM: If TFA did not
exist, it is highly doubtful that the 2005 National Teacher of the Year
Jason Kamras, who taught for nine years in the Washington, D.C., public
school system, would have become a teacher. The same goes for Mike Feinberg
and Dave Levin, who went on to create KIPP based on principles for
effective schooling that they first developed while they were TFA corps
members. Today, KIPP’s schools catapult low-income students from the
30th percentile in math to the 70th or 80th, positioning them for success
in high school and beyond. Because of TFA, KIPP schools are delivering an
incredible education to more than 14,000 low-income students of color
during this school year alone, and many of these students are being taught
directly by current TFA corps members or alumni.
Add to the mix the impact of alumni like Mikara
Solomon, who as principal of Bunche Elementary School in Compton, a very
low income community in Los Angeles, led its transformation from one of the
district’s lowest-ranked schools to one of the best performers, and
the long-term impact of TFA alumni on students in low-income communities
begins to emerge. TFA estimates that more than 280 of its alumni lead
district or charter schools. At least 67 percent of alums continue to work
or study full-time in education; half of these alumni are teachers.
TFA has also had an impact on district practices,
much of which comes through the work of its alumni. The current
administration of the D.C. Public Schools is staffed at the highest levels
by TFA alumni who have remained committed to public education. The New
Teacher Project has partnered with over 200 school districts in 32 states
to recruit and prepare 23,000 teachers. Many of TNTP’s staff are TFA
alumni as well; they sit side by side with human resources personnel to
help fix broken recruiting and hiring systems that prevent the neediest
schools from getting the best candidates. TFA alumnus Cami Anderson is
superintendent of New York City’s district of Alternative Schools and
Programs, where she oversees the educational needs of 50,000 young people
at a variety of facilities, including transfer schools and correctional
education facilities. In nearby New Jersey, alumnus Brian Osborne is the
superintendent of the 6,000-student Maplewood-South Orange school district.
And in Chicago, Michael Lach wields significant influence on district
policy as director of science for Chicago Public Schools.
While I was head of alumni for TFA, each year about
90 percent of alumni indicated in an annual survey that they work,
volunteer, or pursue graduate studies in fields that directly affect
low-income communities. Whether they work inside or outside a school
system, they bring a passion and sense of outrage that come from having
spent at least two years learning about the challenges that low-income
students and schools face.
AW: These talented
graduates, most from fortunate backgrounds, complete their TFA commitments
with direct experience trying to help the nation’s less fortunate
population learn and then they move on. Small minorities have remained in
education (it appears mostly in policy positions) and have a direct
opportunity to make a difference in the status quo. Michelle Rhee, for
example, first used her TFA experience to develop The New Teacher Project
in a parallel attempt to increase teacher quality in urban areas by
recruiting new types of teachers, and now to help improve one of the
nation’s worst-performing urban districts.
Some TFA graduates are already becoming part of the
next generation of society’s leaders, and many more will surely
follow. They have directly experienced the teacher quality conundrum in
hard-to-staff schools, and they will presumably be willing to advocate for
new approaches to ameliorate the problems of underresourced schools and
underserved children.
EN: How many teachers would TFA need to prepare every year for the
program to have a significant, even transformative, effect on urban
education?
AW: Six hundred fifty
NCATE-accredited schools graduate over 100,000 career-oriented teaching candidates a year (about two-thirds of the total
graduates of university-based teacher education programs). TFA hopes to
provide 4,000 teachers a year—for two-year stints—by 2010. Even
if it continues to concentrate its efforts on hard-to-staff urban schools,
any significant systemic impact must necessarily be catalytic rather than
proportional.
JM: The program was never
intended to solve the teacher shortage problem or even to fix public
education simply by preparing bright college students to teach for two
years. Instead, TFA intends to transform public education by exposing these
talented people to the challenges of public education and engaging them in
figuring out solutions, and by concentrating its impact within certain
markets. Nearly 45 percent of TFA’s 12,000 alumni live in six
regions—NYC, Chicago, Washington, DC, Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and
Houston. As TFA grows, the organization’s impact will increase, as
these alumni take on more visible and influential roles.
EN: Ultimately, what would you say is the single biggest
impact—positive or negative—that TFA has had on American
schooling?
AW: Given its small size
TFA’s greatest positive impact may be the creation of a new
generation of education and societal leaders with abiding interest and
direct experience in the problems of educating our nation’s
disadvantaged. The nation needs their help.
Government must invest in and redesign underresourced
urban and rural schools so that they consistently provide high-quality
education for their students. Eliminating the teacher shortage in
hard-to-staff schools will require changing economic incentives, working
conditions, and staffing patterns so that these schools attract and retain
a competent teaching force that will help all students learn.
Teachers’ propensity to remain in a school
depends heavily on their perception of teaching conditions and the degree
to which they see the school environment supporting their teaching. Efforts
to redesign hard-to-staff schools to provide attractive teaching conditions
have been insufficient and inadequate.
Still I do not think any of us presumes to think that
teachers will remain in positions as long as their predecessors did when
many other types of occupations and professions were not open to women or
people of color. There must be economic incentives, both relative to other
professions and within the education profession, for career-oriented
teachers to teach those students who most need their abilities and
experience.
JM: There is no doubt
that Teach For America has had a positive impact on American education.
This impact has played out along two primary dimensions. First, the
teachers it recruits are in fact good teachers who produce achievement
gains for students that match or exceed those accomplished by other new
teachers who have been prepared in other ways. Second, TFA has channeled
thousands of talented people into education who might not otherwise have
chosen this profession, and shown them what it takes to educate high-need
students. Although TFA is by no means the entire solution to the problems
facing public education, or even our teacher shortage, TFA is helping to
redefine the educational and economic opportunities available in rural and
urban communities.
Teach For America, by focusing all of its teachers on
the singular goal of helping their students make more than one year’s
worth of growth in a single year, is proving that we have no excuse for the
perennial underachievement of children from low-income communities. As
corps members and as alumni, TFA teachers carry this torch into their
careers in education, public service, and other sectors, lighting a fire
under our public will that can ignite much-needed change in public
education. Their work will augment the efforts of many others who are
simultaneously working at all levels and in a variety of fields to make
high-quality education the norm, regardless of the school a child attends.
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