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Press ReleaseTeach For America Teachers Outperform Novice and Veteran Colleagues in Math; Contacts: Paul Decker, (609) 275-2290 PRINCETON, N.J. (June 9, 2004)—Students of Teach For America (TFA) teachers outscored their schoolmates on math achievement tests, and matched their average performance in reading, according to a national study of the program released today by Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. The study compared the performance of corps members from Teach For America—which since 1990 has recruited more than 10,000 carefully selected recent graduates of liberal arts colleges to teach in urban and rural low-income communities—to that of other novice and veteran teachers in the same elementary schools. The study reveals that after a single school year, students of TFA teachers outscored a randomized control group of non-TFA teachers' students by three percentile points on the math portion of the Iowa Test of Basic Skills—the equivalent of one extra month of math achievement. On the reading portion of the test, the average gain in test scores of TFA students was nearly identical to that of control students. "TFA teachers not only had more success than other novice teachers but they had more success than teachers with an average of six years of experience in the classroom," says Paul Decker, vice president and director of human services research at Mathematica® and principal investigator for the research effort. The study is based on a large national sample, including nearly 2,000 elementary school students in 100 classrooms in 17 schools in six geographical high-poverty areas-Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles (Compton), New Orleans, and the Mississippi Delta. In each school, students in the study were randomly assigned to either TFA teachers or control group teachers in the same grades. Student performance was measured at the beginning and end of the 2002-2003 academic year. Other Key FindingsThe report also examined teacher attitudes about their work, their expectations for their careers, and impacts on student behaviors. It found:
Teachers Have Significantly Different BackgroundsDemographic information compiled by researchers shows differences in race, education, age, and experience levels between TFA and non-TFA control group teachers.
Teaching Styles VaryThe researchers found that control group teachers said they were more likely to emphasize the memorization of math rules and getting correct answers in math. While about six in 10 control group teachers (59 percent) placed a major emphasis on memorizing facts, rules, and steps, only about one-quarter of TFA teachers (26 percent) emphasized these skills. About twice as many TFA teachers (40 percent) said they emphasized computational speed and accuracy in their math instruction, compared with control group teachers (22 percent). In reading instruction, TFA teachers reported they were less likely to believe in using phonics instruction than control teachers. The evaluation included two stages, with a pilot study first in Baltimore during the 2001-2002 school year, followed by the full-scale evaluation in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, the Mississippi Delta, and New Orleans in 2002-2003. The sample includes six of the 15 regions in which the TFA program placed teachers at the time the study was designed. The full report, Effects of Teach For America on Students: Findings from a National Evaluation, by Paul T. Decker, Daniel P. Mayer, and Steven Glazerman, is available on the web at http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/publications/redirect_pubsdb.asp?strSite=PDFs/teach.pdf. Call Publications at (609) 275-2350 for printed copies of the study. ##### Mathematica ® is a registered trademark of Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. |
© 2008 Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.,
P.O. Box 2393, Princeton,
NJ 08543-2393
Phone: (609) 799-3535 Fax: (609) 799-0005 Mathematica® is a registered trademark of Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. |
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