Author(s)
World BankKeywords
PAPERSNATIONAL ASSESSMENTS
TEACHER PREPARATION
SCHOOL SYSTEMS
NATIONAL CURRICULUM
INSTRUCTIONAL TIME
SANITATION
PEDAGOGY
CURRICULA
SCIENCE ACHIEVEMENT
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
EDUCATIONAL TESTING
TEACHER WORKFORCE
STUDENT OUTCOMES
TEACHER TRAINING
QUALITY OF TEACHERS
ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
EDUCATION REFORM
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
TEACHER RECRUITMENT
SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
LABOR MARKETS
SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
EMPLOYMENT
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
EDUCATION ECONOMICS
TEACHER PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
TEACHER SUPPORT
TEACHER ORGANIZATIONS
SCHOOL HOURS
TEACHING
HIGH SCHOOLS
SOCIAL SCIENCE
MASTER TEACHERS
TEACHER CERTIFICATION
CAREER PATHS
BASIC SKILLS
SCHOOL HEADS
CURRICULUM
EXAMS
EDUCATIONAL QUALITY
LEADERSHIP
LEARNING LEVELS
EDUCATION SYSTEMS
PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHERS
LEARNING ACHIEVEMENT
SCHOOL TEACHER
TEACHER EVALUATION
GRADING
URBAN SCHOOLS
CLASSROOM
STUDENT POPULATIONS
TEACHER KNOWLEDGE
GRADUATION RATES
TEACHER MOBILITY
SCHOOL LEVEL
EXPERIENCED TEACHERS
LEARNING
SPECIAL LEARNING NEEDS
INTERVENTIONS
SCHOOL QUALITY
TEACHER QUALITY
SCHOOL OWNERS
EDUCATIONAL PERFORMANCE
TRAINING PROGRAMS
SERVICE TRAINING
SKILLED TEACHERS
TENURE
TEACHER SUPPLY
DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS
TEACHER PERFORMANCE
ACHIEVEMENT DATA
SCHOOL AUTONOMY
TEXTBOOK
SCHOOL YEAR
TEACHER HIRING
TEACHERS
EDUCATIONAL EVALUATION
HUMAN RESOURCES
TEACHER ABSENTEEISM
TEACHER SHORTAGES
EDUCATION FINANCE
TEACHING PERFORMANCE
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
TEACHER PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT
TEACHER SALARIES
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
CLASSROOM TEACHING
URBAN SCHOOL
ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION
TEACHER DEVELOPMENT
PUBLIC SCHOOL
MATH TEACHERS
TEACHER BEHAVIOR
SPECIAL LEARNING
MIDDLE SCHOOL
ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
RESEARCH REPORT
INSTRUCTION
PRESERVICE TEACHER TRAINING
CLASS TIME
SCHOOL EFFECTS
CLASSROOM EXPERIENCE
SCHOOLING QUALITY
ACCREDITATION
SCHOOL MANAGEMENT
TEACHING QUALITY
PUPIL PERFORMANCE
TEACHER MANAGEMENT
TEACHER PAY
EDUCATION OUTCOMES
CLASSROOMS
TEACHER TURNOVER
SCHOOL LEADERS
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
SCIENCE TEACHERS
TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAMS
SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS
STUDENT TEACHERS
DECENTRALIZATION
LITERATURE
LET
PRIMARY SCHOOL STUDENTS
TEACHER
EDUCATION REFORMS
SUBJECTS
SCHOOLS
EDUCATIONAL OUTPUT
QUALITY TEACHERS
CERTIFIED TEACHERS
INCENTIVES FOR TEACHERS
TEACHING STAFF
TEACHING ASSIGNMENTS
STUDENT LEARNING
STUDENTS PER TEACHER
HIGH SCHOOL
NUMBER OF TEACHERS
SCHOOL EFFECTIVENESS
CLASSROOM CHARACTERISTICS
SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHER
TEST SCORES
STUDENT POPULATION
ENTRY REQUIREMENTS
TEACHER UNIONS
BUSINESS SCHOOL
EDUCATION POLICY
ACHIEVEMENT TESTS
CLASS SIZE
SCHOOL DISTRICT
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
CLASSROOM PRACTICE
EARLY GRADES
SCHOOL EXPERIENCE
QUALITY OF EDUCATION
TEACHER SHORTAGE
UNIVERSITY GRADUATES
EDUCATIONAL POLICY
EFFECTIVE TEACHERS
EDUCATION QUALITY
TEACHER EDUCATION REFORM
TEACHER EDUCATION
LABOR FORCE
CAREER
TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS
ETHICS
TEACHER INCENTIVES
LEARNING OUTCOMES
PUBLIC SCHOOLING
PRIVATE SCHOOLS
WORKERS
DECENTRALIZATION OF EDUCATION
SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH
EDUCATION SYSTEM
SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS
EDUCATION SECTOR
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT
STUDENT PERFORMANCE
BETTER TEACHERS
EXPENDITURES
PRIMARY SCHOOL
TEACHER ATTRITION
READING
EDUCATORS
LESSON PLANNING
EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES
TEACHER EVALUATIONS
TEACHING FORCE
SCHOOL FINANCE
SUBJECT MATTER
YOUTH
STUDENT LEARNING ASSESSMENT
SECONDARY EDUCATION
CAREERS
EVALUATION OF EDUCATION
QUALIFIED TEACHERS
SCHOOL PRINCIPALS
BEGINNING TEACHERS
CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION
SECONDARY SCHOOL
GENDER DIFFERENCES
SCHOOLING
SMALL SCHOOLS
TEACHER QUALIFICATIONS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17674Abstract
Research suggests that teacher quality is the main school-based predictor of student achievement and that several consecutive years of outstanding teaching can offset the learning deficits of disadvantaged students (Hanushek and Rivkin, 2006; Nye et al, 2004; Park and Hannum, 2001; Rivkin et al, 2005; Rockoff, 2004; Sanders, 1998; Sanders and Rivers 1996; and Vignoles et al, 2000). However, it is not yet clear exactly which teacher policies can raise teacher effectiveness (Goldhaber, 2002 and Rivkin et al, 2005). Thus, devising effective policies to improve teaching quality remains a challenge. The eight policy goals includes the following headings: setting clear expectations for teachers; attracting the best into teaching; preparing teachers with useful training and experience; matching teachers' skills with students' needs; leading teachers with strong principals; monitoring teaching and learning; supporting teachers to improve instruction; and motivating teachers to perform.Date
2014-04-07Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/17674http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17674
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Related items
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Inside Indonesia's Mathematics Classrooms : A TIMSS Video Study of Teaching Practices and Student AchievementWorld Bank (World Bank, 2012-03-19)The following report is the first of a
 two-stage video study to examine teaching practices and
 activities in Indonesian classrooms. The first stage is
 linked to results of the 2007 Trends in International
 Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) where 100 of the 150
 classes that participated in the TIMSS examination also
 participated in this additional video study component. The
 second stage will also involve 100 classes that will
 participate in the 2011 exam. The second phase will follow
 the same methodology, allowing for comparison across years,
 but will also involve more in-depth analysis of the links
 between teaching practices and student outcomes and how
 teaching practices are influenced by teachers' belief
 systems and subject content knowledge. Indonesia has been a
 committed participant in the TIMSS, Program for
 International Student Assessment (PISA) and the Progress in
 International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) international
 standardized student examinations for many years and is one
 of the few non-OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation
 and Development) countries to participate so fully.
 Indonesian student performance in these examinations has
 been relatively low, even when taking socio-economic levels
 into account. For example, for mathematics Indonesia ranked
 36th out of 48 participating countries in TIMSS 2007, and
 its score of 397 was more than one standard deviation below
 the international average (Mullis et al, 2008). The results
 have been useful in providing an indication of
 Indonesia's relative standing in student achievement
 and its progress over time, but the real challenge is to
 take the next step and translate the results into an
 understanding of the factors leading to the test scores and
 what might be done to enhance student achievement in Indonesia.
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Great Teachers : How to Raise Student Learning in Latin America and the Caribbean--OverviewLuque, Javier; Bruns, Barbara (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014-08-20)While the importance of good teaching
 may be intuitively obvious, only over the past decade has
 education research begun to quantify the high economic
 stakes around teacher quality. In a world where the goals of
 national education systems are being transformed, from a
 focus on the transmission of facts and memorization to a
 focus on student competencies for critical thinking, problem
 solving and lifelong learning the demands on teachers are
 more complex than ever. Governments across the world have
 put teacher quality and teacher performance under increasing
 scrutiny. The Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) region
 is no exception to these trends; indeed, in some key areas
 of teacher policy, the region is at the vanguard of global
 reform experience. The study aims to benchmark the current
 performance of LAC s teachers and identify key issues. It
 shares emerging evidence on important reforms of teacher
 policy being implemented in Lac countries. The study also
 analyzes the political room for maneuver for further reform
 in Lac. They focus on teachers in basic education
 (preschools, primary and secondary education) because the
 quantitative and qualitative challenges of producing
 effective teachers at these levels differ in key ways from
 university-level education, which has been addressed in
 other recent World Bank publications.
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Private Non-State Sector Engagement in the Provision of Educational Services at the Primary and Secondary Levels in South Asia : An Analytical Review of Its Role in School Enrollment and Student AchievementDahal, Mahesh; Nguyen, Quynh (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014-06)Private (non-state) sector engagement in
 the provision of educational services at the primary and
 secondary levels in South Asia has recently undergone
 remarkable growth. This type of education comes in various
 forms, such as schools financed and managed by the private
 sector, schools financed by the government and managed by
 the private sector, private school vouchers, and tutoring
 outside the classroom. According to recent household survey
 data, almost one-third of school-goers aged 6 to 18 years in
 South Asia go to private schools, with a high concentration
 in Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan. Data for India,
 Nepal, and Pakistan show that on average, private schools
 perform at least as well as government schools on student
 test scores, after controlling for socioeconomic factors,
 and they do so at significantly lower costs to society.
 However, student achievement varies greatly across schools
 of each type, with many weak private schools as well as
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 important driver of the effectiveness of private schools. In
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 sector may set a low benchmark for the private sector. The
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 capacity. Public-private partnerships with effective
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