Teacher Classroom Practices and Student Performance: How Schools Can Make a Difference NAEP
- Author(s):
- Wenglinsky, Harold
- Publication Year:
- 2001
- Report Number:
- RR-01-19
- Source:
- ETS Research Report
- Document Type:
- Report
- Page Count:
- 37
- Subject/Key Words:
- National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), Mathematics, Instructional Practices, Teacher Quality
Abstract
Quantitative studies of school effects have generally supported the notion that the problems of U.S. education lie outside of the school. Yet such studies neglect the primary venue through which students learn, the classroom. The current study explores the link between classroom practices and student academic performance by applying multilevel modeling to the 1996 National Assessment of Educational Progress in mathematics. The study finds that the effects of classroom practices, when added to those of other teacher characteristics, are comparable in size to those of student background, suggesting that teachers can contribute as much to student learning as the students themselves.
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- http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.2333-8504.2001.tb01861.x