Teacher Beliefs
Teacher effectiveness is low in many developing countries. How can it be improved? We show that understanding teacher beliefs may be an important but overlooked part of the puzzle. Our review of recent evidence shows that teacher beliefs can impact student outcomes directly; they can also mediate policy implementation. Despite this, we find that teacher beliefs are seldom accounted for or even measured in impact evaluations of teacher-focused programs. Most of these programs ultimately fail to change teacher behavior. Next, using survey data from 20,000 teachers across nine developing countries, we discuss teacher beliefs about their role, their effort, and their students’ learning. We uncover four insights. First, teachers exhibit fixed mindsets on the learning potential of disadvantaged students. For instance, nearly 43 percent of teachers believe that “there is little they can do to help a student learn” if parents are uneducated. Second, in most countries, more teachers believe that students deserve additional attention if they are performing well than if they are lagging behind. This suggests that teachers may be reinforcing rather than compensating for baseline gaps in student levels. Third, there is some normalization of absenteeism—nearly one in four teachers believe it is acceptable to be absent if students are left with work to do. Finally, teacher support for pay-for-performance varies widely across countries.
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Format: | Journal Article biblioteca |
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Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank
2021-06-14
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Subjects: | EDUCATION, TEACHER ABSENTEEISM, TEACHER PERFORMANCE, TEACHER MOTIVATION, |
Online Access: | https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40096 |
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dig-okr-10986400962023-08-10T15:28:28Z Teacher Beliefs Why They Matter and What They Are Sabarwal, Shwetlena Abu-Jawdeh, Malek Kapoor, Radhika EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION Teacher effectiveness is low in many developing countries. How can it be improved? We show that understanding teacher beliefs may be an important but overlooked part of the puzzle. Our review of recent evidence shows that teacher beliefs can impact student outcomes directly; they can also mediate policy implementation. Despite this, we find that teacher beliefs are seldom accounted for or even measured in impact evaluations of teacher-focused programs. Most of these programs ultimately fail to change teacher behavior. Next, using survey data from 20,000 teachers across nine developing countries, we discuss teacher beliefs about their role, their effort, and their students’ learning. We uncover four insights. First, teachers exhibit fixed mindsets on the learning potential of disadvantaged students. For instance, nearly 43 percent of teachers believe that “there is little they can do to help a student learn” if parents are uneducated. Second, in most countries, more teachers believe that students deserve additional attention if they are performing well than if they are lagging behind. This suggests that teachers may be reinforcing rather than compensating for baseline gaps in student levels. Third, there is some normalization of absenteeism—nearly one in four teachers believe it is acceptable to be absent if students are left with work to do. Finally, teacher support for pay-for-performance varies widely across countries. 2023-07-27T17:48:36Z 2023-07-27T17:48:36Z 2021-06-14 Journal Article 0257-3032 (print) 1564-6971 (online) https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40096 en_US World Bank Research Observer The World Bank Research Observer; Volume 37, Issue 1, February 2022, Pages 73–106 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO World Bank https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ application/pdf Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank |
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EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION |
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EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION Sabarwal, Shwetlena Abu-Jawdeh, Malek Kapoor, Radhika Teacher Beliefs |
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Teacher effectiveness is low in many developing countries. How can it be improved? We show that understanding teacher beliefs may be an important but overlooked part of the puzzle. Our review of recent evidence shows that teacher beliefs can impact student outcomes directly; they can also mediate policy implementation. Despite this, we find that teacher beliefs are seldom accounted for or even measured in impact evaluations of teacher-focused programs. Most of these programs ultimately fail to change teacher behavior. Next, using survey data from 20,000 teachers across nine developing countries, we discuss teacher beliefs about their role, their effort, and their students’ learning. We uncover four insights. First, teachers exhibit fixed mindsets on the learning potential of disadvantaged students. For instance, nearly 43 percent of teachers believe that “there is little they can do to help a student learn” if parents are uneducated. Second, in most countries, more teachers believe that students deserve additional attention if they are performing well than if they are lagging behind. This suggests that teachers may be reinforcing rather than compensating for baseline gaps in student levels. Third, there is some normalization of absenteeism—nearly one in four teachers believe it is acceptable to be absent if students are left with work to do. Finally, teacher support for pay-for-performance varies widely across countries. |
format |
Journal Article |
topic_facet |
EDUCATION TEACHER ABSENTEEISM TEACHER PERFORMANCE TEACHER MOTIVATION |
author |
Sabarwal, Shwetlena Abu-Jawdeh, Malek Kapoor, Radhika |
author_facet |
Sabarwal, Shwetlena Abu-Jawdeh, Malek Kapoor, Radhika |
author_sort |
Sabarwal, Shwetlena |
title |
Teacher Beliefs |
title_short |
Teacher Beliefs |
title_full |
Teacher Beliefs |
title_fullStr |
Teacher Beliefs |
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Teacher Beliefs |
title_sort |
teacher beliefs |
publisher |
Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank |
publishDate |
2021-06-14 |
url |
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40096 |
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