The Merit in Performance Pay: How Changing Teacher Compensation Can Increase the Supply of Quality Educators
Author(s) -
Emma Pellerin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
policy perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2377-7753
pISSN - 1085-7087
DOI - 10.4079/pp.v27i0.8
Subject(s) - merit pay , incentive , certification , teacher quality , compensation (psychology) , economic shortage , quality (philosophy) , alternative teacher certification , political science , teacher education , order (exchange) , turnover , psychology , business , pedagogy , economics , finance , marketing , management , social psychology , metric (unit) , linguistics , philosophy , epistemology , government (linguistics) , microeconomics , law
T here is no question that classrooms in US public schools do not function without an adult responsible for facilitating student learning. There is less agreement, however, regarding what constitutes quality instruction or what credentials an instructor should have in order to be considered a certifed teacher. Low enrollment in teacher preparation programs combined with increasing teacher turnover rates have created a shortage of quality educators in districts across the country for high-need schools and subject areas. Educators, labor activists, and politicians have called for teacher compensation reform as a way to increase the teacher retention rate. This article summarizes research on the impact of individual and group incentive pay schemes on student achievement, reviews alternative fnancial incentives to retain exceptional educators, and evaluates policy proposals to improve teacher salaries from current and former 2020 presidential candidates.
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