This document discusses how despite massive increases in education spending and reform efforts over decades, performance in many school systems has barely improved. International assessments show wide variations in quality between systems. The US is used as an example - despite large spending increases, smaller class sizes, and tens of thousands of reform initiatives, student outcomes remained almost the same. The experiences of top-performing systems were studied to understand why some consistently perform better and improve faster than others.
ACSA Technology Leadership Group Position Paperdvodicka
This document provides recommendations from the Association of California School Administrators' Technology Leadership Group on promoting effective technology integration into teaching and learning. It recommends that teachers permit collaborative projects and provide meaningful feedback on challenge-based learning. It recommends site leaders provide resources and training to support challenge-based learning and customized learning experiences. It recommends district leaders revisit age-based grouping, promote new communication tools, and support online access and learning experiences. It recommends state leaders revise standards and assessments to reflect digital-age skills and support flexible learning models. The overall goal is to better prepare students for the 21st century by transforming classrooms from information centers to places where students can develop skills like creative and adaptive thinking.
ACSA Technology Leadership Group Position Paperdvodicka
This document provides recommendations from the Association of California School Administrators' Technology Leadership Group on promoting effective technology integration into teaching and learning. It discusses the need to transform classrooms from information centers to places where students develop 21st century skills. Recommendations are provided for teachers, site leaders, district leaders, and state leaders focused on challenge-based learning, customized learning experiences, online resources, and revising standards and assessments to reflect digital-age needs. The goal is to better prepare students through strategies that engage them and develop skills like problem-solving, critical thinking, and digital literacy.
Education systems across the world are grappling with the challenge of preparing their students for the rapid changes they will experience during their lifetimes. To this end, schools have a critical role in equipping students with the requisite skills and
competencies that will be in demand, particularly as digital technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) increasingly transform businesses and influence economies. In this report, The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) discusses the results of a study that explores how to best prepare primary and
secondary school (referred to in this report as “K-12”) students for the 21st century workplace (“the modern workplace”), where
a mix of hard and soft skills are crucial for success. The research, sponsored by Google for Education, draws on a survey of 1,200 educators in 16 countries.1 It looks at the
strategies most effective in developing 21st century skills and how technology can support such efforts.
This document summarizes a research article that examined early years educators' sense of professionalism in Ontario, Canada. 37 early years educators participated in a study during the implementation of Ontario's full-day early learning-kindergarten program (ELKP). The findings indicate that educators perceive a "glass ceiling" effect, feeling that their profession is not equally valued compared to teachers. As care and education sectors merge in Ontario, ideological and practical encounters between teachers and early childhood educators in ELKP classrooms may challenge perceptions of professional identity. Greater integration of sectors requires promoting equality between professions to realize the goal of a cohesive early learning system.
China has undertaken several education reforms since the 1980s including decentralizing finance and administration in 1985, allowing local production of textbooks in 1988, and introducing national education technology standards in 2004. It has seen significant improvements in PISA scores. The US can learn from high-performing countries like China, Finland, and Singapore by revamping teacher education, providing school autonomy, emphasizing student-centered learning over rote memorization, and adopting some of their best practices to close domestic achievement gaps.
The document discusses the importance of quality in education and what is required to improve it. It argues that countries should evaluate their education systems based on the best performing systems globally rather than just their own national standards. It also stresses the importance of developing the types of skills that benefit individuals and societies economically and socially. The document examines data on education spending, graduation rates, and student performance in order to identify best practices for improving education quality and outcomes.
This chapter introduces the concept of "Why not the best schools?" and outlines the International Project to Frame the Transformation of Schools.
The project studied 30 secondary schools across 6 countries (Australia, China, England, Finland, US, Wales) that have achieved significant and sustained success for all students. The goal was to identify common characteristics and strategies that could be transferred to other school contexts internationally.
50 indicators across 4 types of capital (intellectual, social, spiritual, financial) and governance were identified and validated. The findings demonstrate that transformation is possible for any school that develops these capitals and is well governed, regardless of context. The book aims to close the gap between international studies and on-the-ground
The document provides an executive summary of the National Educational Technology Plan for 2010. It discusses two goals for 2020: raising the proportion of college graduates to 60% and closing achievement gaps. It calls for embracing innovation, evaluation, and continuous improvement in education through technology. A model is presented with recommendations in five areas: learning, assessment, teaching, infrastructure, and productivity. The plan aims to transform education through personalized and technology-powered learning.
ACSA Technology Leadership Group Position Paperdvodicka
This document provides recommendations from the Association of California School Administrators' Technology Leadership Group on promoting effective technology integration into teaching and learning. It recommends that teachers permit collaborative projects and provide meaningful feedback on challenge-based learning. It recommends site leaders provide resources and training to support challenge-based learning and customized learning experiences. It recommends district leaders revisit age-based grouping, promote new communication tools, and support online access and learning experiences. It recommends state leaders revise standards and assessments to reflect digital-age skills and support flexible learning models. The overall goal is to better prepare students for the 21st century by transforming classrooms from information centers to places where students can develop skills like creative and adaptive thinking.
ACSA Technology Leadership Group Position Paperdvodicka
This document provides recommendations from the Association of California School Administrators' Technology Leadership Group on promoting effective technology integration into teaching and learning. It discusses the need to transform classrooms from information centers to places where students develop 21st century skills. Recommendations are provided for teachers, site leaders, district leaders, and state leaders focused on challenge-based learning, customized learning experiences, online resources, and revising standards and assessments to reflect digital-age needs. The goal is to better prepare students through strategies that engage them and develop skills like problem-solving, critical thinking, and digital literacy.
Education systems across the world are grappling with the challenge of preparing their students for the rapid changes they will experience during their lifetimes. To this end, schools have a critical role in equipping students with the requisite skills and
competencies that will be in demand, particularly as digital technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) increasingly transform businesses and influence economies. In this report, The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) discusses the results of a study that explores how to best prepare primary and
secondary school (referred to in this report as “K-12”) students for the 21st century workplace (“the modern workplace”), where
a mix of hard and soft skills are crucial for success. The research, sponsored by Google for Education, draws on a survey of 1,200 educators in 16 countries.1 It looks at the
strategies most effective in developing 21st century skills and how technology can support such efforts.
This document summarizes a research article that examined early years educators' sense of professionalism in Ontario, Canada. 37 early years educators participated in a study during the implementation of Ontario's full-day early learning-kindergarten program (ELKP). The findings indicate that educators perceive a "glass ceiling" effect, feeling that their profession is not equally valued compared to teachers. As care and education sectors merge in Ontario, ideological and practical encounters between teachers and early childhood educators in ELKP classrooms may challenge perceptions of professional identity. Greater integration of sectors requires promoting equality between professions to realize the goal of a cohesive early learning system.
China has undertaken several education reforms since the 1980s including decentralizing finance and administration in 1985, allowing local production of textbooks in 1988, and introducing national education technology standards in 2004. It has seen significant improvements in PISA scores. The US can learn from high-performing countries like China, Finland, and Singapore by revamping teacher education, providing school autonomy, emphasizing student-centered learning over rote memorization, and adopting some of their best practices to close domestic achievement gaps.
The document discusses the importance of quality in education and what is required to improve it. It argues that countries should evaluate their education systems based on the best performing systems globally rather than just their own national standards. It also stresses the importance of developing the types of skills that benefit individuals and societies economically and socially. The document examines data on education spending, graduation rates, and student performance in order to identify best practices for improving education quality and outcomes.
This chapter introduces the concept of "Why not the best schools?" and outlines the International Project to Frame the Transformation of Schools.
The project studied 30 secondary schools across 6 countries (Australia, China, England, Finland, US, Wales) that have achieved significant and sustained success for all students. The goal was to identify common characteristics and strategies that could be transferred to other school contexts internationally.
50 indicators across 4 types of capital (intellectual, social, spiritual, financial) and governance were identified and validated. The findings demonstrate that transformation is possible for any school that develops these capitals and is well governed, regardless of context. The book aims to close the gap between international studies and on-the-ground
The document provides an executive summary of the National Educational Technology Plan for 2010. It discusses two goals for 2020: raising the proportion of college graduates to 60% and closing achievement gaps. It calls for embracing innovation, evaluation, and continuous improvement in education through technology. A model is presented with recommendations in five areas: learning, assessment, teaching, infrastructure, and productivity. The plan aims to transform education through personalized and technology-powered learning.
Let Schools Decide: The Norwegian approach to school improvementEduSkills OECD
The Norwegian approach to school improvement focuses on decentralizing decision making to allow schools and municipalities to determine their own professional development needs. An OECD project analyzed Norway's competence development model, which provides funding for collaboration between schools and universities to address local needs. Key recommendations included refining the model's design, clarifying stakeholder engagement, taking a whole-system approach to policy coherence, and updating the implementation strategy. The decentralized model has moved from policy to action across Norway by defining networks and roles to shape professional offerings based on educator input.
The document discusses the key competencies outlined in the New Zealand curriculum and how they can enable pedagogical shift and prepare students for the 21st century. It provides context on how the competencies are viewed globally and nationally. It also discusses how developing competencies requires a whole-school approach and professional learning communities to support teachers.
Technology-Supported Professional Development for Teachers: Lessons from Deve...eraser Juan José Calderón
Technology-Supported Professional Development for Teachers: Lessons from Developing Countries
Education Development Trust.
This report captures what might be learnt from a selection of the world's most interesting examples of technology-assisted in-service professional development in lower-income countries and from wider reflections about the potential of technology to enhance the professional learning of teachers. This report explores the literature surrounding technology for professional learning, identifying six promising case studies:
Wefusa new visionforeducation_report2015DaniArias9
This document summarizes a report on addressing the skills gap between the skills needed in the 21st century versus the skills students are attaining. It finds large gaps in skills between developed and developing countries as well as within countries. The skills needed are grouped into foundational literacies, competencies, and character qualities. While foundational literacies like literacy and numeracy are the traditional focus of education, competencies like problem solving and character qualities like persistence are also essential for today's world. The report examines performance data for these skills across nearly 100 countries and finds wide variations both between income groups and within countries. It also identifies areas like education policy, teacher quality, resources, and technology infrastructure that contribute to these gaps and could be
The document discusses new learning options and a strategic plan for Plano ISD through 2020. It outlines compelling forces driving change in education, including a changing global world and federal initiatives like Race to the Top that emphasize college and career readiness. The strategic plan focuses on strengthening core skills while developing skills like global awareness, financial literacy, and health. New directions for Plano ISD include initiatives around personalized learning, teacher quality, and specialized academy schools to better prepare students for the future.
Helping students navigate an interconnected world — What to expect from PISA ...EduSkills OECD
Today’s students live in an interconnected, diverse and rapidly changing world. In this complex environment, a student’s ability to understand the world and appreciate the multiple different perspectives they are likely to encounter is key to their success.
In 2018, the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) conducted its first evaluation of students’ capacity to live in an interconnected world. The assessment focused on students’ knowledge of issues of local and global significance, including public health, economic and environmental issues, as well as their intercultural knowledge, skills and attitudes. The results of this assessment – PISA 2018 Volume VI – will be launched on 22 October.
Want to get a head start on what this latest Volume is all about? Andreas Schleicher, OECD Director for Education and Skills, unveils the main themes addressed in Volume VI and what to expect from the data.
The document discusses the concepts of the knowledge society, information society, collective intelligence, and the role of teachers. It outlines six broad aims for teachers related to instructional design, facilitating learning, managing environments, assessment, professional development, and subject matter knowledge. The document also discusses competencies for teachers, the six aspects of a teacher's work, and provides references.
The L.A. Compact is an unprecedented commitment by 18 major L.A. institutions that want to see positive change in Los Angeles public schools, and better prepare local students for college and the 21st century workplace.
The L.A. Compact identifies important areas where its partners can work together to address pressing educational issues, better leverage resources and have a measurable impact.
This document discusses challenges facing global education and proposes a new model to address them. It summarizes that global education must prepare students for 21st century careers by focusing on teaching skills like critical thinking, adopting new technologies, and ensuring education is available and affordable worldwide. A new model is proposed that emphasizes lifelong learning through personalized, skills-focused, technology-enabled education to help students and economies compete globally.
This presentation was given by Diana Koroleva at the Public Conference “Innovation in education : What has changed in the classroom in the past decade?”.
Measuring innovation in education and understanding how it works is essential to improve the quality of the education sector. Monitoring systematically how pedagogical practices evolve would considerably increase the international education knowledge base. We need to examine whether, and how, practices are changing within classrooms and educational organisations and how students use learning resources. We should know much more about how teachers change their professional development practices, how schools change their ways to relate to parents, and, more generally, to what extent change and innovation are linked to better educational outcomes. This would help policy makers to better target interventions and resources, and get quick feedback on whether reforms do change educational practices as expected. This would enable us to better understand the role of innovation in education.
The document discusses four main challenges facing education systems: the information age, a changing workplace, the influence of mass media, and greater democracy. It notes that the current curriculum needs to consider how more information is now available anytime and anywhere. It also notes that jobs are changing rapidly with automation and computers, requiring skills to be acquired faster. The document questions if schools are preparing children with skills to make wise decisions amidst competing media influences. It raises the issue of participating in a more democratic process.
This document discusses the concept of school autonomy and networking. It provides examples of networks of model schools from international experience, including the Networked Learning Communities in England and specialized school networks. School autonomy is most effective when combined with accountability measures like external exams. The document concludes that while networking is an important strategy for improving schools, further research is still needed to fully understand its impact.
The document discusses trends in the K-12 education system. It notes that technology has advanced rapidly, changing how students learn and how teachers teach. Some key trends highlighted include the use of internet and social media as teaching tools to engage students, improving educational facilities which has led to better test scores and behavior, and giving students more opportunities to provide feedback to teachers and have a role in developing classroom rules. Overall, the trends show the education system adapting to remain relevant by incorporating new technologies and becoming more student-centered.
White Paper Creating the 21st Century Campus Innovation in Higher Education T...Terry Vahey
This white paper discusses how higher education institutions can transition to more collaborative models of teaching, learning, research, and administration through the use of new technologies. It identifies common challenges to change in higher education, such as institutional inertia and a lack of technology standardization. The paper then outlines how leading universities are transforming academics through flipped and virtual classrooms, improving research collaboration, using technology to build community for students, and fostering better connections through administrative tools. Case studies of three universities already piloting and deploying these collaborative solutions are also presented. The goal is to help higher education evolve to meet new demands while preserving its strengths through innovative uses of collaboration technologies.
Creating the 21st century Unbounded UniversityMainstay
In collaboration with Cisco, Mainstay conducted a study of the Higher Education system, revealing common speed bumps in Higher Education, and crafting a guide to the evolution of the 21st century higher education system.
Higher education policy is the key to lifelong learning and this is particularly important as the ageing population is increasing in many countries. It is a major driver of economic competitiveness in an increasingly knowledge-driven global economy and it also brings social cohesion and well-being. Countries are increasingly aware that higher education institutions need to foster the skills required to sustain a globally competitive research base and improve knowledge dissemination to the benefit of society. Kazakhstan’s higher education system has made progress over the past ten years. However, there is scope for improvement in delivering labour-market relevant skills to Kazakhstanis, and in supporting economic growth through research and innovation.
In examining the higher education system in Kazakhstan, this report builds on a 2007 joint OECD/World Bank review: Reviews of National Policies for Education: Higher Education in Kazakhstan 2007. Each chapter presents an overview of progress made in the past decade across the main areas explored in the 2007 report. These include quality and relevance, access and equity, internationalisation, research and innovation, financing and governance. The report also examines policy responses to evolving dynamics in higher education and the wider socio-economic changes.
Seminar (4th in series) developed and presented as part of responsibilities of Visiitng Professorship in National Changhua University of Education, Taiwan (March 2016)
El documento presenta un análisis del programa de manejo y transferencia de tecnología arrocera en Costa Rica. Describe los sistemas de producción actuales, las variedades disponibles, las prácticas de manejo y las actividades realizadas entre 2009-2010 por diferentes instituciones para validar tecnología con productores líderes. Incluye resúmenes de ensayos realizados para evaluar factores como densidad de siembra, dosis de nitrógeno y estrategias de fertilización. Finalmente, propone fortalecer el programa de transferencia
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in student outcomes, regardless of culture or context.
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in outcomes, regardless of culture.
Let Schools Decide: The Norwegian approach to school improvementEduSkills OECD
The Norwegian approach to school improvement focuses on decentralizing decision making to allow schools and municipalities to determine their own professional development needs. An OECD project analyzed Norway's competence development model, which provides funding for collaboration between schools and universities to address local needs. Key recommendations included refining the model's design, clarifying stakeholder engagement, taking a whole-system approach to policy coherence, and updating the implementation strategy. The decentralized model has moved from policy to action across Norway by defining networks and roles to shape professional offerings based on educator input.
The document discusses the key competencies outlined in the New Zealand curriculum and how they can enable pedagogical shift and prepare students for the 21st century. It provides context on how the competencies are viewed globally and nationally. It also discusses how developing competencies requires a whole-school approach and professional learning communities to support teachers.
Technology-Supported Professional Development for Teachers: Lessons from Deve...eraser Juan José Calderón
Technology-Supported Professional Development for Teachers: Lessons from Developing Countries
Education Development Trust.
This report captures what might be learnt from a selection of the world's most interesting examples of technology-assisted in-service professional development in lower-income countries and from wider reflections about the potential of technology to enhance the professional learning of teachers. This report explores the literature surrounding technology for professional learning, identifying six promising case studies:
Wefusa new visionforeducation_report2015DaniArias9
This document summarizes a report on addressing the skills gap between the skills needed in the 21st century versus the skills students are attaining. It finds large gaps in skills between developed and developing countries as well as within countries. The skills needed are grouped into foundational literacies, competencies, and character qualities. While foundational literacies like literacy and numeracy are the traditional focus of education, competencies like problem solving and character qualities like persistence are also essential for today's world. The report examines performance data for these skills across nearly 100 countries and finds wide variations both between income groups and within countries. It also identifies areas like education policy, teacher quality, resources, and technology infrastructure that contribute to these gaps and could be
The document discusses new learning options and a strategic plan for Plano ISD through 2020. It outlines compelling forces driving change in education, including a changing global world and federal initiatives like Race to the Top that emphasize college and career readiness. The strategic plan focuses on strengthening core skills while developing skills like global awareness, financial literacy, and health. New directions for Plano ISD include initiatives around personalized learning, teacher quality, and specialized academy schools to better prepare students for the future.
Helping students navigate an interconnected world — What to expect from PISA ...EduSkills OECD
Today’s students live in an interconnected, diverse and rapidly changing world. In this complex environment, a student’s ability to understand the world and appreciate the multiple different perspectives they are likely to encounter is key to their success.
In 2018, the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) conducted its first evaluation of students’ capacity to live in an interconnected world. The assessment focused on students’ knowledge of issues of local and global significance, including public health, economic and environmental issues, as well as their intercultural knowledge, skills and attitudes. The results of this assessment – PISA 2018 Volume VI – will be launched on 22 October.
Want to get a head start on what this latest Volume is all about? Andreas Schleicher, OECD Director for Education and Skills, unveils the main themes addressed in Volume VI and what to expect from the data.
The document discusses the concepts of the knowledge society, information society, collective intelligence, and the role of teachers. It outlines six broad aims for teachers related to instructional design, facilitating learning, managing environments, assessment, professional development, and subject matter knowledge. The document also discusses competencies for teachers, the six aspects of a teacher's work, and provides references.
The L.A. Compact is an unprecedented commitment by 18 major L.A. institutions that want to see positive change in Los Angeles public schools, and better prepare local students for college and the 21st century workplace.
The L.A. Compact identifies important areas where its partners can work together to address pressing educational issues, better leverage resources and have a measurable impact.
This document discusses challenges facing global education and proposes a new model to address them. It summarizes that global education must prepare students for 21st century careers by focusing on teaching skills like critical thinking, adopting new technologies, and ensuring education is available and affordable worldwide. A new model is proposed that emphasizes lifelong learning through personalized, skills-focused, technology-enabled education to help students and economies compete globally.
This presentation was given by Diana Koroleva at the Public Conference “Innovation in education : What has changed in the classroom in the past decade?”.
Measuring innovation in education and understanding how it works is essential to improve the quality of the education sector. Monitoring systematically how pedagogical practices evolve would considerably increase the international education knowledge base. We need to examine whether, and how, practices are changing within classrooms and educational organisations and how students use learning resources. We should know much more about how teachers change their professional development practices, how schools change their ways to relate to parents, and, more generally, to what extent change and innovation are linked to better educational outcomes. This would help policy makers to better target interventions and resources, and get quick feedback on whether reforms do change educational practices as expected. This would enable us to better understand the role of innovation in education.
The document discusses four main challenges facing education systems: the information age, a changing workplace, the influence of mass media, and greater democracy. It notes that the current curriculum needs to consider how more information is now available anytime and anywhere. It also notes that jobs are changing rapidly with automation and computers, requiring skills to be acquired faster. The document questions if schools are preparing children with skills to make wise decisions amidst competing media influences. It raises the issue of participating in a more democratic process.
This document discusses the concept of school autonomy and networking. It provides examples of networks of model schools from international experience, including the Networked Learning Communities in England and specialized school networks. School autonomy is most effective when combined with accountability measures like external exams. The document concludes that while networking is an important strategy for improving schools, further research is still needed to fully understand its impact.
The document discusses trends in the K-12 education system. It notes that technology has advanced rapidly, changing how students learn and how teachers teach. Some key trends highlighted include the use of internet and social media as teaching tools to engage students, improving educational facilities which has led to better test scores and behavior, and giving students more opportunities to provide feedback to teachers and have a role in developing classroom rules. Overall, the trends show the education system adapting to remain relevant by incorporating new technologies and becoming more student-centered.
White Paper Creating the 21st Century Campus Innovation in Higher Education T...Terry Vahey
This white paper discusses how higher education institutions can transition to more collaborative models of teaching, learning, research, and administration through the use of new technologies. It identifies common challenges to change in higher education, such as institutional inertia and a lack of technology standardization. The paper then outlines how leading universities are transforming academics through flipped and virtual classrooms, improving research collaboration, using technology to build community for students, and fostering better connections through administrative tools. Case studies of three universities already piloting and deploying these collaborative solutions are also presented. The goal is to help higher education evolve to meet new demands while preserving its strengths through innovative uses of collaboration technologies.
Creating the 21st century Unbounded UniversityMainstay
In collaboration with Cisco, Mainstay conducted a study of the Higher Education system, revealing common speed bumps in Higher Education, and crafting a guide to the evolution of the 21st century higher education system.
Higher education policy is the key to lifelong learning and this is particularly important as the ageing population is increasing in many countries. It is a major driver of economic competitiveness in an increasingly knowledge-driven global economy and it also brings social cohesion and well-being. Countries are increasingly aware that higher education institutions need to foster the skills required to sustain a globally competitive research base and improve knowledge dissemination to the benefit of society. Kazakhstan’s higher education system has made progress over the past ten years. However, there is scope for improvement in delivering labour-market relevant skills to Kazakhstanis, and in supporting economic growth through research and innovation.
In examining the higher education system in Kazakhstan, this report builds on a 2007 joint OECD/World Bank review: Reviews of National Policies for Education: Higher Education in Kazakhstan 2007. Each chapter presents an overview of progress made in the past decade across the main areas explored in the 2007 report. These include quality and relevance, access and equity, internationalisation, research and innovation, financing and governance. The report also examines policy responses to evolving dynamics in higher education and the wider socio-economic changes.
Seminar (4th in series) developed and presented as part of responsibilities of Visiitng Professorship in National Changhua University of Education, Taiwan (March 2016)
El documento presenta un análisis del programa de manejo y transferencia de tecnología arrocera en Costa Rica. Describe los sistemas de producción actuales, las variedades disponibles, las prácticas de manejo y las actividades realizadas entre 2009-2010 por diferentes instituciones para validar tecnología con productores líderes. Incluye resúmenes de ensayos realizados para evaluar factores como densidad de siembra, dosis de nitrógeno y estrategias de fertilización. Finalmente, propone fortalecer el programa de transferencia
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in student outcomes, regardless of culture or context.
This document provides an executive summary of a report about education reform and improving school systems. It discusses how despite increases in education spending, the performance of many school systems has barely improved. However, some school systems consistently perform better than others. The report studied 25 school systems, including 10 top performers, to understand what factors contribute to their success. The key findings are that the three most important factors are: 1) ensuring good quality teachers, 2) developing teachers' skills, and 3) delivering the best instruction to every child. Top performing systems demonstrate that focusing on these areas can lead to substantial improvements in outcomes, regardless of culture.
The impact of innovation on travel and tourism industries (World Travel Marke...Brian Solis
From the impact of Pokemon Go on Silicon Valley to artificial intelligence, futurist Brian Solis talks to Mathew Parsons of World Travel Market about the future of travel, tourism and hospitality.
We’re all trying to find that idea or spark that will turn a good project into a great project. Creativity plays a huge role in the outcome of our work. Harnessing the power of collaboration and open source, we can make great strides towards excellence. Not just for designers, this talk can be applicable to many different roles – even development. In this talk, Seasoned Creative Director Sara Cannon is going to share some secrets about creative methodology, collaboration, and the strong role that open source can play in our work.
Reuters: Pictures of the Year 2016 (Part 2)maditabalnco
This document contains 20 photos from news events around the world between January and November 2016. The photos show international events like the US presidential election, the conflict in Ukraine, the migrant crisis in Europe, the Rio Olympics, and more. They also depict human interest stories and natural phenomena from various countries.
The Six Highest Performing B2B Blog Post FormatsBarry Feldman
If your B2B blogging goals include earning social media shares and backlinks to boost your search rankings, this infographic lists the size best approaches.
1) The document discusses the opportunity for technology to improve organizational efficiency and transition economies into a "smart and clean world."
2) It argues that aggregate efficiency has stalled at around 22% for 30 years due to limitations of the Second Industrial Revolution, but that digitizing transport, energy, and communication through technologies like blockchain can help manage resources and increase efficiency.
3) Technologies like precision agriculture, cloud computing, robotics, and autonomous vehicles may allow for "dematerialization" and do more with fewer physical resources through effects like reduced waste and need for transportation/logistics infrastructure.
This document discusses professional learning communities (PLCs) and their potential to foster collaborative success in schools. It provides historical context for educational reform efforts beginning with A Nation at Risk in 1983 and the No Child Left Behind Act in 2001. The document defines PLCs as groups of educators working collaboratively to improve student outcomes. It reviews research showing that effective PLCs develop high levels of trust among stakeholders and incorporate teacher collaboration, data-driven instruction, administrative support, and community involvement. The document argues that PLCs that demonstrate these characteristics are more likely to achieve measurable gains in student performance.
Educator Autonomy Research Sources and Summaryppageegd
This document provides summaries of various sources related to educational autonomy. It summarizes 20 different documents that discuss topics like teacher-led schools, international education systems like Finland that have strong student performance, and different governance models. A recurring theme across many of the sources is that increased autonomy for teachers and schools tends to be associated with better student outcomes, especially when there are also meaningful accountability systems in place. Several sources also indicate that high-performing education systems emphasize professionalizing teaching and trusting teachers with significant decision-making authority.
Educator Autonomy Research Sources and Summariesppageegd
This document provides summaries of various sources related to educational autonomy. It summarizes 20 different documents that discuss topics like teacher-led schools, international education systems like Finland that grant autonomy, and studies on the relationship between autonomy and student performance. The summaries indicate that autonomy works best when paired with accountability, when teachers are developed as professionals and granted decision-making power, and when systems foster collaboration and innovation at the school level. Overall, the document explores perspectives on educational autonomy from research and examples around the world.
The document discusses formative assessment and its potential to raise student achievement standards. It summarizes research showing that:
1) Improving formative assessment through activities that provide feedback to teachers and students leads to significant learning gains, as evidenced by numerous studies with controlled experiments over many subjects and age groups.
2) There is room for improvement in formative assessment practices, as current policies often treat classrooms as "black boxes" without addressing what happens inside.
3) Research provides evidence on how to improve formative assessment through professional development that builds on good practices already in use by teachers.
Improving education in turkey final printmustafahilmi
This document provides an overview of improving education systems and outcomes in Turkey based on McKinsey & Company's research and experience working with education systems around the world. It identifies four key themes for improving Turkey's education system: 1) cultivating great teaching and school leadership at a large scale, 2) creating student pathways to success and employment, 3) equipping Turkish students with English proficiency, and 4) improving the role of regional/local education authorities. The document also discusses lessons learned from education systems that have improved, such as the importance of process interventions like collaborative teaching practices.
Eunetra Ellison Simpson, PhD Proposal Defense, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, D...William Kritsonis
This document provides an introduction and literature review for a dissertation examining the effectiveness of Title I tutoring programs in elementary schools. It discusses the background of Title I programs and issues with evaluating tutoring effectiveness. The study aims to investigate tutoring program structures and relationships between program ratings and student achievement. Surveys will be used to collect administrator and teacher ratings of tutoring programs at selected elementary schools.
Starting Strong III: A Quality Toolbox for Early Childhood Education and Care EduSkills OECD
Curriculum or standards can:
Ensure even quality across different settings
Help staff to enhance their pedagogical strategies
Help parents to better understand child development
There is a need to:
Go beyond “curriculum dichotomies” – academic vs. comprehensive approach.
Consolidate the “added value” of different approaches.
An article review: Placing teachers in global governance agendaIwan Syahril
All governing practices are pedagogical because they involve the selective acquisition of particular knowledge and practices. Since the turn of the century global organizations are increasingly becoming very influential pedagogic agencies because they shape teachers' pedagogic practices in national education settings.
Education System in Puerto ricoTeam AUniversity of Phoenix.docxjack60216
Education System in Puerto rico
Team A
University of Phoenix
PHL/458
Prof. Angel Duran
NOTE:
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1
Table of Content
Original issue
Initial resolutions
Critical examination of best resolution
Evaluation of the argument
Revised argument
Refined resolution with implementation plan
2
Original Issue
Absence of an official educational philosophy
Excessive centralized system
Limited financial resources, compounded by the uncertainty in the economy dependent on metropolis
An archaic and outdated education law dating from 1903, which conferred excessive powers to the Secretary of Education on issues such as decision-making on management, budget, curriculum, monitoring, assessment and staff throughout the system.
Lack of coordination between regional and local exchange operational levels, and these, in turn, other public institutions.
Lack of continuity due to changes in public administration
Inadequate supervision of teachers
Our team identified as an issue the education system in Puerto Rico. Some of the factors which we believe are the main cause of this problem are; the absence of a limited formal educational philosophy, excessive centralized system, financial resources, compounded by uncertainty in the economy dependent on the metropolis, a archaic and obsolete education law dating from 1903, which confers excessive powers to the Secretary of Education in issues like making management decisions, budget, curriculum, monitoring, evaluation and staff throughout the system. Also the lack of coordination between operating regional and local levels trade, which, in turn, other public institutions and finally the lack of continuity due to changes in government and inadequate supervision of teachers.
3
Initial Resolutions
To improve or contribute to the education of our people, the main thing is a degree of commitment that has every one of the people who are in charge of our education.
Promote activities in which parents and children interact and simultaneously they are contributing something to society would be one of our proposals.
Our second proposal to the Department of Education would work with the multiple intelligence of students for classes more interactive. Not all students work in the same way, and many stay back. They should promote activities that arouse the interest of students and help growth and intellectual and cultural life of each performance to feel appreciated.
We understand that to improve or contribute to the system of education of our people, the main thing is the commitment that each one of the people who are in charge of our education have.
We promote activities where parents and children to interact and at the same time contribute to society.
Our second proposal to the Department of Education is working with the multiple intelligences of the students and design a new system ...
Networking between schools is an important strategy to help schools improve performance as autonomy increases. Research shows some benefits of networking, such as improved student performance when schools collaborate on staffing and hiring. Effective networks share knowledge, resources, and address common problems. They involve partnerships across education and other sectors. Further research is still needed to better understand how networking contributes to school improvement.
This document summarizes the key findings of the 2013 Global Teacher Status Index report published by the Varkey GEMS Foundation. The report measures perceptions of teacher status across 21 countries through public opinion surveys. It finds that while teaching is still a respected profession in countries like China, in many Western countries teachers do not have the same high social status and respect as other professions like doctors. The report aims to provide insights to help improve teacher status and educational outcomes globally. It presents data on perceptions of teacher pay, performance-based pay for teachers, trust in education systems, and the influence of teachers unions.
Quickly And Substantially Improve Student Achievementnoblex1
The primary goal of educators in every public school and district across the country has always been to provide a solid educational foundation for all students. Such a foundation is key to students' eventual success in higher education, the workforce, and, in a broader sense, their adult lives as citizens and heads of their own families. In recent years, however, school success has increasingly come to be measured by results on standardized assessments, and the public expectation is that all children should meet state-established standards.
Thousands of schools and districts are grappling with the need to significantly, and rapidly, raise student achievement as measured by high stakes assessments. They are looking for answers— a roadmap — to guide their improvement efforts. Their efforts to improve might also go more smoothly if they are better prepared for "speed bumps" experienced by other districts. School districts can have a profound and positive impact on school improvement efforts. But many of them will have to make substantial changes in the way they do business.
A substantial number of studies have been conducted over nearly three decades to identify factors describing individual schools that have defied the odds by accomplishing high levels of achievement while serving significant numbers of children from low-income or minority families. But until recently little research has focused on school districts as the locus for improvement efforts.
For information about efforts to improve larger systems, educators often turned to research done in the corporate world. Perhaps the most famous of these studies was conducted by Peters and Waterman, who studied companies that ranked high on six measures of long-term financial health. The study contributed to a revolution in many American businesses that responded to the findings describing several characteristics of successful companies. Among Peters' and Waterman's key findings were that the high-performing corporations:
- were "close to their customers" and listened to what customers or clients said about their products and services;
- had a "bias for action"—they tried new ways of doing things, then tried other alternatives if necessary; and
- shifted responsibility for improving quality to the "workers" themselves — those dealing directly with clients and customers.
The Fifth Discipline, by Peter Senge, is another work that was originally written for the corporate world that has had substantial impact on education. In particular, his concept of the learning organization translated well to the understanding that schools had of themselves. However, the primary theme in his book — the importance of taking a systems view — was overlooked by many.
Source: https://ebookschoice.com/quickly-and-substantially-improve-student-achievement/
Successful leadership: a review of the international literature examines research on effective school leadership. It finds that while instructional/pedagogical leadership has been shown to improve student outcomes, transformational leadership and a combination of the two approaches may be most effective. Successful school leaders set direction, create positive school culture, and support staff motivation and commitment to foster improvement. International research emphasizes the importance of leadership in supporting school improvement.
This document summarizes a discussion between researchers at Johns Hopkins University's School of Education about their experiences bringing evidence-based educational programs to scale. The researchers discuss the importance of having dedicated coaches and facilitators to support implementation, the challenges of high turnover rates in schools, the need to adapt programs to local contexts while maintaining fidelity, and the importance of ongoing evaluation and communicating data to demonstrate program effectiveness. The researchers emphasize facilitating quality implementation, establishing local and national support networks, and maintaining program integrity as key factors for successfully expanding evidence-based programs.
The one-day conference brought together over 300 school leaders from across the North West of England to discuss the developing school-led system.
Key topics included expanding system leadership capacity as many current leaders approach retirement. Specialist leaders are providing school-to-school support but more are still needed. Teaching school alliances aim to lead on initial teacher training, professional development, and school improvement, but challenges remain around deployment of support and collaboration between schools. School governance is evolving from committees to a more strategic model with a focus on data and accountability. Overall the conference shared progress in the school-led system and continuing work to build capacity and commitment across the region.
This document provides guidance for educators on measuring 21st century competencies. It begins by outlining three categories of 21st century competencies: cognitive, interpersonal, and intrapersonal. It then examines examples of competencies within each category in more detail, defining competencies like critical thinking, creativity, communication, leadership, growth mindset, and more. The purpose is to explore challenges in assessing these competencies, which are important for success but not always easily measured with traditional tests.
Innovation at St. Mary’s Catholic Primary School, North Sydneystmns
The document discusses innovation in schools and education. It outlines that innovation and change are central to the role of school leaders according to professional standards. Reasons for building innovation capacity include improving learning outcomes, enhancing equity and equality, and keeping education relevant. One approach to measuring innovation looks at changes in practice reported in international studies. Countries with greater innovation see increases in student achievement and outcomes. The document advocates for collaboration as key to encouraging innovation and discusses applying principles of redesigning education at St. Mary's with a focus on measuring the impact of flexible, innovative practices on student learning.
This research paper examines teacher policy recommendations from international organizations and whether evidence supports allocating resources primarily to teacher salaries. It assesses Brazil's FUNDEB policy which dedicates 60% of education funds to teacher salaries and finds mixed results on improving student learning. The paper aims to evaluate which measurable teacher characteristics have the strongest empirical support in relation to boosting student achievement outcomes.
The document discusses the importance of professional learning communities (PLCs) in transforming the Welsh education system to improve student outcomes. It argues that PLCs, when implemented well within and across schools, can build teacher capacity to improve instruction and drive system-wide change. The key aims of Wales' School Effectiveness Framework include reducing achievement gaps and ensuring success for all students through strategies like PLCs, distributed leadership, and increasing collective efficacy.
1. ng
d s rmi s
rl ’ o
he erf system
wo
w t p hool
Ho - sc ut on top
stme o
eco
b
ptember 2007
se
2.
3.
4.
5. Executive
Summary
Education reform is top of the agenda of almost every country in the world. Yet despite massive increases in spending (last year, the
world’s governments spent $2 trillion on education) and ambitious attempts at reform, the performance of many school systems has
barely improved in decades. This is all the more surprising because there are wide variations in the quality of education.
For instance, in international assessments, less than one percent of African and Middle Eastern children perform at or above the
Singaporean average. Nor is this solely the result of the level of investment. Singapore, one of the world’s top performers, spends less
on primary education than do 27 of the 30 countries in the OECD.1
Changing what happens in the hearts an minds of millions of children – the main charge of any school system – is no simple task.
That some do so successfully while others do not is indisputable. So why is it that some school systems consistently perform better
and improve faster than others?
There are many different ways to improve a school system, and the complexity of this task and the uncertainty about outcomes
is rightly reflected in the international debate about how this should best be done. To find out why some schools succeed where
others do not, we studied twenty-five of the world’s school systems, including ten of the top performers. We examined what these
high-performing school systems have in common and what tools they use to improve student outcomes.
The experiences of these top school systems suggests that three things matter most: 1) getting the right people to
become teachers, 2) developing them into effective instructors and, 3) ensuring that the system is able to deliver
the best possible instruction for every child.
These systems demonstrate that the best practices for achieving these three things work irrespective of the culture in which
they are applied. They demonstrate that substantial improvement in outcomes is possible in a short period of time and that
applying these best practices universally could have enormous impact in improving failing school systems, wherever they
might be located.
6.
7. Contents
Foreword
Preface
Introduction: Inside the black box
1.“The quality of an education system cannot
exceed the quality of its teachers”
2.“The only way to improve outcomes is to
improve instruction”
3. “High performance requires every child
to succeed”
Conclusion: The system and the journey
Bibliography
References
Acknowledgements
The authors deeply thank the following educationalists for their counsel and thought partnership:
Michael Fullan, Andreas Schleicher, Lee Sing Kong, S. Gopinathan, and Peter Hill. The authors
would also like to acknowledge the substantial contribution of Fenton Whelan to this report,
the insightful input from McKinsey colleagues Andrew Moffit, Maisie O’Flanagan, Paul Jansen,
the editorial skills of Ivan Hutnik and art director Nicholas Dehaney Media & Design, London.
8.
9. Foreword
The capacity of countries - both the world’s most advanced economies as well those experiencing rapid development - to compete in the global knowledge economy
increasingly depends on whether they can meet a fast-growing demand for high-level skills. This, in turn, hinges on significant improvements in the quality of schooling
outcomes and a more equitable distribution in learning opportunities.
International comparisons, such as the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) make it now possible to regularly and directly compare the quality of
educational outcomes across education systems. They reveal wide differences in the extent to which countries succeed in fostering knowledge and skills in key subject areas.
For some countries, results from PISA have been disappointing, showing that their 15-year-olds’ performance lags considerably behind that of other countries, sometimes by
the equivalent of several years of schooling and sometimes despite high investments in education. International comparisons have also highlighted significant variation in the
performance of schools and raised strong concerns about equity in the distribution of learning opportunities. Last but not least, they suggest that there is significant scope for
improving educational efficiency such that, across OECD countries, taxpayers could expect 22% more output for their current investments into schooling.
However, comparisons like PISA also provide very encouraging insights. Across the globe - whether it is Canada in North America, Finland in Europe or Japan and Korea
in Asia - some education systems demonstrate that excellence in education is an attainable goal, and at reasonable cost. They also show that the challenge of achieving a high
and socially equitable distribution of learning outcomes can be successfully addressed and that excellence can be achieved consistently throughout the education systems,
with very few students and schools left behind.
But measuring performance does not automatically lead to insights as to what policy and practice can do to help students to learn better, teachers to teach better, and schools
to operate more effectively. This is where McKinsey’s report comes in, with its first-of-its-kind approach that links quantitative results with qualitative insights on what
high-performing and rapidly improving school systems have in common. With a focus on issues that transcends cultural and socio-economic contexts, such as getting
the right people to become teachers, developing those people into effective instructors, and putting in place targeted support to ensure that every child can benefit from
high-quality instruction, the report allows policy-makers to learn about features of successful systems without copying systems in their entirety.
By enabling policy-makers to examine their own education systems in the light the best performing systems that set the standards of what can be achieved, the report
provides policy-makers with a unique tool to bring about improvements in schooling and better preparation for young people as they enter an adult life of rapid change and
deepening global interdependence. Comparative analyses of this kind will become ever more important, as the best performing education systems, not simply improvement by
national standards, will increasingly become the yardstick for success. Countries will not simply need to match the performance of these countries but do better if their citizens
want to justify higher wages. The world is indifferent to tradition and past reputations, unforgiving of frailty and ignorant of custom or practice. Success will go to those individuals
and countries which are swift to adapt, slow to complain and open to change. The task for governments will be to ensure that countries rise to this challenge.
Andreas Schleicher
Head, Indicators and Analysis Division,
Directorate for Education, OECD
10.
11. Preface
This report is the result of research carried out by
McKinsey & Company between May 2006 and March 2007.
Its objective has been to understand why the world’s
top-performing school systems perform so very much better
than most others and why some educational reforms succeed
so spectacularly, when most others fail.
Our focus is primarily on how differences in what is
happening at the level of the school system impacts
what is happening in the classrooms, in terms of enabling
better teaching and greater learning. We have chosen not
to focus on pedagogy or curricula, however important
these subjects might be in themselves. These subjects
are well-debated in the literature. There is much less
focus elsewhere on the school ‘system’ itself – the critical
infrastructure that underpins performance – and how to
ensure that it delivers great education for every child. (Exhibit 1). The first group includes the world’s top ten best-performing school systems
according to the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA); the
The report is the outcome of an analysis of the achievements
second group comprises those that are improving rapidly, having recently introduced
of the best-performing school systems as defined by the
reforms that are raising student outcomes. The examples highlighted throughout this report
OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment
are derived from the experiences of these two categories.
(PISA), a survey of the current literature,2 and interviews
with more than one hundred experts, policymakers and We also examined, though to a lesser extent, a third group of school systems located in
practitioners. In the course of this research we have visited developing economies in the Middle East and Latin America that are seeking to provide for
schools from Wellington to Helsinki and from Singapore to growing populations (Bahrain, Brazil, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and UAE). This group is currently
Boston in order to benchmark more than two dozen school embarking on ambitious improvement programs and, in the spirit of focusing on how others
systems in Asia, Europe, North America and the Middle East. can learn from past experience, we have sought to understand the rationale of their reforms
and how they are adapting approaches that have been successful elsewhere.
The school systems we have benchmarked were selected
to represent two different categories in order to balance the Our hope is that this report will help inform the international debate about how to improve
analysis of current high achievement with developing an the quality of schools and help chart the path to make future reforms more effective in
understanding of the route by which others can get there improving the quality of schooling for all children everywhere.
13. Introduction: black
inside the
box despite substantial
increases in spending and
many well-intentioned
reform efforts, performance
in a large number of
school systems has barely
Despite substantial increases in spending and many
well-intentioned reform efforts, performance in a large
after allowing for inflation. Over the same period, the
U.S. employed more teachers: the student-to-teacher improved in decades
number of school systems has barely improved in ratio fell by 18 percent and by 2005, class sizes in the The United States was not the only country which had
decades. Few of the most widely supported reform nation’s public schools were the smallest they had ever trouble improving its school system. In fact, almost
strategies (for instance, giving schools more autonomy, been. The federal government, state governments, every country in the OECD substantially increased
or reducing class sizes) have produced the results school boards, principals, teachers, teacher unions, its spending on education over the same period, in
promised for them. Yet some school systems listed companies, non-profit organizations, and others addition to launching multiple initiatives to spend this
consistently perform better and improve faster than launched tens of thousands of initiatives aimed at money more effectively. Yet very few of the school
others. We studied 25 of the world’s school systems, improving the quality of education in the nation’s schools. systems in the OECD achieved significant improve-
including 10 of the top performers, to find out why. ments in performance. One study based on the results
Actual student outcomes, however, as measured by the
Department of Education’s own national assessment of national and international assessments showed that in
SPENDING, REFORMS AND OuTCOMES program, stayed almost the same. Though there was many school systems performance had either flat-lined
some improvement in mathematics, the reading scores or deteriorated (Exhibit 3).3
Between 1980 and 2005, public spending per student
increased by 73 percent in the United States of America, of 9 year-olds, 13 year-olds and 17 year-olds remained Yet many of these reform efforts appear well thought-out
the same in 2005 as they had been in 1980 (Exhibit 2). and far-reaching in their objectives, making their failure
all the more perplexing. In England, for example, almost
every aspect of the various reforms was reviewed and
reorganized. They reformed “the funding of schools,
the governance of schools, curriculum standards,
assessment and testing, the inspection of quality, the role
of local government, the role of national government,
the range and nature of national agencies, the relation-
ship of schools to communities, school admissions...”4
Yet a report published by the National Foundation for
Education Research in 1996 demonstrated that between
1948 and 1996, despite 50 years of reform, there had
been no measurable improvement in standards of
literacy and numeracy in English primary schools.5
3 Pritchett, Educational Quality and Costs: A Big Puzzle and Five Possible Pieces (2004) | 4 Barber, Journeys of Discovery
(2005) | 5 NFER, Trends in Standards in Literacy and Numeracy in the UnitedKingdom (1997)
14. it was naive to assume that classroom
quality would improve just because we changed
our structure
The reforms in the United States already mentioned were A report by the Cross City Campaign, which analyzed
similarly ambitious and were concerned with far more similar reforms in Chicago, Milwaukee and Seattle,
than merely improving the student-teacher ratio. concluded that, “The three districts had decentralized
They also experimented with structural reforms, most resources and authority to the schools in different ways
11
prominently, in the decentralization of powers in school and had undergone significant organizational changes
districts, smaller schools, and charter schools (schools to facilitate their ambitious instructional improvement
given increased autonomy in exchange for increased plans. The unfortunate reality for the many principals
accountability). Yet the results were disappointing. and teachers we interviewed is that the districts were
Though the best charter schools demonstrated signifi- unable to change and improve practice on a large scale.
cant improvements in student outcomes were possible, And the evidence is indisputable: you can’t improve
and certain chains of charter schools showed that student learning without improving instruction.”9
reliable models could consistently deliver improvements
The one policy that almost every school system has
in a succession of schools, in the aggregate, the results
pursued is in reducing class sizes. “Class size reduction,
of the charter schools did not significantly outperform
facilitated by lower student-to-teacher ratios, has
those of other schools. The National Assessment of
probably been the most widely supported and most
Educational Progress (NAEP) went so far as to suggest
extensively funded policy aimed at improving schools.”10
that students in charter schools slightly underperformed
Over the past five years every country in the OECD
their counterparts in public schools, even after
except for one has increased the number of its teachers
allowing for student background (Exhibit 4).6 Similarly,
relative to the number of its students.
‘small schools’ (new schools created by breaking up
larger high schools) showed “slightly improved results Yet the available evidence suggests that, except at the
in reading, and worse results in math.”7 very early grades, class size reduction does not have
much impact on student outcomes. Of 112 studies
In New Zealand, policymakers overhauled the
which looked at the impact of the reduction in class
structure of the system, decentralizing powers to
sizes on student outcomes, only 9 found any positive
individual schools (which would be governed by
relationship. 103 found either no significant relationship,
elected boards), created two new independent
or a significant negative relationship.11 Even when a
regulatory bodies, and significantly reduced the role of
significant relationship was found, the effect was not
6 NAEP, America’s Charter Schools: Results from the NAEP Pilot Study (2003) central government in the school system. Five years on,
7 Business Week, Bill Gates Gets Schooled, (2006) substantial. More importantly, every single one of the
8 Interview: New Zealand, May, 2006 in the mid-1990s, up to one third of schools were failing.
9 Cross City Campaign, A Delicate Balance: District policies and Classroom Practice (2005) studies showed that within the range of class sizes
10 OECD, Attracting Developing and Retaining Effective Teachers (2005). One policymaker explained, “It was naive to assume
11 Hanushek, The Evidence on Class Size (2003). Shapson, An experimental study on the effects of class size. typical in OECD countries, “variations in teacher
Akerhielm, Does class size matter? that classroom quality would improve just because we
12 Ibid quality completely dominate any effect of reduced
changed our structure.”8
class size”.12 Moreover reducing class sizes had
significant resource implications: smaller classes
15. ten years ago, seminal research based on
data from Tennessee showed that if two
average eight-year-old students were
given different teachers – one of them a
high performer, the other a low performer
– their performances diverge by more than
50 percentile points within three years
meant that the school systems needed more teachers, at best.15 Another study, this time in Dallas, shows that teachers for several years in a row suffer an educational
which in turn meant that, with the same level of the performance gap between students assigned three loss which is largely irreversible. In some systems, by
funding, they had less money per teacher. It also effective teachers in a row, and those assigned three age seven, children who score in the top 20 percent on
meant that because the school system requires more ineffective teachers in a row, was 49 percentile points.16 tests of numeracy and literacy are already twice as likely
teachers to achieve smaller class sizes it could become In Boston, students placed with top-performing math to complete a university degree as children in the
less selective about who could be a teacher.13 teachers made substantial gains, while students placed bottom 20 percent. In England, students that were failing
with the worst teachers regressed – their math got at age 11 had only a 25 percent chance of meeting the
FOCuSING ON TEACHER quALITy worse.17 Studies that take into account all of the available standard at age 14. By age 14, the chances that a failing
evidence on teacher effectiveness suggest that students student would graduate with the expected minimum set
The available evidence suggests that the main driver of
placed with high-performing teachers will progress of school-leaving qualifications had fallen to just six
the variation in student learning at school is the quality
three times as fast as those placed with low-perform- percent (Exhibit 6). Taken together, all the evidence
of the teachers. Ten years ago, seminal research based
ing teachers.18 In every school system visited during the suggests that even in good systems, students that do
on data from Tennessee showed that if two average
benchmarking, head teachers reported variations in the not progress quickly during their first years at school,
eight-year-old students were given different teachers –
amount of learning that occurred in different classes, because they are not exposed to teachers of sufficient
one of them a high performer, the other a low performer
and those variations depended mainly on the quality of calibre, stand very little chance of recovering the lost
– their performance diverge by more than 50 percentile
teaching in different classrooms. The negative impact years.
points within three years (Exhibit 5).14
of low-performing teachers is severe, particularly during
By way of comparison, the evidence shows that reducing 13 The most optimistic estimates of the effectiveness of reducing class size on student achievement suggest that
the earlier years of schooling. At the primary level, a reduction in class size from 23 to 15 in the early grades leads to an improvement in performance equivalent to 0.2
class sizes from 23 to 15 students improves the perform- standard deviations. | 14 Sanders & Rivers, Cumulative and Residual Effects of Teachers on Future Student Academic
students that are placed with low-performing Achievement (1996). | 15 Scientific American, Does Class Size Matter (2001). | 16 Teacher Effects on Student
ance of an average student by eight percentile points Achievement (1997) 17 Kati Haycock, Achievement in America: Can we close the gaps (2006)
16. STRIKING DIFFERENCES, Yet there were also fundamental similarities. We found
FuNDAMENTAL SIMILARITIES that high-performing school systems, though strikingly
Yet some school systems do perform better and improve different in construct and context, maintained a strong
faster than others. Singaporean students score top in focus on improving instruction because of its direct
the TIMSS assessment (an international examination in impact upon student achievement. To improve
Mathematics and Science) despite the fact that Singapore instruction, these high-performing school systems
spends less on each student in primary education than consistently do three things well:
almost any other developed country. In Finland, students They get the right people to become teachers
do not start school until they are seven years old, and (the quality of an education system cannot exceed
13
attend classes for only four or five hours each day the quality of its teachers).
during their first two years of schooling. Yet by age
15, they score top in the world in tests of mathematics, They develop these people into effective
science, reading and problem solving, a full 50 points instructors (the only way to improve outcomes
ahead of their peers in neighbouring Norway. In the is to improve instruction).
United States, Boston increased the number of students They put in place systems and targeted support
meeting the MCAS standard from 25 percent to to ensure that every child is able to benefit from
74 percent in Math, and from 43 percent to 77 percent excellent instruction (the only way for the system
in English, in just six years. to reach the highest performance is to raise the
Clearly there are inevitable differences between standard of every student).
schools: policy makers in Seoul, Helsinki and Chicago Acting on these drivers requires that changes and
operate in completely different cultural and political improvements be made in other parts of the system,
contexts, and confront different challenges. Some ranging from funding structures to governance and
systems appear to be polar opposites: the Netherlands incentives. These systems all ensure that they put in
attributed much of their success to a highly devolved place the necessary foundational conditions, such as
governance system; Singapore says it succeeded rigorous standards and assessments, clear expectations,
because of strong central control; England’s system differentiated support for teachers and students, and
contains 23,000 schools, Boston’s just 150. sufficient funding, facilities and other core resources.
So, although it is true that the system’s context, culture,
politics and governance will determine the course which
system leaders must follow, the cumulative experience
of the high-performing systems we studied indicates
that focusing on these three drivers is essential for
improving student outcomes and, more importantly, that
reform efforts which fail to address these drivers are
unlikely to deliver the improvements in outcomes that
system leaders are striving to achieve. The remainder
of this report explores these drivers in more detail.
19. “T he quality of an education
system cannot exceed the
quality of its teachers”
The top-performing school systems consistently attract teacher training, work in the toughest schools, and CuLTuRE, POLICy AND THE STATuS
more able people into the teaching profession, leading to generally have no prior experience (teacher OF TEACHING
better student outcomes. They do this by making entry effectiveness increases dramatically during the first five In all of the systems we studied, both policymakers and
to teacher training highly selective, developing effective years of teaching).21 commentators frequently attributed their success in
processes for selecting the right applicants to become The top-performing systems we studied recruit their attracting talented people into teaching (or the lack
teachers, and paying good (but not great) starting teachers from the top third of each cohort graduate from thereof) to variables seemingly outside the control of the
compensation. Getting these essentials right drives up their school system: the top 5 percent in South Korea, policymaker: history, culture, and the status of the
the status of the profession, enabling it to attract even the top 10 percent in Finland, and the top 30 percent teaching profession. In particular, outsiders often attribute
better candidates. in Singapore and Hong Kong. In the United States, the success of the Asian school systems we studied to the
The quality of a school system rests on the quality of its programs in rapidly improving systems, such as the dual blessing of a high cultural premium on education
teachers. The evidence that getting the right people to Boston Teacher Residency, the New York Teaching and traditional (Confucian) respect for teachers.
become teachers is critical to high performance is both Fellows, and the Chicago Teaching Fellows do the same Despite this common belief, our benchmarking
anecdotal and statistical. A South Korean policymaker is thing, targeting the graduates of top universities. suggests that the same broad policies are effective in
explicit about the importance of getting good people Conversely, lower-performing school systems rarely different school systems irrespective of the cultural
into teaching: “The quality of an education system attract the right people into teaching. The New context in which they are applied. School systems in
cannot exceed the quality of its teachers”.19 In the United Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce Europe and America which have made the same policy
States, studies show that “a teacher’s level of literacy, as observes that, “We are now recruiting our teachers from choices as Asian school systems attract the same qual-
measured by vocabulary and other standardized tests, the bottom third of high-school students going to college ity of applicants, or better: the Chicago Teaching Fellows
affects student achievement more than any other meas- ... it is simply not possible for students to graduate [with and Boston Teacher Residency, for instance, attract the
urable teacher attribute.”20 While it is a matter of debate, the skills they will need]... unless their teachers have the same calibre of graduate as Singapore or Hong Kong.
some studies have found that teachers working for Teach knowledge and skills we want out children to have.”22 Some school systems have made strategic policy inter-
For America (a program which targets graduates of top A Middle Eastern policymaker a region where teachers ventions that have quickly transformed the status of the
universities) get significantly better outcomes from their have historically been recruited from the lowest third teaching profession: England has made teaching the
students than do other teachers. This is the case despite of high-school graduates is succinct: “faakid ashay la most popular profession among undergraduates and
the fact that their teachers have only a short period of yua’tee” (“One cannot give what one does not have”).23 graduates in just five years.24 Even in systems where
the teaching profession enjoys a traditionally high status,
policy still had a massive impact on quality. Finland has
19 Interview: South Korea, 2007 | 20 NCTQ, Increasing the Odds: How good policies can yield better teachers | 21 Decker, Mayer, Glazerman,
lifted the status of its primary school teachers relative to
The Effects of Teach for America: Findings from a National Evaluation (2004) | 22 NCEE, Tough Choices or Tough Times (2007) | 23 Interview: GCC, May 2006 | 24 Training and Development Agency for Schools (11 August 2005)
20. those in secondary schools by varying salaries by as Almost universally, the top school systems do two things: skills and attributes, and select those applicants that
little as €100 a month. In South Korea there is a substantial they have developed effective mechanisms for selecting possess them. Singapore’s and Finland’s selection
difference between the status of primary teachers and teachers for teacher training, and they pay good starting procedures are among the most effective. Both these
secondary teachers: this is entirely attributable to govern- compensation. These two things have a clear and systems place a strong emphasis on the academic
ment policy in controlling the supply in teacher training demonstrable impact on the quality of people who achievement of candidates, their communication skills,
places for primary school teachers. In each system we become teachers. These same features are frequently and their motivation for teaching. Singapore has im-
studied the evidence suggests that policies have a strong absent in lower-performing systems. plemented a single, state-wide selection process that is
impact on status, irrespective of the cultural context in managed jointly by the Ministry of Education and the
which they are applied. MECHANISMS FOR SELECTING National Institute for Education (Exhibit 7).
17 Looking at the various systems as a whole, there are TEACHERS FOR TEACHER TRAINING Finland has introduced a national first-round in its
common strategies and best practices for attracting The top-performing school systems have more selection process which, from 2007 onwards, will
strong candidates into the teaching profession. England effective mechanisms for selecting people for teacher consist of a multiple-choice examination designed to
has led the way in using marketing and recruitment training than do the lower-performing systems. test numeracy, literacy and problem-solving skills.26
techniques taken from business to increase the supply They recognize that a bad selection decision can result The top-scoring candidates are then passed through to
of quality applicants. Most top-performing school in up to 40 years of poor teaching. These mechanisms second round in the selection procedure which is run by
systems remove obstacles to entry into the profession acknowledge that for a person to become an effective the individual universities. In this round the applicants
by creating alternative pathways for experienced hires. teacher they need to possess a certain set of characteris- are tested for their communication skills, willingness
Most of the systems also recognise that they will make tics that can be identified before they enter teaching: to learn, academic ability, and motivation for teaching.
mistakes, and have developed processes to remove a high overall level of literacy and numeracy, strong Upon graduation from teacher training, the prospective
low-performing teachers from the classroom soon after interpersonal and communications skills, a willingness teachers nevertheless need to pass yet further tests run
appointment. to learn, and the motivation to teach.25 The selection by the individual schools to which they apply for
procedures are therefore designed to test for these teaching positions (Exhibit 8).
the top-performing
school systems have
more effective
mechanisms for
selecting people
for teacher training
than do the
lower-performing
systems
25 Allington, Johnston, What do we know about effective fourth grade teachers and their classrooms (2000). Interviews
in Singapore, South Korea, and Hong Kong | 26 Before 2007, the first round of the recruitment process had been based
mainly on achievement at secondary school.
21. As important as it is to get the selection process right, As the quality of people on the courses begins to drop,
it is equally important to make sure that the selection so does the quality of the courses themselves, because
process happens at the right point in time. In every the quality of any classroom experience is highly de-
system we studied, teachers begin their professional pendent on the quality of the people in the classroom.
careers with a period of teacher training. In most cases The programs also suffer from having too many stu-
this consisted of either a three- or four-year undergradu- dents: if the program had selected just the number of
ate program, or a one-year postgraduate program people needed to fill the vacant teaching posts, they
following an undergraduate degree in a subject other would have been able to spend almost three times as
than education. School systems therefore have two much on training each student. All told, Option 2 tends
options for selecting teachers (Exhibit 9). to make teacher training a low-status program, which in
turn makes teaching a low-status profession. Once this
Option 1: The first model selects people before
has been allowed to happen, teaching becomes stuck in
they start their teacher training and limits
a downward spiral.
places in the training program to those
who are selected. Conversely, the top-performing systems select for
entry into the teacher training programs. They do so
Option 2: The second model leaves the selection
either by controlling entry directly, or by limiting the
process until after the prospective
number of places on teacher training courses, so that
teachers have graduated from teacher
supply matches demand. In Singapore, applicants are
training and then selects the best
screened, tested and selected before they enter teacher
graduates to become teachers.
training (Exhibit 10). They are then formally employed
While almost every school system in the world uses by the Ministry of Education and paid a salary during
the second option, most of the top-performers use their training.27 This means that teacher training is not an
variations on the first. option for those with few other options. Making teacher
training selective in this manner makes it attractive to
Failing to control entry into teacher training almost
high performers. It also means that Singapore can, and
invariably leads to an oversupply of candidates which,
does, spend more on teacher training (per student) than
in turn, has a significant negative effect on teacher
other education systems because there are fewer people
quality. In one system we benchmarked, of 100 people
in its courses. All of this makes teacher training an attrac-
that applied to teacher training, only 20 became
tive and high-status course in Singapore and this, in turn,
teachers. Of this 100, 75 received offers for teacher
makes teaching an attractive and high-status profession.
training places, indicating that it is relatively easy to
get into the teacher training program. However, upon Several other school systems have created similar
graduation, because of over-supply, they struggle to structures to those seen in Singapore. Finland limits the
find jobs as teachers, making the course less appealing number of places on teacher training so that the supply
to the more able students. In such conditions teacher of teachers matches demand, and only allows universi-
training became an option for students who had few 27 A full salary is paid during training on one-year programs. On longer programs,
a salary is only paid during the final part of the course
ties to select candidates who have passed a national
other options available to them. screening process. Boston, Chicago and New York have
a somewhat different approach in that they control entry
22. into teacher training only for prospective teachers on to the same approach. Instead of facing restrictions in Controlling places through funding: In Hong Kong,
their Fellows and Residency programs (rather than entry to training courses, they are free to complete their England and South Korea’s primary school system,
for all prospective teachers). For these programs teacher training at one of more than 350 competing pro- the government uses its control of funding to limit the
candidates are selected through a system-wide admis- viders. Graduates then apply for jobs at one of the 16 number of students (and the supply of teacher train-
sions process and guaranteed a teaching position in a provincial or metropolitan offices of education. ing places). This approach assumes that once supply
school before they enter teacher training. Both programs As a result, there is significant oversupply: South Korea is restricted, universities will implement rigorous
report that the calibre of their candidates is much higher produces five times as many graduates each year as is selection procedures to ensure that the best appli-
than the cities’ average intake. England focuses on required by the secondary school system. This problem cants are selected. This approach probably functions
limiting the funding for teacher training to manage has been compounded over time and the number of best in England, which defines the competencies for
19
supply, and ensures that all training providers meet applicants now exceeds the number of places by a factor new teachers, has a rigorous quality assurance sys-
certain general standards for the selection of the of eleven (in December 2005 there were 59,090 tem, and puts in place penalties for under-perform-
students in their courses. applications for 5,245 teaching positions). As a result, ing training providers. This ensures that the training
in contrast to situation for primary school teaching, the providers have the right incentives to implement
A compelling example of how the control of entry to
status and attractiveness of secondary school teaching thorough selection processes.
teacher training programs can have a substantial
has declined in South Korea, making it unattractive to
positive impact on the quality of people who become Alternative pathways: Where the system leaders
high-performers.
teachers is seen in the contrast between how South can not influence the university selection procedures
Korea’s system treats its primary school and secondary Selective entry has clear benefits. Broadly, there are or funding, the systems have created alternative
school teachers. three different mechanisms that school systems use to entry paths that enable them to select suitable
make entry into teacher training more selective and to candidates before their entry into training. The
In order to become a primary teacher it is necessary
match the supply of teacher training with demand. Boston Teacher Residency, Chicago Teaching
for the prospective teacher to first complete a four-year
Fellows, and New York Teaching Fellows programs
undergraduate degree in education at a National System-wide recruitment processes: In Singapore
all follow this approach, guaranteeing those selected
Education University. Places on these courses are and Finland, to different degrees, the state controls
a teaching position before they enter the training
limited, to ensure that the supply of teachers meets the entire process for the selection of students for
program. These districts have entered into
demand. Entry is by merit. Admission to all first degree teacher training. In Singapore, prospective teachers
agreements with the local schools and universities
courses in South Korea is based on the results of the are selected and employed by the Ministry of
to provide training for the candidates they select.
national College Entrance Exam; the cut-off score for Education before entering teacher training. In
teacher training courses requires that students should Finland, there is a two-stage process. In the first In addition to developing alternative ways of recruit-
be in the top five percent of their academic cohort. stage, prospective teachers are subjected to a ing fresh graduates, top-performing systems have also
The courses are therefore highly selective and the nation-wide screening process. In the second stage, found ways to recruit more experienced graduates.
graduates of these courses are very likely to find the individual universities select their own candidates Typically, teacher training requirements create barriers
employment as a teacher. This ensures that the attrac- from those that have met the criteria in the first stage. to recruiting such people. Applicants to teaching who
tiveness, status and quality of the courses remain high. Places in teacher training courses in both countries have already completed their university studies and
are limited so that the supply of graduates matches started work generally have to undertake a year of train-
South Korea takes a very different approach to training
demand. ing, during which they lose a year’s earnings, as well as
its secondary school teachers, however, resulting in very
often having to bear the cost of their course in addition.
different outcomes. In contrast to its careful matching of
This makes entry into the profession unattractive to ex-
supply with demand for primary school teachers, the
perienced hires, particularly those with families or other
selection of secondary school teachers are not subjected
financial commitments. Opening up alternative routes
23. all of the top-performing systems we benchmarked
(except for one) paid starting salaries that
were at or above the OECD average, relative to
their GDP per capita
into teaching in which entrants are relieved of this GOOD STARTING COMPENSATION
financial burden increases significantly the pool of The other essential ingredient for getting the right
potential applicants into the profession. Most systems people to become teachers is to provide good starting
have also found that the quality of applicants on these pay. All of the top-performing systems we benchmarked
programs is higher than otherwise (Exhibit 11). (except for one) paid starting salaries that were at or
England has probably diversified its recruitment above the OECD average, relative to their GDP per
process the most, having developed more entry points capita. What is interesting, however, is that the range of
into teaching than any other system in an attempt to starting salaries offered by the top performers is very
maximise recruitment. By 2006 there were 32 different narrow: most systems pay a starting salary between 95
ways to enter the teaching profession in England, though percent and 99 percent of GDP per capita (across the
the expectations of the skills, knowledge, and the behav- OECD as a whole, starting salaries range from 44
iours teachers should demonstrate by the time they had percent to 186 percent of GDP per capita) (Exhibit 12).
completed their training is the same for each route. A good salary is not necessarily the main or only
Most top-performing systems recognise that no motivation for teaching, of course. Surveys show that
selection process is perfect, and so implement proce- most people who enter the teaching profession do so for
dures to ensure that the lowest-performing teachers a range of reasons, the foremost of which is the desire to
can, if necessary, be removed from the classroom after help a new generation succeed in a world in which skills
appointment to their teaching position, based on the and knowledge are crucial to success. In fact, salary is
evidence of their classroom practice. In the rapidly im- rarely stated to be one of the most important reasons
proving systems of Boston and Chicago, teachers are not for becoming a teacher, even in the systems where
made permanent until they have been teaching for three compensation is good; in the words of one Finnish
or four years, respectively. This allows the district to teacher, “None of us do this for the money”.28 However,
remove them from their position if they prove unsuitable. the surveys also show that unless school systems offer
In England and New Zealand teachers do not gain their salaries which are in-line with other graduate starting
teaching licences until after they have completed one or salaries, these same people do not enter teaching.
two years teaching, respectively, and have gained This has important implications for policy. Top-perform-
satisfactory reviews from their principals. In New ing systems have found that while raising salaries in line
Zealand, the Teachers’ Council makes a second, with other graduate salaries is important, raising them
follow-up evaluation of 10 percent of all new teachers so above the market average for graduates does not lead to
28 Interview: Finland, March, 2007 as to ensure the evaluations undertaken by the school substantial further increases in the quality or quantity of
principals meet the right standard. applicants. In England, where salaries had been slightly
24. teaching.29 This might explain why countries which pay in other professions. Systems which frontload com-
very high starting salaries (in Europe, Spain, Germany pensation succeed because of two factors: first, sal-
and Switzerland pay the highest starting salaries relative ary progression is less important in the decision to
to GDP) have not gained improved outcomes as a result. become a teacher than starting salary and, secondly,
Only in South Korea, where salaries are exceptionally teacher retention is generally not correlated strongly
high (not only do they start high, but they rise to a to salary progression.
maximum that is two-and-a-half times higher than the
Though restructuring salary scales in order to front-
average maximum teacher salary in the OECD)30 do
load compensation is likely to prove difficult to achieve
higher salaries appear to have resulted in an increase
in most school systems, it is not impossible. One of the
21
in the quality of people becoming teachers.
top-performers, the Netherlands, has done exactly this.
Clearly, paying higher starting salaries places a financial Between 1990 and 1997, the Netherlands increased its
burden on the school system. Broadly, there are three monthly starting salary for teachers from €1,480 to
strategies for balancing the cost of paying higher start- €2,006, effectively bringing teachers’ starting salaries
ing salaries: into line with the private sector.32 The Netherlands also
reduced the time it takes to reach the top of the salary
Spending more: Boston Public Schools pay the
schedule from 26 years to 18 years, with the eventual
highest starting salaries in Massachusetts. In order
aim of reducing it to 15 years. Similarly, Alberta has
to do so, it spends more: its annual spending on
been increasing its starting salaries more quickly than
primary education per student is equivalent to
its maximum salary, and has reduced the difference
26 percent of GDP per capita, significantly above
between the top and bottom of its scale from 81 percent
the OECD average. However, most of the top
to 70 percent since 2001. Some of the school systems
performers spent less on their school systems than
use other mechanisms to frontload compensation, such
the OECD average – they have found other ways to
as paying salaries or bursaries during teacher training
fund higher starting salaries (Exhibit 13).
(Boston, England, Chicago, New York, Singapore) or
Frontloading compensation: Finland, the Nether- offering signing bonuses to new teachers (England).
lands, New Zealand, Australia and England, in effect,
Increasing class size: South Korea and Singapore
frontload their compensation: the starting salaries
employ fewer teachers than other systems; in ef-
are good, but relative to other OECD countries,
fect, this ensures that they can spend more money
subsequent increases in compensation are small.31
on each teacher at an equivalent funding level. Both
In Finland, the difference between the average start-
countries recognise that while class size has relatively
ing salary and the maximum teacher salary is just 18
little impact on the quality of student outcomes (see
percent (Exhibit 14). By paying good starting salaries,
below average graduate salaries, increasing teacher above), teacher quality does. South Korea’s student-
Finland attracts strong performers into the profession.
salaries by a small amount (10 percent) resulted in a to-teacher ratio is 30:1, compared to an OECD aver-
Teachers who are committed to teaching stay despite
substantial rise in applications (30 percent); whereas, in age of 17:1,33 enabling it to in effect double teacher
the salary; others who are less committed leave, as
Switzerland, where salaries were already very high (116 salaries while maintaining the same overall funding
their compensation decreases relative to their peers
percent of GDP per capita), further increases in salary level as other OECD countries (teacher salaries are
had little impact on the number or quality of applicants to 29 OECD, Attracting Developing and Retaining Effective teachers, (from Dolton, Wolter, Denzler) p. 70 | 30 Starting primary teacher salaries in South Korea are 141 percent of GDP per capita, rising to 389 percent of GDP per capita
(compared to OECD averages of 95 percent and 159 percent of GDP per capita respectively) (2003). | 31 The increase in the maximum salary over the starting salary in high-performing systems is as follows: an increase of 18 percent in Finland, 45
percent in New Zealand and the Netherlands, 46 percent in England, and 47 percent in Australia (average across all states and territories), compared to an OECD average of 70 percent. Source: OECD, Education at a Glance 2005 | 32 Attracting Developing and
Retaining Teachers: Country Report for the Netherlands, pp. 36-37 | 33 2003 (OECD, Education at a Glance 2005)