Authors
Dan Goldhaber, Stephanie Liddle, Roddy Theobald
Publication date
2013/6/1
Journal
Economics of Education Review
Volume
34
Pages
29-44
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
With teacher quality repeatedly cited as the most important schooling factor influencing student achievement, there has been increased interest in examining the efficacy of teacher training programs. This paper presents the results of research investigating the relationship between teachers who graduate from different training programs and student achievement on state reading and math tests. Using a novel methodology that allows teacher training effects to decay, we find that training institution indicators explain a statistically significant portion of the variation in student achievement in reading, but not in math. Moreover, there is evidence that graduates from some specific training programs are differentially effective at teaching reading than the average teacher trained out-of-state and that these differences are large enough to be educationally meaningful.
Total citations
2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024919252248394435402725248