Quantitative studies of school effects have generally supported the notion that the problems of U.S. education lie outside of the school. Yet such studies neglect the primary venue through which students learn, the classroom. The current study explores the link between classroom practices and student academic performance by applying multilevel modeling to the 1996 National Assessment of Educational Progress in mathematics. The study finds that the effects of classroom practices, when added to those of other teacher characteristics, are comparable in size to those of student background, suggesting that teachers can contribute as much to student learning as the students themselves
An exploratory, sequential, mixed-methods study examined the extent to which teachers of English, ma...
The purpose of this mixed methods study was to first analyze quantitative data to identify if a rela...
This study uses longitudinal student-level test score data to examine the effectiveness of elementar...
While there is a substantial literature on the relationship between general teacher characteristics ...
The Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System (TVAAS) has been designed to use statistical mixed-model...
Research confirms that teachers have substantial impacts on their students’ academic and life-long s...
Using data from a 50-state survey of policies, state case study analyses, the 1993-94 Schools and St...
The idea that teachers differ substantially in their ability to motivate and educate students has pe...
This report is about conceptual and methodological issues that arise when educational researchers us...
Teachers are the most important school-based factor in affecting student achievement levels. Knowing...
Literature on school effects is inconclusive regarding which characteristics of schools are importan...
High quality instruction is necessary for students of all ages to develop a deep understanding of ma...
This analysis contributes to efforts to improve the use and understanding of sur-vey data in educati...
This paper studies how the effectiveness of teachers varies by classroom composition. We combine ran...
The demand for educational accountability to improve student achievement has been the force behind e...
An exploratory, sequential, mixed-methods study examined the extent to which teachers of English, ma...
The purpose of this mixed methods study was to first analyze quantitative data to identify if a rela...
This study uses longitudinal student-level test score data to examine the effectiveness of elementar...
While there is a substantial literature on the relationship between general teacher characteristics ...
The Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System (TVAAS) has been designed to use statistical mixed-model...
Research confirms that teachers have substantial impacts on their students’ academic and life-long s...
Using data from a 50-state survey of policies, state case study analyses, the 1993-94 Schools and St...
The idea that teachers differ substantially in their ability to motivate and educate students has pe...
This report is about conceptual and methodological issues that arise when educational researchers us...
Teachers are the most important school-based factor in affecting student achievement levels. Knowing...
Literature on school effects is inconclusive regarding which characteristics of schools are importan...
High quality instruction is necessary for students of all ages to develop a deep understanding of ma...
This analysis contributes to efforts to improve the use and understanding of sur-vey data in educati...
This paper studies how the effectiveness of teachers varies by classroom composition. We combine ran...
The demand for educational accountability to improve student achievement has been the force behind e...
An exploratory, sequential, mixed-methods study examined the extent to which teachers of English, ma...
The purpose of this mixed methods study was to first analyze quantitative data to identify if a rela...
This study uses longitudinal student-level test score data to examine the effectiveness of elementar...