What About Curriculum Effects? Imprimer Envoyer
Pédagogie Explicite - Barak Rosenshine
Écrit par Barak Rosenshine   
Jeudi, 19 Août 2010 00:00

Source : Albert Shanker Institute

Barak Rosenshine

What About Curriculum Effects?

19 août 2010

 

 

Bill Gates, the Los Angeles Times, and others have argued that teachers should be held accountable for the achievement of their students. This has led to heated debates over the validity and proper use of value added statistical measures. But no one seems to be talking about curriculum effects. What if an excellent teacher is in a school that has selected a curriculum for mathematics or for reading that isn’t very good. How accountable should the teacher be in those circumstances?

In the July-Sept. issue of the Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness (Vol. 3, No 3, 2010) Roberto Agodini and Barbara Harris reported on a large-scale study in which four different elementary school math programs were randomly assigned to first-grade classrooms in 39 schools. These schools all served students from low-income families and were located in four different school districts. The same standardized test in mathematics was administered to all students.

Students who were taught using two of the programs (let’s call them A and B) obtained achievement scores that were 9 to 12 percentile points higher than student achievement scores using the other two programs (X and Y). In other words, a student who scored at the 50th percentile when taught using curriculum X or Y would have scored at about the 60th percentile had they been in a class that used curriculum A or B. If we assume two teachers of equal ability, the teacher whose class used the A or B curriculum would have had a much higher value added score than a teacher whose class used the X or Y curriculum. In this specific case, then, how accountable can we hold the first-grade teachers who were given curriculum X or Y for the achievement of their students?

Currently, very few effective curriculum programs such as A and B have been identified and, right now, we don’t know how well any of these four programs would do in grades 4 or 5. But I suggest that the study by Agodini and Harris illustrates the fact that some specific curriculum programs can help raise student achievement in the hands of an average teacher whereas other programs aren’t as successful even in the hands of an excellent teacher. Unfortunately, when we look at student achievement scores for a specific teacher or a specific school, we don’t know whether the curriculum program helped enhance the scores or had little effect. But I suggest that the quality of each curriculum program a teacher is using needs to be considered when student achievement scores are used to grade teachers.

I believe that teachers are responsible for implementing a program well, but are only responsible for the implementation. As this research shows, the quality of a given program has a strong influence on the students’ achievement. Teachers, who generally have little say over which curriculum programs their states, districts, and schools select, should not be held responsible for the quality of the program they were given. The program developers and adopters, not the teachers, are responsible for the results when the program is implemented well.

 
 
Une réalisation LSG Conseil.