Ohio Education Technology Network

Collaborate, Connect, Contribute

Tim Phillips

Do Teacher Absences Correlate To Decreased Student Achievement?

An excerpt from Center for American Progress article finds a correlation between teacher absences and student achievement. See below. The question is this: should we hold teachers accountable for excessive absences?

Public school teachers in the United States are absent between nine and 10 days per year, on average. In other words, between kindergarten and 12th grade, a typical student is taught by someone other than the regularly assigned teacher for the equivalent of two-thirds of a school year. Students experience teacher absence in bursts of time, ranging from a few hours to a few months, and this fractured exposure may help deflect policymakers’ attention. Yet there are three good reasons to revisit policies around teacher absence:

Teacher absence is expensive. With 5.3 percent of teachers absent on a given day, stipends for substitute teachers and associated administrative costs amount to $4 billion, annually.

Teacher absence negatively affects student achievement. Researchers have found that every 10 absences lowers mathematics achievement by the same amount as having a teacher with one year to two years of experience instead of a teacher with three years to five years of experience.

Teacher absence disproportionately affects low-income students. Students in schools serving predominantly low-income families experience teacher absence at higher rates than students in more affluent communities. Part of the achievement gap is thus due to a teacher attendance gap.

Tags: data, decisions, driven

Share

Reply to This

About

Abby Kelton Abby Kelton created this social network on Ning.

Create your own social network!

Badge

Loading…

© 2009   Created by Abby Kelton on Ning.   Create Your Own Social Network

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service