Text Only
Search Special English

School Districts Approve Plans to Link Teacher Pay with Student Performance

12 April 2006
Education Report - Download MP3 audio clip
Education Report - Download RealAudio audio clip
Listen to Education Report audio clip

I’m Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Education Report.

Last month, the Florida Board of Education approved a program that will link increases in teachers’ pay to improvements in students’ test scores.

The program will take effect next school year.  It increases a teacher’s pay if his or her students increase their scores on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.  The test measures reading and mathematics knowledge.  It is now used to decide if students will pass to the next grade level. The state gives extra money to schools whose scores are good or have increased from the year before.  Normally, the money is divided among the school workers.

The new program requires all school districts in the state to list the top ten percent of teachers in each subject area. These teachers will receive an increase of five percent in their yearly pay.  For an average teacher, that would be about two thousand dollars.

Those who teach reading and mathematics will be judged on the test scores only. That is, how much their students have improved since the year before. But those who teach other subjects like geography, art and music will have to be judged differently.  State officials say they will develop a system to do this.

Teacher in a Minnesota school system that is paying teachers based on performance.
Teacher in a Minnesota school system that pays teachers based on performance.
Florida is not the only state with a plan to link teacher pay and student performance.  Schools in Texas, Colorado and Minnesota have similar programs.  But not all of them link pay with test scores alone.

Teacher groups around the country generally oppose such programs.  They say it is not fair to judge teachers by how well students score on a test. They say many things affect a student’s test scores, such as learning problems or lack of sleep.  They also say that there are other ways to judge strengths and weaknesses of students.

Some teachers say the quality of teaching will decrease if teachers are forced to compete with each other for money and praise.  They fear that teachers will refuse to work in schools where many children have learning problems or do not speak English well.       

Those who support the new pay programs say teachers must be judged the way other professionals are — by the results of their work.  And they say that using student test scores is a true measure of a teacher’s performance.

This VOA Special English Education Report was written by Nancy Steinbach.  I’m Steve Ember.  Our weekly reports can be found at voaspecialenglish.com.  

                                                                 

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
Another World, Underground: Carlsbad Caverns National Park  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
At Home in a Shipping Container  Audio Clip Available
Willa Cather, 1873-1947: She Celebrated Europeans Who Settled in the American Midwest  Audio Clip Available
Before Next McCain-Obama Debate, Palin and Biden Take Their Turn  Audio Clip Available
Infectious Disease Expert, Sax Player Are Among MacArthur Winners  Audio Clip Available
Credit and the Crisis of Confidence  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: Public or Private?  Audio Clip Available
New Money for Malaria  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: In Election of 1824, a Clash of Personalities    Audio Clip Available
Isaac Newton: One of the World’s Greatest Scientists  Audio Clip Available
Progress Seen Toward Making Objects Invisible  Audio Clip Available
'Catch Shares': A Better Way to Share the World's Fish?  Audio Clip Available