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Designing a System of Performance-Based Pay

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Approaches to Differentiated Teacher Compensation. Signing bonuses for hard-to-staff schools or shortage areas. Higher pay for additional responsibilities, e.g ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Designing a System of Performance-Based Pay


1
Designing a System of Performance-Based Pay
  • Charlotte Danielson
  • charlotte_danielson_at_hotmail.com
  • www.danielsongroup.org

2
A Traditional Steps and Lanes Structure
  • It was an advance on what came before, and is
    still an advance in some situations, e.g.
    independent schools
  • Higher salaries are paid for additional years of
    experience and completion of courses and/or
    degrees

3
Differentiated Evaluation Systems
  • Multi-year cycle
  • Comprehensive evaluation- every 2-4 years
  • Self-directed professional inquiry in the other
    years

4
Why Performance-Based Pay?(What is the Problem
for which P-B-P is the Solution?)
  • Compensation in the private sector reflects
    individual performance
  • Teaching is a flat profession. Long-term
    recruitment and retention of teachers requires
    the promise of higher career earnings
  • Market forces make recruitment difficult in
    shortage areas
  • Teachers must be motivated to work harder to
    increase student achievement

5
Approaches to Differentiated Teacher Compensation
  • Signing bonuses for hard-to-staff schools or
    shortage areas
  • Higher pay for additional responsibilities, e.g.,
    debate team coach
  • School or team based performance awards
  • Individual pay-for-performance
  • (The first three approaches are non-controversial)

6
A Fundamental Flaw
  • Unless a board (state, district, or school) is
    willing to write, in effect, a blank check, and
    since the number of individuals eligible for
    bonuses cannot be accurately predicted, teachers
    are, consequently, in competition with one
    another for scarce resources.

7
High-Stakes (Consequential) Assessment
  • The results matter, for either compensation or
    career status
  • Procedures must meet high standards of
    psychometric rigor
  • The system must be, and must be perceived to be,
    fair and accurate

8
Requirements for Psychometric Rigor
  • What are the criteria are they publicly
    understood, and do all teachers have the
    opportunity to demonstrate them?
  • Who decides whether the criteria are met, and can
    they make consistent and defensible judgments
    based on evidence?

9
Performance System Design
High Rigor Structured Mentoring Programs, e.g. New Teacher Center, Framework Induction Program Low ------------------------------------ National Board Certification Praxis III Level of Stakes -------------------High
Informal Mentoring Programs Low Rigor DANGER!!
10
Stated Purposes of Individual Pay-for-Performance
  • Motivate teachers to work harder
  • Reward superior teaching
  • Recognize enhanced career status
  • Provide incentives for activities that benefit
    the entire school, e.g. action research
  • (The first two are flawed, the last two have
    merit)

11
Motivating Teachers to Work Harder
  • This approach assumes that teachers are holding
    back, waiting for higher pay
  • Most teachers find this assumption demeaning and
    insulting, an undermining of professionalism

12
Motivating Teachers With Individual Performance
Awards
  • Merit pay is an effective incentive in work such
    as sales and piecework, where employees
    contribute individually to the effectiveness of
    the entire effort.
  • But in schools, the work is successive,
    accomplishments are cumulative, and cooperation
    is essential.

13
Rewarding Superior Teaching
  • Two basic approaches
  • Inputs, that is, what teachers do, how well they
    do the work of teaching
  • Outputs, that is, what teachers accomplish,
    typically how well their students learn

14
Rewarding What Teachers Do
  • Two basic approaches
  • As judged by internal assessors, within the
    school or district, based on specific criteria
    (including parent input?)
  • As judged by external assessors, for example
    National Board Certification
  • (Only the latter is generally perceived to be
    valid)

15
The Framework for TeachingSecond Edition
  • Domain 4 Professional Responsibilities
  • Reflecting on Teaching
  • Maintaining Accurate Records
  • Communicating with Families
  • Participating in a Professional Community
  • Growing and Developing Professionally
  • Showing Professionalism

16
Domain 2The Classroom Environment2a Creating
an Environment of Respect and Rapport
17
Negative Consequences of Using the Framework for
Teaching(or other such definition)
  • In their concern to look good on the rubric,
  • Teachers become legalistic, parsing the words,
    defending their performance
  • Teachers adopt a low-risk approach, not willing
    to try new approaches
  • Teachers are unwilling to accept challenging
    students in their classes

18
Rewarding What Teachers Accomplish
  • Typically linked to student achievement on
    state-wide assessments
  • Because of the importance of out-of-school
    factors, validity demands value-added measures

19
Assumptions of Rewarding Teachers Based on
Student Achievement
  • Available assessments include all valuable
    learning
  • Assessments are available for all teachers
  • In preparing students for the assessments,
    teachers will use good instructional strategies
  • (That is, teaching to the test is good
    teaching)
  • Statistical techniques can attribute student
    learning to individual teachers

20
Negative Consequences of Rewarding Teachers Based
on Student Achievement
  • Even if the assumptions are satisfied
  • Cheating, by teachers or administrators
  • Narrowing the curriculum to what is assessed, and
    the manner in which it is assessed
  • If student achievement is defined as the
    percentage who exceed a standard, teachers
    concentrate their efforts on those close to the
    line, ignoring others

21
Positive Consequences of School or Team-based
Performance Awards
  • Recognizes that all teachers contribute to
    student learning
  • Encourages collaboration and cooperation among
    teachers within the school or team

22
Recognizing Enhanced Career Status
  • Must designate career levels, for example
  • Novice teacher (similar to probationary)
  • Career teacher (similar to tenured)
  • Master teacher
  • Faculty leader

23
Issues to Consider in Career-Ladder Systems
  • What are the criteria for teachers to achieve the
    different levels?
  • What are the procedures for teachers to move from
    one level to another?
  • Who decides whether the criteria are met?
  • Do the different levels carry differentiated
    responsibilities?

24
Recommendations for Career-Level Systems
  • Any teacher may apply for enhanced status
  • Procedures contribute to professional learning,
    requiring self-assessment and reflection on
    practice
  • Teacher actions contribute to the intellectual
    capital of the school, e.g., conducting and
    sharing action research
  • Teacher applications are evaluated by both
    teachers and administrators

25
Practical Challenges for Performance-Based
Compensation
  • Time, for both teachers and evaluators
  • Evaluator skill and detachment
  • Stability of funding

26
A Promising ApproachArlington, VA
  • Traditional salary structure supplemented by
    bonuses worth 5 of base salary
  • Within every five years of experience, teachers
    may apply for a bonus
  • Three ways to win bonuses- achieve National
    Board certification- conduct action research-
    demonstrate informal teacher leadership
  • The last two are determined by panels of trained
    teachers and administrators

27
Bottom Line Benefit/Cost Ratio
  • Given a pool of money, and given the goals of
    enhancing student learning, how should that money
    be spent? That is, is an investment in bonuses
    for teachers likely to yield more than the same
    money invested in, for example, mentoring,
    coaching, or professional development?
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