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发展中国家的教师劳动力市场。

Teacher labor markets in developing countries.

作者信息

Vegas Emiliana

机构信息

World Bank.

出版信息

Future Child. 2007 Spring;17(1):219-32. doi: 10.1353/foc.2007.0011.

Abstract

Emiliana Vegas surveys strategies used by the world's developing countries to fill their classrooms with qualified teachers. With their low quality of education and wide gaps in student outcomes, schools in developing countries strongly resemble hard-to-staff urban U.S. schools. Their experience with reform may thus provide insights for U.S. policymakers. Severe budget constraints and a lack of teacher training capacity have pushed developing nations to try a wide variety of reforms, including using part-time or assistant teachers, experimenting with pay incentives, and using school-based management. The strategy of hiring teachers with less than full credentials has had mixed results. One successful program in India hired young women who lacked teaching certificates to teach basic literacy and numeracy skills to children whose skills were seriously lagging. After two years, student learning increased, with the highest gains among the least able students. As in the United States, says Vegas, teaching quality and student achievement in the developing world are sensitive to teacher compensation. As average teacher salaries in Chile more than doubled over the past decade, higher-quality students entered teacher education programs. And when Brazil increased educational funding and distributed resources more equitably, school enrollment increased and the gap in student test scores narrowed. Experiments with performance-based pay have had mixed results. In Bolivia a bonus for teaching in rural areas failed to produce higher-quality teachers. And in Mexico a system to reward teachers for improved student outcomes failed to change teacher performance. But Vegas explains that the design of teacher incentives is critical. Effective incentive schemes must be tightly coupled with desired behaviors and generous enough to give teachers a reason to make the extra effort. School-based management reforms give decisionmaking authority to the schools. Such reforms in Central America have reduced teacher absenteeism, increased teacher work hours, increased homework assignments, and improved parent-teacher relationships. These changes, says Vegas, are especially promising in schools where educational quality is low.

摘要

埃米利亚娜·维加斯考察了世界上发展中国家为让合格教师走进课堂所采用的策略。由于教育质量低下且学生成绩差距巨大,发展中国家的学校与美国师资短缺的城市学校极为相似。因此,它们的改革经验或许能为美国政策制定者提供一些启示。严峻的预算限制和师资培训能力的匮乏促使发展中国家尝试了各种各样的改革措施,包括聘用兼职教师或助教、试验薪酬激励措施以及采用校本管理。聘用资质不全教师的策略效果不一。印度的一个成功项目聘用了没有教学证书的年轻女性,让她们为技能严重滞后的儿童教授基础读写和算术技能。两年后,学生的学习成绩有所提高,能力最差的学生进步最大。维加斯说,与美国一样,发展中国家的教学质量和学生成绩对教师薪酬很敏感。在过去十年里,智利教师的平均工资增加了一倍多,于是有更优秀的学生进入了教师教育项目。当巴西增加教育资金并更公平地分配资源时,入学率上升了,学生考试成绩的差距也缩小了。基于绩效的薪酬试验结果不一。在玻利维亚,农村地区教学奖金并未造就更高质量的教师。在墨西哥,一个奖励教师提高学生成绩的制度未能改变教师的表现。但维加斯解释说,教师激励措施的设计至关重要。有效的激励方案必须与期望的行为紧密挂钩,而且要足够丰厚,让教师有理由付出额外努力。校本管理改革将决策权下放给学校。中美洲的此类改革减少了教师缺勤现象,增加了教师工作时长,增加了家庭作业量,并改善了家长与教师的关系。维加斯说,这些变化在教育质量较低的学校尤其有前景。

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