Park Hyunjoon, Byun Soo-Yong
Comp Educ Rev. 2015 Aug;59(3):523-549. doi: 10.1086/681930. Epub 2015 May 27.
Using data from 37,570 students in 23 OECD countries in PISA 2006, we examine how national contexts shape the expectation of being a teacher at age 30 among high-achieving students in secondary schools. Our results show considerable between-country differences in the degree of students' expectation of a teaching job. To address sources of this cross-national variation, we use two-level logit models by linking student-level data with country-level data. Consistent with earlier findings, we find that teachers' economic status matters for students' expectation of becoming a teacher. Moreover, our results show that teachers' social status also matters. Countries' levels of professionalization of teaching, indicated by whether teachers have a bachelor's degree and are fully certified, are also related to students' expectation of the teaching profession. Specifically, in countries with higher levels of professionalization, we see a reduced gender gap in students' expectation of becoming a teacher.
利用2006年经济合作与发展组织(OECD)23个国家37570名学生的数据,我们研究了国家背景如何影响中学高成就学生在30岁成为教师的期望。我们的研究结果表明,各国学生对教师职业的期望程度存在显著差异。为了探究这种跨国差异的根源,我们通过将学生层面的数据与国家层面的数据相联系,使用了二级逻辑回归模型。与早期研究结果一致,我们发现教师的经济地位对学生成为教师的期望有影响。此外,我们的研究结果表明,教师的社会地位也很重要。以教师是否拥有学士学位并获得完全认证来衡量的国家教学专业化水平,也与学生对教师职业的期望有关。具体而言,在教学专业化水平较高的国家,我们发现学生成为教师的期望中性别差距有所缩小。