A Degree Above? The Value-Added Estimates and Evaluation Ratings of Teachers with a Graduate Degree

Author:

Bastian Kevin C.1

Affiliation:

1. Education Policy Initiative at Carolina University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Abstract

In the present study I use teacher value added and evaluation rating data from North Carolina public schools to estimate the signaling and human capital effects of graduate degrees. These analyses consider the effects of graduate degrees, overall, and the effects of graduate degrees inside and outside teachers’ area(s) of teaching. Signaling analyses show that those with a graduate degree in their area of teaching have comparable value-added estimates and receive higher evaluation ratings than teachers with undergraduate degrees only. Human capital analyses indicate that in-area graduate degrees benefit teacher value added in several comparisons and predict higher evaluation ratings on the Leadership standard. Signaling and human capital effects for out-of-area graduate degrees are generally negative or insignificant. Taken together, these results present a more comprehensive and nuanced view of the effectiveness of teachers with graduate degrees. Future analyses should assess additional outcome measures and continue focusing on the alignment between the graduate degree content and the teaching assignment.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Education

Reference46 articles.

1. Teacher Churning

2. Evaluating Teacher Preparation Programs With Teacher Evaluation Ratings: Implications for Program Accountability and Improvement

3. Betts, Julian R., Andrew C. Zau, and Lorien A. Rice. 2003. Determinants of student achievement: New evidence from San Diego. San Francisco: Public Policy Institute of California.

4. Grade Assignments and the Teacher Pipeline

5. Teacher and Teaching Effects on Students’ Attitudes and Behaviors

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