Performance Pay System Preferences of Students Preparing to Be Teachers
This study explored the potential acceptability of performance pay to new teachers by investigating attitudes toward performance pay of students preparing to be teachers. Focus groups and a survey of students preparing to be teachers at a large U.S. university were conducted. Most students expressed a preference for some form of performance pay and tended to prefer pay based on individual performance or pay for knowledge and skill development instead of pay based on school performance. Personality traits and work values were not related to preferences for different performance pay approaches or performance pay in general. These results suggest that teachers' experiences rather than personality or work values may be the dominant influences on attitudes toward performance pay. This implies that beginning teachers may view performance pay more favorably than their more experienced colleagues, suggesting a strategy of applying performance pay to new teachers only. © 2007 American Education Finance Association
Year of publication: |
2007
|
---|---|
Authors: | Milanowski, Anthony |
Published in: |
Education Finance and Policy. - MIT Press, ISSN 1557-3060. - Vol. 2.2007, February, 2, p. 111-132
|
Publisher: |
MIT Press |
Subject: | teacher pay | performance pay | teacher performance |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
(Mis-)Measuring the Relative Pay of Public School Teachers
Podgursky, Michael, (2006)
-
Value Added and Its Uses: Where You Stand Depends on Where You Sit
Corcoran, Sean, (2013)
-
Chapter 5. Teacher Compensation and Collective Bargaining
Podgursky, Michael, (2011)
- More ...