Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics - Info and Reading Options
By Victor Lavy
"Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics" was published by National Bureau of Economic Research in 2004 - Cambridge, MA and the language of the book is English.
“Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics
- Author: Victor Lavy
- Language: English
- Publisher: ➤ National Bureau of Economic Research
- Publish Date: 2004
- Publish Location: Cambridge, MA
“Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: Performance awards - Rating of - Salaries - Teachers
- Places: Israel
Edition Specifications:
- Format: Electronic resource
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL3476059M - OL889746W
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 2005615516
AI-generated Review of “Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics”:
"Performance pay and teachers' effort, productivity and grading ethics" Description:
The Open Library:
"Performance-related incentive pay for teachers is being introduced in many countries, but there is little evidence of its effects. This paper evaluates a rank-order tournament among teachers of English, Hebrew, and mathematics in Israel. Teachers were rewarded with cash bonuses for improving their students' performance on high-school matriculation exams. Two identification strategies were used to estimate the program effects, a regression discontinuity design and propensity score matching. The regression discontinuity method exploits both a natural experiment stemming from measurement error in the assignment variable and a sharp discontinuity in the assignment-to-treatment variable. The results suggest that performance incentives have a significant effect on directly affected students with some minor spillover effects on untreated subjects. The improvements appear to derive from changes in teaching methods, after-school teaching, and increased responsiveness to students' needs. No evidence found for teachers' manipulation of test scores. The program appears to have been more cost-effective than school-group cash bonuses or extra instruction time and is as effective as cash bonuses for students"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
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