PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Paying for whose performance? Teacher incentive pay and the black-white test score gap

2021-04-12
(Press-News.org) Study: "Paying for Whose Performance? Teacher Incentive Pay and the Black-White Test Score Gap"
Authors: Andrew J. Hill (Montana State University), Daniel B. Jones (University of Pittsburgh)

This study was published today in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis.

Key Finding:

Teacher incentive pay programs that focused on raising student achievement in high-need high schools expanded the test score gap between Black and White students by between 64 percent and 85 percent. Details:

The Black-White test score gap has proven to be one of the most persistent phenomena in American education, for reasons that cannot be entirely explained by student characteristics or school and teacher quality.

Teacher performance pay is increasingly common in the United States and often introduced with the goal of reducing gaps in test scores across groups of students. Performance pay aims to directly increase the effectiveness of teaching within high-need schools.

The authors used robust administrative data available in North Carolina to study the impacts of teacher incentive pay programs introduced for teachers in several districts in the state during the 2000s. Teachers in 34 high-need high schools were offered bonuses if their classroom test score averages increased sufficiently on state standardized tests over the course of the school year.

The authors found that performance pay had little impact on average student achievement overall. However, they found a considerable difference in the effect on Black students relative to White students.

Black students experience significantly smaller gains than White students under performance pay, and in some cases actually suffer as a result of the reforms. The result was that the gap in test scores between White and Black students, controlling for other factors, expanded by between 64 percent and 85 percent.

The authors also found some evidence that Hispanic students, like Black students, experience smaller gains than White students. Asian students are not impacted differently relative to White students.

"One potential explanation is drawn from existing work documenting that teachers' expectations of students differ by student race," said Andrew J. Hill, an associate professor of labor economics at Montana State University. "When average student achievement is incentivized--as is common in the U.S. and in the programs we studied--teachers may target their attention toward students they expect to achieve higher levels of growth. This may cause gaps to grow between groups of students, potentially by race."

The authors note their results should not be taken as evidence that performance pay, generally speaking, cannot have a positive impact on reducing test score gaps. Rather, they provide implications for how performance pay programs should be designed to meet the objectives of policymakers.

"We know from previous research that when performance pay explicitly incentivizes helping the lowest performing students, it leads to more attention from teachers and large gains among those students," Hill said. To talk to the study authors, please contact AERA Communications: Tony Pals, Director of Communications, tpals@aera.net, cell: (202) 288-9333; Tong Wu, Communications Associate, twu@aera.net, cell: (202) 957-3802

INFORMATION:

About AERA The American Educational Research Association (AERA) is the largest national interdisciplinary research association devoted to the scientific study of education and learning. Founded in 1916, AERA advances knowledge about education, encourages scholarly inquiry related to education, and promotes the use of research to improve education and serve the public good. Find AERA on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Thawing permafrost cools Arctic currents: This might affect fish stocks

2021-04-12
GEOGRAFI A new study by a University of Copenhagen researcher finds that thawing permafrost in Alaska causes colder water in smaller rivers and streams. This surprising consequence of climate change could affect the survival of fish species in the Arctic's offshore waters. Arctic stream The study's researchers discovered that thawing permafrost causes groundwater to run deeper, where it becomes cooler than when it flows near the soil surface. Rising global temperatures are causing frozen Arctic soil - permafrost - to thaw. In a new study, researchers have discovered something surprising: small ...

Exercise promotes healthy living and a healthy liver

Exercise promotes healthy living and a healthy liver
2021-04-12
Tsukuba, Japan - Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common liver disorder worldwide, affecting as much as a quarter of humanity. It is characterized by fat accumulation in liver cells and may progress to inflammation, cirrhosis and liver failure. Now, researchers at the University of Tsukuba reveal the positive effects, beyond the expected weight-loss benefit, of exercise on the liver. NAFLD is associated with unhealthy behaviors such as overeating and a sedentary lifestyle. In Japan 41% of middle-aged men have NAFLD and 25% will progress to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and hepatic dysfunction. Weight reduction is fundamental to NAFLD management. Unfortunately, ...

To combat gum disease, help oral bacteria evolve

2021-04-12
Tsukuba, Japan--Liver disease, from metabolic and bacterial causes, is a growing concern. What connects these dots? The gut, or more specifically, bacteria in the gut. Bacteria that cause inflammation in the mouth are transported through the digestive tract to the gut and liver, where they can cause liver inflammation. Lipopolysaccharides, important structural molecules in some bacteria, act as endotoxins, producing systemic effects that can manifest as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Now, a multidisciplinary team from the University of Tsukuba show that exercise could be used to improve the oral environment in people with NAFLD, potentially leading to a new treatment for the disease. These ...

A tummy invader: This bacterial molecule may be key to fighting stomach cancer

A tummy invader: This bacterial molecule may be key to fighting stomach cancer
2021-04-12
Osaka, Japan - Humans are exposed to many types of bacteria daily, the majority of which are harmless. However, some bacteria are pathogenic, which means they can cause disease. An extremely common pathogenic bacterial infection is Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) in the stomach, where it can lead to chronic inflammation (gastritis), ulcers, and even cancer. A group of researchers from Osaka University have determined a specific molecular mechanism that H. pylori uses to adapt to growing in the human stomach for long periods of time. In a report published in Nature Communications, this group found that a small RNA molecule called HPnc4160 plays a key role in how H. pylori invades the stomach ...

Spit samples uncover genetic risk factors for paediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder

2021-04-12
Researchers at the University of Calgary and The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), in Toronto, have discovered genetic risk factors for OCD that could help pave the way for earlier diagnosis and improved treatment for children and youth. "Our group made the first finding of a genome-wide significant risk gene relevant to childhood OCD," says Dr. Paul Arnold, MD, PhD, co-principal investigator, a professor and director of The Mathison Centre for Mental Health Research & Education at the Cumming School of Medicine. "We've known that OCD runs in families, but we hadn't identified and validated specific genetic risks of OCD symptoms in children and youth until now." The research drew on ...

Machine learning at speed

Machine learning at speed
2021-04-12
Inserting lightweight optimization code in high-speed network devices has enabled a KAUST-led collaboration to increase the speed of machine learning on parallelized computing systems five-fold. This "in-network aggregation" technology, developed with researchers and systems architects at Intel, Microsoft and the University of Washington, can provide dramatic speed improvements using readily available programmable network hardware. The fundamental benefit of artificial intelligence (AI) that gives it so much power to "understand" and interact with the world is the machine-learning step, in which ...

Which US elementary schoolchildren are more likely to be frequently bullied?

2021-04-12
Study: "Which U.S. Elementary Schoolchildren Are More Likely to Be Frequently Bullied?" Authors: Paul Morgan (Pennsylvania State University), Adrienne D. Woods (Pennsylvania State University), Yangyang Wang (Pennsylvania State University), George Farkas (University of California, Irvine), Yoonkyung Oh (University of Texas Health Science Center), Marianne Hillemeier (Pennsylvania State University), Cynthia Mitchell (Pennsylvania State University) This study was presented at the AERA 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting Session: Friends, Enemies, and Bullies: Peer Relationships in Schools Date/Time: Saturday, April 10, 10:40 a.m. - 12:10 p.m. ET Main Findings: Kindergarten children who frequently externalize problem behaviors (i.e., are aggressive or ...

Prehistoric Pacific Coast diets had salmon limits

2021-04-12
PULLMAN, Wash. - Humans cannot live on protein alone - even for the ancient indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest where salmon was once thought to make up as much as 90% of their diet. In a new paper led by Washington State University anthropologist Shannon Tushingham, researchers document the many dietary solutions ancient Pacific Coast people likely employed to avoid "salmon starvation," a toxic and potentially fatal condition brought on by eating too much lean protein. "Salmon was a critical resource for thousands of years throughout the Pacific Rim, but there were a lot of foods that were important," said Tushingham the lead author of the paper published online on April 8 in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. "Native people were ...

Research reveals household water consumption changes during lockdown

2021-04-12
Cranfield University research using data from smart meters has found that household water consumption changed significantly after the start of the COVID-19 lockdown, shifting from predominantly higher usage early in the morning to multiple peaks and continued demand throughout the day. The study used machine learning algorithms to analyse and identify patterns in hourly water consumption data from 11,528 households in the East of England from January to May 2020. The research is the first of its kind in the UK to quantify network consumption and segment households ...

Dismantling white supremacy in public health

Dismantling white supremacy in public health
2021-04-12
The CDC recently declared racism as a threat to public health. But when it comes to dismantling white supremacy in public health, action must be taken beyond issuing statements declaring racism a public health crisis, says Sirry Alang, associate professor of sociology and health, medicine, and society at Lehigh University. A new analysis from Alang and colleagues examines the three core functions of public health -- assessment, policy development and assurance -- and the ten recently revised essential public health services (EPHSs) to offer strategies public health can follow to dismantle white supremacy. The article, "White Supremacy and the Core Functions of Public ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A gender gap in using AI for research

Human-caused fires growing faster than lightning fires in the Western US

Barbeque and grandma’s cookies: New study looks at nostalgia, comfort in food preparation for older adults

The political consequences of undocumented residents in the census

Purity and environmental concern

Branch patterns in trees and art

Researcher develops method to measure blood-brain barrier permeability accurately

SynGAP Research Fund dba cure SYNGAP1 (SRF) announces the release of their SYNGAP1 impact report for 2024

Breakthrough in click chemistry: innovative method revolutionizes drug development

Digital Science announces Catalyst Grant winners, rewarding innovations to safeguard research integrity

How cancer cells trick the immune system by altering mitochondria

Poll: Most U.S. workers with chronic conditions manage them at work, haven’t told employer

Disruption of a single amino acid in a cellular protein makes breast cancer cells behave like stem cells

As more Americans work later in life, poll shows positive health impacts, especially for those over 65

Is the Metaverse a new frontier for human-centric manufacturing?

When qubits learn the language of fiberoptics

The prevalence of older Americans without disabilities increases substantially between 2008 and 2017

New study reveals hidden manic symptoms in one-fourth of schizophrenia patients

Does the universe behave the same way everywhere? Gravitational lenses could help us find out

Majority support moderation on social media platforms

Majority support moderation on social media platforms, global survey shows

Born too late? Climate change may be delaying births

Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon

California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state

Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon

Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit

Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model

Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests

Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results

Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge

[Press-News.org] Paying for whose performance? Teacher incentive pay and the black-white test score gap