Teacher Quality 2.0 explores the role of the teacher and how her place is evolving with new technology, policies, and reform efforts. This essential book helps administrators evaluate teachers and ensure teaching outcomes are met.
Will today's education policies fit tomorrow's schools?
In schools across the country, educators are experimenting with new models for recruiting, training, and supporting teachers. They are using strategies like differentiated roles and the use of technology to deploy teachers' talents to best effect. However, most of the policy measures currently under consideration to ensure teacher quality are designed with a one-size-fits-all approach that threatens to constrain these cutting-edge efforts.
Frederick M. Hess and Michael Q. McShane, the editors of
Teacher Quality 2.0, have convened a diverse array of contributors to examine promising innovations in teacher preparation, compensation, and evaluation. Together, they investigate whether current efforts to improve the quality of our nation's teachers will be able to keep up with these innovations--or, worse, will hold them back.
Teacher Quality 2.0 is a volume in the Educational Innovation series.
"Recent changes in the state and federal stance toward teaching have been nothing short of a policy revolution. But revolutions in policy do not solve all of the underlying problems, and they create new problems of their own.
Teacher Quality 2.0 provides useful insights and new ideas on where the teacher quality revolution needs to go next." --
Douglas N. Harris, associate professor of economics and director of The Education Research Alliance for New Orleans, Tulane University
"Everyone talks about education reform, but systemic thinking about reform is lacking--until now.
Teacher Quality 2.0 provides rich historical context, pulls together successful elements of current reforms, and then pioneers new, systemic ways of thinking about the third rail of education--teacher quality. A must-read for anyone serious about real and lasting reform for all kids." --
Rick Ogston, CEO, Carpe Diem Schools
Frederick M. Hess is a resident scholar and director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI).
Michael Q. McShane is a research fellow in education policy studies at AEI.