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Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality

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Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality. / Francis, Becky; Hodgen, Jeremy; Craig, Nicole et al.
In: Teaching and Teacher Education, Vol. 77, 31.01.2019, p. 183-192.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Francis, B, Hodgen, J, Craig, N, Taylor, B, Archer, L, Mazenod, A, Tereshchenko, A & Connolly, P 2019, 'Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality', Teaching and Teacher Education, vol. 77, pp. 183-192. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001

APA

Francis, B., Hodgen, J., Craig, N., Taylor, B., Archer, L., Mazenod, A., Tereshchenko, A., & Connolly, P. (2019). Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality. Teaching and Teacher Education, 77, 183-192. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001

Vancouver

Francis B, Hodgen J, Craig N, Taylor B, Archer L, Mazenod A et al. Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality. Teaching and Teacher Education. 2019 Jan 31;77:183-192. Epub 2018 Oct 11. doi: 10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001

Author

Francis, Becky ; Hodgen, Jeremy ; Craig, Nicole et al. / Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping : The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality. In: Teaching and Teacher Education. 2019 ; Vol. 77. pp. 183-192.

Bibtex

@article{c8838343e62c4cdcbd65526a50d7cdf5,
title = "Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping: The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality",
abstract = "Prior research suggests that where pupils are 'tracked', better qualified, more experienced teachers tend to be deployed to higher attainment groups, at the expense of pupils in lower tracks. This is especially pertinent from a social justice perspective, given consistent findings in the UK that pupils from socially-disadvantaged backgrounds are over-represented in low attainment groups. This article draws on data from 380 teachers, drawn from 126 secondary schools in England, and interviews with 118 Year 7 students, to examine whether these findings from prior research in the US and elsewhere extend to the case of England in the present day. Findings show some evidence of these inequitable tendencies: those teachers highly qualified in their taught subject were less likely to be allocated to low sets. We also examine whether an intervention designed to encourage more equitable distribution had any impact on practice, and find tentative evidence that deployment in intervention schools had been impacted in relation to teacher subject qualifications. Pupils believed that teachers of higher sets had higher expectations and standards of behaviour, whereas those for low sets were seen to be unhelpfully indulgent, indicating a need for research attention to pedagogy and tracking. Findings are analysed from a social justice perspective, with interest in the consequences of inequitable distribution of teachers for the reproduction of social inequality.",
author = "Becky Francis and Jeremy Hodgen and Nicole Craig and Becky Taylor and Louise Archer and Anna Mazenod and Antonina Tereshchenko and Paul Connolly",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001",
language = "English",
volume = "77",
pages = "183--192",
journal = "Teaching and Teacher Education",
issn = "0742-051X",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Teacher “quality” and attainment grouping

T2 - The role of within-school teacher deployment in social and education inequality

AU - Francis, Becky

AU - Hodgen, Jeremy

AU - Craig, Nicole

AU - Taylor, Becky

AU - Archer, Louise

AU - Mazenod, Anna

AU - Tereshchenko, Antonina

AU - Connolly, Paul

PY - 2019/1/31

Y1 - 2019/1/31

N2 - Prior research suggests that where pupils are 'tracked', better qualified, more experienced teachers tend to be deployed to higher attainment groups, at the expense of pupils in lower tracks. This is especially pertinent from a social justice perspective, given consistent findings in the UK that pupils from socially-disadvantaged backgrounds are over-represented in low attainment groups. This article draws on data from 380 teachers, drawn from 126 secondary schools in England, and interviews with 118 Year 7 students, to examine whether these findings from prior research in the US and elsewhere extend to the case of England in the present day. Findings show some evidence of these inequitable tendencies: those teachers highly qualified in their taught subject were less likely to be allocated to low sets. We also examine whether an intervention designed to encourage more equitable distribution had any impact on practice, and find tentative evidence that deployment in intervention schools had been impacted in relation to teacher subject qualifications. Pupils believed that teachers of higher sets had higher expectations and standards of behaviour, whereas those for low sets were seen to be unhelpfully indulgent, indicating a need for research attention to pedagogy and tracking. Findings are analysed from a social justice perspective, with interest in the consequences of inequitable distribution of teachers for the reproduction of social inequality.

AB - Prior research suggests that where pupils are 'tracked', better qualified, more experienced teachers tend to be deployed to higher attainment groups, at the expense of pupils in lower tracks. This is especially pertinent from a social justice perspective, given consistent findings in the UK that pupils from socially-disadvantaged backgrounds are over-represented in low attainment groups. This article draws on data from 380 teachers, drawn from 126 secondary schools in England, and interviews with 118 Year 7 students, to examine whether these findings from prior research in the US and elsewhere extend to the case of England in the present day. Findings show some evidence of these inequitable tendencies: those teachers highly qualified in their taught subject were less likely to be allocated to low sets. We also examine whether an intervention designed to encourage more equitable distribution had any impact on practice, and find tentative evidence that deployment in intervention schools had been impacted in relation to teacher subject qualifications. Pupils believed that teachers of higher sets had higher expectations and standards of behaviour, whereas those for low sets were seen to be unhelpfully indulgent, indicating a need for research attention to pedagogy and tracking. Findings are analysed from a social justice perspective, with interest in the consequences of inequitable distribution of teachers for the reproduction of social inequality.

U2 - 10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001

DO - 10.1016/j.tate.2018.10.001

M3 - Journal article

VL - 77

SP - 183

EP - 192

JO - Teaching and Teacher Education

JF - Teaching and Teacher Education

SN - 0742-051X

ER -