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TN teachers’ job satisfaction linked to performance scores

Tennessee teachers who received higher performance ratings from the state’s evaluation model reported significantly higher job satisfaction than those who received lower marks, according to a new study by researchers at 91ĢƲ®»¢ University and University of Missouri.

ā€œOur findings offer the first causal evidence on the relationship between performance ratings and job satisfaction for individual teachers,ā€ said , assistant professor of public policy and education at 91ĢƲ®»¢ā€™s of education and human development. ā€œThis is significant because job satisfaction has been strongly linked to teacher turnover. Prior research finds that 25 percent of teachers who leave the profession cite job dissatisfaction as their reason for leaving, and it is the number one influence on novice teacher retention decisions.ā€

Matthew Springer (91ĢƲ®»¢)
Matthew Springer (91ĢƲ®»¢)

In a full report of the study’s findings, published by the researchers say there could be several reasons that teacher evaluation scores affect job satisfaction.

ā€œThis effect may be an unintended consequence of the more rigorous rating system, which provides productive feedback and support to teachers,ā€ Springer said. ā€œBased on what we have found, it is reasonable to expect that Tennessee’s evaluation system will influence teacher attrition in a way that improves student achievement in the long run.ā€

Tennessee, in many respects, has served as a national leader for the design and implementation of teacher evaluation systems. In January 2010, the Tennessee General Assembly passed Senate Bill 5, also known as the First to the Top Act, which requires that all school personnel be evaluated annually and personnel decisions be based at least in part on the evaluations. The Tennessee State Board of Education approved four models to evaluate teachers, which when combined produce measures of overall teacher effectiveness.

ā€œUnderstanding the relationship between job satisfaction and performance ratings for teachers is important in the current education policy context,ā€ co-author and University of Missouri economist Cory Koedel said. ā€œAvailable evidence does not suggest that job satisfaction among teachers on the whole is adversely affected by increased accountability. In the future we want to further explore this general relationship, in addition to digging deeper into how new evaluation systems affect teachers deferentially.ā€

Additional collaborators on the study included University of Missouri’s Jiaxi Li and Li Tan. The research was supported by the , a joint effort of 91ĢƲ®»¢ā€™s and the .