Teacher quality and incentives - Theoretical and empirical effects of standards on teacher quality | Munich Center for the Economics of Aging - MEA
Home
Publikationen

Teacher quality and incentives - Theoretical and empirical effects of standards on teacher quality

Inhalt Applying the theory of yardstick competition to the schooling system, we show that it is optimal to have central tests of student achievement and to engage in benchmarking because it raises the quality of teaching. This is true even if teachers’ pay (defined in monetary terms) is not performance related. If teachers value reputation, and if teaching output is measured so that it becomes comparable, teachers will increase their effort. The theory is tested using the German PISA-E data. Use is made of the fact that central exams exist in some federal states of Germany but not in all. The empirical evidence suggests that central exams have a positive effect on the quality of teaching.
Publikationsdetails
csm_csm_juerges_01_55f98aeea6_cbf6f66a51

Hendrik Jürges

Richter Wolfram F.

Schneider Kerstin

2005
Ansehen