In the last two decades of education reform, teachers
have been viewed as central to both the problems of education and their solutions.
Education researchers and school leaders have faced the challenge of motivating teachers
to high levels of performance.
According to sociologists, current school environments
are a reward-scarce setting for professional work and often seem to work against
teachers best efforts to grow professionally and improve student learning (Peterson
1995). Much of teachers work is carried out in self-contained classrooms that
isolate them from the support of their colleagues. Because of this organizational
structure, teachers are difficult to supervise, do not receive regular feedback from
others, and often find it hard to collaborate.
Perhaps as a result of these circumstances, the research
also shows that many good teachers leave teaching in the first three years (Frase 1992).
Clearly, education leaders need to find ways to keep teachers in the profession and keep
them motivated. A motivated teacher, as described here, is one who not only feels
satisfied with his or her job, but also is empowered to strive for excellence and growth
in instructional practice.
This issue looks at teacher motivation and considers how
it has been treated historically, how it is affected by external and internal factors, and
how new directions in professional development, teacher evaluation, new teacher induction
and school reform are currently creating opportunities for more effective teacher
motivation.
Recent History of Teacher
Motivation Measures
In the 1980s, state governments and local school
districts enacted an array of incentive plans designed to recruit, reward, and retain the
best teachers. Merit pay and career ladders were intended to provide financial incentives,
varied work, and advancement opportunities for seasoned teachers. These, along with
across-the-board pay raises, work environment premiums for difficult assignments, and
grants or sabbaticals for research and study, were expected to improve teacher performance
and motivation.
According to Johnson (1986), measures developed to boost
teacher motivation are based on three theories of motivation and productivity:
- Expectancy theory.
Individuals are more likely to strive in their work if there is an anticipated reward that
they value, such as a bonus or a promotion, than if there is none.
- Equity theory. Individuals
are dissatisfied if they are not justly compensated for their efforts and accomplishments.
- Job enrichment theory. Workers
are more productive when their work is varied and challenging.
The first two theories are justification for merit pay
and career ladders, and the third suggests differentiated staffing, use of organizational
incentives, and reform-oriented staff development.
Merit
Pay
The idea of merit pay has a straightforward appeal: it
provides financial rewards for meeting established goals and standards.
Some researchers have warned, however, that merit pay may
change the relationships between teachers and students: poor students may pose threats to
the teachers rating and rewards (Johnson 1986). Another concern is that merit pay
plans may encourage teachers to adjust their teaching down to the program goals, setting
their sights no higher than the standards (Coltham 1972).
Odden and Kelley reviewed recent research and experience
and concluded that individual merit and incentive pay programs do not work and, in fact,
are often detrimental (1997). A number of studies have suggested that merit pay plans
often divide faculties, set teachers against their administrators, are plagued by
inadequate evaluation methods, and may be inappropriate for organizations such as schools
that require cooperative, collaborative work (Lawler 1983).
Differentiated Staffing and
Career Ladders
While merit pay plans attempt to reward excellent teacher
performance with increased financial compensation, career ladders such as mentor teacher
and master teacher programs and differentiated staffing reforms, popular during the 1970s
and 1980s, are designed to enrich work and enlarge teachers responsibilities.
However, many of these programs have faltered for largely
the same reasons that merit pay plans have failed - unanticipated costs, teacher
opposition, inadequate evaluation methods, and dissension (Freiberg 1984).
New Theories of Teacher
Motivation
Merit pay and other incentive policies gained legislative
popularity largely because of their seeming simplicity. They were meant to provide
external incentives - financial rewards, advancement opportunities, workplace variety -
but did not adequately resolve the problem of teacher satisfaction.
Frase (1992) offers one reason why measures relying on
external rewards have been insufficient. There is overwhelming research evidence, he says,
that teachers enter teaching to help young people learn, that their most gratifying reward
is accomplishing this goal, and that the work-related factors most important to teachers
are those that allow them to practice their craft successfully (see also Frase 1989;
Lortie 1976; Mitchell, Ortiz, and Mitchell 1987).
Frase identified two sets of factors that affect
teachers ability to perform effectively: work context factors (the teaching
environment, and work content factors (teaching).
Work Context Factors
Work context factors are those that meet baseline needs.
They include working conditions such as class size, discipline conditions, and
availability of teaching materials; the quality of the principals supervision; and
basic psychological needs such as money, status, and security.
In general, context factors clear the road of the debris
that block effective teaching. In adequate supply, these factors prevent dissatisfaction.
Even the most intrinsically motivated teacher will become discouraged if the salary
doesnt pay the mortgage.
But these factors may not have an extended motivational
effect or lead to improved teaching. For example, a survey conducted by the National
Center for Education Statistics found that teacher compensation, including salary,
benefits, and supplemental income, showed little relation to long-term satisfaction with
teaching as a career (NCES 1997). According to Frase (1992), content variables are the
crucial factor in motivating teachers to high levels of performance.
Work Content Factors
Work content factors are intrinsic to the work itself.
They include opportunities for professional development, recognition, challenging and
varied work, increased responsibility, achievement, empowerment, and authority. Some
researchers argue that teachers who do not feel supported in these states are less
motivated to do their best work in the classroom (NCES 1997).
Data from the National Center for Education Statistics
(1997) confirm that staff recognition, parental support, teacher participation in school
decision making, influence over school policy, and control in the classroom are the
factors most strongly associated with teacher satisfaction. Other research concurs that
most teachers need to have a sense of accomplishment in these sectors if they are to
persevere and excel in the difficult work of teaching.
Frase and Sorenson (1992) studied work content factors in
a questionnaire administered to 73 San Diego School District teachers. They identified
three major areas that relate to teachers job satisfaction.
- Feedback is the factor most
strongly related to job satisfaction, yet teachers typically receive very little accurate
and helpful feedback regarding their teaching.
- Autonomy is strongly related
to job satisfaction for many, but not all, teachers. Autonomy is not necessarily defined
as freedom from interference in the classroom; rather, the majority of teachers view
autonomy as freedom to develop collegial relationships to accomplish tasks.
- Collegiality is also
important for teachers. Collegiality can be expressed through experiencing challenging and
stimulating work, creating school improvement plans, and leading curriculum development
groups. The literature suggests that collegiality is directly linked to effective schools
(Johnson 1986; Glatthorn and Fox 1996), where "teachers valued and participated in
norms of collegiality and continuous improvement (experimentation)" (Little 1982, 1).
New Directions Shaping
Teacher Motivation
School Reform
Since the goal of current school reform efforts is to
improve student achievement, these efforts are well-aligned with the primary motivator of
teachers - the power to help children learn.
Zemmelman, Daniels, and Hyde (1993) write that
teachers attitudes are crucial to the success of in-depth curricular innovation.
Moreover, the beneficial effort of teachers attitudes on education reform is
reciprocal. Some research shows that when principals effectively used shared governance
strategies and participatory management, teachers feel energized and motivated, and their
sense of ownership and empowerment increases (Blase and Blase 1994).
Well-implemented school improvement plans can increase
collegiality and give teachers the satisfaction to committing themselves to school
improvement goals. Some practitioners believe that such rewards may be more effective in
motivating teachers and improving teaching practices than individual, extrinsic rewards
(Johnson 1986).
However, Frase and Sorenson (1992) caution that not every
teacher will respond positively to educational reform approaches. Autonomy for one may be
isolation for another; one teacher may welcome feedback, another may see it as
infringement on his or her professionalism; and while one may welcome collaboration,
another may see it as stressful imposition. Opportunities for participatory management
must be differentiated for each teacher.
Professional Development
The interrelation of teacher motivation and school reform
efforts has also been addressed through the issue of staff development. Traditionally,
staff development has meant encouraging teachers to enhance pedagogical skills and
knowledge of subject matter through advanced academic study at the graduate level;
providing funding for conferences and workshops; and developing other training
opportunities, including inservice programs.
However, many leading school reformers have called for
new forms of professional development. Lieberman (1995) argues for a "radical
rethinking" of professional development that encourages teachers growth. She
believes that teachers must have opportunities to try out new practices by taking new
roles and creating a culture of inquiry.
Darling-Hammond and McLaughlin (1995) suggest that staff
development also means "providing occasions for teachers to reflect critically on
their practice and to fashion new knowledge and beliefs about content, pedagogy, and
learners" (p. 597).
Monahan (1996) describes a new concept, Comprehensive
Professional Development (CPD), that focuses on strategies for facilitating teacher growth
through professional dialogue with colleagues, collaborative curriculum development, peer
supervision, peer coaching, and action research leading to schoolwide change.
Unfortunately, he reports, principals and teachers still regard CPD like activities for
continuing professional development to be less important than traditional methods. Monahan
suggests embedding strategies like collaborative curriculum design, peer
supervision/review, and portfolio analysis within the tenure review process, and providing
incentives such as increased preparation time for peer collaboration and resources for
action research.
Problem-based school development (PBSD) is an approach
that takes staff development and school form to the next level by creating a professional
community capable of sustaining longterm educational reform (Clarke et al. 1998). Inspired
by a 10-year partnership between the University of Vermont and school districts, PBSD
consists of teams that consider problems, search for new information, and organize local
inquiry projects in their respective schools. "The drive to develop and test
solutions to real problems makes PBSD an authentic learning experience, managed by
independent team of teachers who teach themselves by working together" (Clarke et al.
1998, x).
Even traditional staff development models such as
workshops can be motivational if they give teachers control by asking them to set their
own agenda at the beginning of a meeting or inservice, asking for their analysis of
problems in the school or in childrens learning, and respecting their answers
(Zemmelman, Daniels, and Hyde 1993). Many teachers respond with great energy when they are
immersed in new perspectives on their own teaching and learning abilities and provided
with opportunities to express themselves honestly.
The National Foundation for the Improvement of Education
(1996) offers several recommendations for establishing professional development programs
that result in teacher growth and motivation.
- Find the time to build professional
development into the life of schools. Reorganize the school day to enable teachers
to work together as well as individually, both daily and weekly, and throughout the year.
Redefine the teaching job to include blocks of extended time for teachers
professional development.
- Help teachers to assume
responsibility for their own professional development, based on an analysis of the needs
of students in their own schools. Professional development goals, standards for
student learning, and standards for professional practice should be decided locally by the
school community of teachers, administrators, and parents. In addition, teachers and
administrators should collaborate in each district to create peer assistance and review to
nurture the practice of all teachers.
- Work with the community to provide
high-quality professional development. At the local level, parents, business, and
the community should continue to help schools set the vision for students success
and support teachers learning. Teachers organizations should collaborate with
districts to invite local leaders to join in conducting an inventory of available local
resources and institutions for teachers professional growth, including higher
education, business, cultural groups, and other relevant agencies.
Induction and Support of New
Teachers
New teachers enter the profession for intrinsic rewards,
but the negative effect of extrinsic conditions may overwhelm them. They face new and
difficult challenges: classroom management and discipline, adjustment to the physical
demands of teaching, managing instructional tasks, and sacrificing leisure time. Without
proper support and aid, a new teachers problems can grow worse.
Key ideas for supporting new teachers include:
- Relocation and acclimation
assistance can help the new teacher with locating housing, can share information
about the community, and can introduce the recruit to other new teachers.
- Mentor/buddy teachers break
the isolation, show the new teacher the ropes and help them reflect on a days
experience and redirect efforts for next day. In addition, these experienced teachers can
transmit instructional, planning, and/or management skills the novices lack skills that
can help new teachers grow professionally as they adjust to the realities of teaching.
(Frase 1992). In addition, the mentor teachers themselves gain the satisfaction of sharing
their knowledge and experience and helping their new colleagues grow professionally.
Teacher Evaluation
Recognition and feedback have been cited as important
motivators for teachers, so it would seem that evaluation is an obvious vehicle for using
these incentives to direct the teachers on the path towards professional growth and
improvement (Frase 1992).
However, the most common practices in evaluation are
limited in their capacity to improve teaching, and chiefly serve as monitors of minimal
competency for retention (Loup et al. 1996).
Peterson (1995) calls for a new direction in teacher
evaluation that will bring better results more allied to the goals of comprehensive
professional development and the goals of education reform:
- Emphasize the function of teacher evaluation to seek out,
document, and acknowledge the good teaching that already exists.
- Place the teacher at the center of the evaluation
activity. Ask the teacher to consider his or her duties, responsibilities, contributions
and outcomes, and direct the evaluation from that point.
- Use multiple and variable sources, such as student and
parent surveys, peer review of materials, logs of professional activity, and pupil
test-score data.
- Use the results of a teacher evaluation to encourage
personal professional dossiers, publicize aggregated results, and support teacher
promotion systems.
A Final Word
Discovering what matters to teachers and how best to
motivate them for sustained and improved performance is a complicated challenge. Extrinsic
rewards that have been tried in the past have generally not produced the desired results.
Research and experience show that teachers are most likely to value intrinsic rewards such
as self-respect, responsibility, and a sense of accomplishment.
One clear finding of the research points in a hopeful
direction - helping young people to learn is the central goal of both those who enter the
teaching profession and those who are working to reform public education. Therefore, new
directions in participatory school improvement, comprehensive and meaningful staff
development, and supportive teacher evaluation hold great promise for improving
teachers professional motivation.
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"Motivating Teachers to Improve Instruction"
was reprinted in its entirety from Information for School Leaders prepared for the
Association of California School Administrators (http://www.acsa.org) members by the Educational Research Service, 2000 Clarendon
Boulevard, Arlington VA 22201 (http://www.ers.org).
Source: NAEN Vol. 15, No.1,
July/August 1999
(North American Association of Educational Negotiators (NAEN) http://www.naen.org)
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