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roland fryer returns

Study: $75M teacher pay initiative did not improve achievement

New York City’s heralded $75 million experiment in teacher incentive pay — deemed “transcendent” when it was announced in 2007 — did not increase student achievement at all, a new study by the Harvard economist Roland Fryer concludes.

“If anything,” Fryer writes of schools that participated in the program, “student achievement declined.” Fryer and his team used state math and English test scores as the main indicator of academic achievement.

Schools could distribute the bonus money based on individual teachers' results, but most did not. Most teachers received the average bonus of $3,000.

The program, which was first funded by private foundations and then by taxpayer dollars, also had no impact on teacher behaviors that researchers measured. These included whether teachers stayed at their schools or in the city school district and how teachers described their job satisfaction and school quality in a survey.

The program had only a “negligible” effect on a list of other measures that includes student attendance, behavioral problems, Regents exam scores, and high school graduation rates, the study found.

The experiment targeted 200 high-need schools and 20,000 teachers between the 2007-2008 and 2009-2010 school years. The Bloomberg administration quietly discontinued it last year, turning back on the mayor’s early vow to expand the program quickly.

The program handed out bonuses based on the schools’ results on the city’s progress report cards. The report cards grade schools based primarily on how much progress they make in improving students’ state test scores. A so-called “compensation team” at each school decided how to distribute the money — a maximum of $3,000 per teachers union member, if the school completely met its target, and $1,500 per union member if the school improved its report card score by 75%.

The deal was seen as a landmark in 2007 when Mayor Bloomberg announced it with then-United Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten by his side. “I am a capitalist, and I am in favor of incentives for individual people,” Bloomberg said then, while Weingarten emphasized that schools could decide to distribute bonuses evenly among educators. She called the program “transcendent.”

In his study, published as a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, Fryer writes that researchers were surprised to see that schools that won bonuses overwhelmingly decided to distribute the cash fairly evenly among teachers. More than 80 percent of schools that won bonuses gave the same dollar amount to almost all of the eligible educators.

Researchers were also surprised to find that middle school students actually seemed to be worse off. After three years attending schools involved in the project, middle school students’ math and English test scores declined by a statistically significant amount compared to students attending similar schools that were not part of the project.

The study adds to a research literature on teacher incentive pay that is decidedly more lukewarm than much of the popular conversation about teacher pay. Fryer, himself a strong early advocate of experimenting with financial incentives to improve student achievement, calls the literature “ambivalent.” While programs in developing countries such as India and Kenya have had positive effects, few teacher incentive pay efforts in the United States have been deemed effective.

Almost all schools gave nearly all of their teachers the same sized bonus.

Nevertheless, a person’s position on teacher merit pay has become a litmus test for her reform credentials in many education circles. During his campaign, President Obama used his support for merit pay — traditionally scorned by teachers unions — as evidence that he was willing to challenge traditional Democratic Party thinking. Now, the Obama administration has boosted support for the Teacher Incentive Fund, a program that funds local experiments in incentive pay.

What explains the discrepancy between programs in the U.S. and elsewhere? Fryer rejects several explanations. He argues that the $3,000 bonus (just 4 percent of the average annual teacher salary in the program) was not too small to make a difference, citing examples of effective programs in India and Kenya that gave out bonuses that were an even smaller proportion of teachers’ salaries. He also rejects the possibility that schools’ decisions to use group, rather than individual, incentives was the problem, citing a 2002 study of a program in Israel that used group incentives.

Instead, he says the challenge is that American plans aren’t clear about what teachers can do to receive the reward. In New York City, the bonuses didn’t come simply if students’ test scores rose; the test scores had to rise in comparison to a group of similar schools. So did other measures considered by the city report card, including the surveys that ask students, teachers, and parents for subjective opinions about schools.

Fryer argues that the complexity made it “difficult, if not impossible, for teachers to know how much effort they should exert or how that effort influences student achievement.”

  • Pogue

    What a surprise.

  • bkteacher

    The DOE did not have to pay for a Researcher to come to the conclusion that the teacher bonuses are meaningless.

    Any number of teachers could have drawn this conclusion for the DOE.

    The majority of teachers are not motivated by bonuses. They teach because they want to teach, not because someone is offering a modest bonus.

    One day the DOE will learn that all of their bogus management tricks are meaningless. If you want to motivate teachers and improve student performance, then reduce class size and give students school spaces that they can be proud of.

    There is no other way. Sorry DOE.

  • Smith

    A very interesting video featuring Daniel Pink that might explain why this didn’t work.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc

  • Larry Littlefield

    The whole “merit pay plan” was just symbolism, meant to distract from what really mattered — having teachers retire years earlier, retroactively, and destroying the schools to pay for it. It was meaningless PR, and I said so at the time.

    http://www.r8ny.com/blog/larry_littlefield/the_generational_war_continues_the_uft_allows_bloomberg_to_score_political_points_as_they_jointly_destroy

    Download the attachment to the post below to see the whole history of this deal. Read the articles and the future of education in NYC becomes clear.

    http://www.r8ny.com/blog/larry_littlefield/who_is_the_hell_is_scott_walker_and_why_did_the_cheeseheads_vote_for_him.html

    The press releases and press were all about merit pay, but the Edwize blog gave the real story. It was about securing earlier retirement at a time that everyone else is facing diminished retirement. At the cost of an irrevocable disaster for the schools.

  • I noticed that…

    To me it is still the bonus program was ill-gotten money because the state’s test scores were not reliable. They were inflated, and credit recovery was rampant. In August 2010 the gig was up. The test-score balloon burst! And, all the bonus program was suspended.

    When you link test scores or teacher performance to money, someone, eventually, is going to pay for the truth.

  • http://nyceducator.com/ NYC Educator

    Doubtless these results will inspire Bill Gates to have Arne Duncan replicate this program on a national basis.

  • Anonymous

    This is about the sixth study in a row that shows no positive effects from merit pay. When are the corporate type privateers — and the US govt. — going to give up on this wasteful program?

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  • Anonymous

    So can we stop talking about merit pay now? Please?

  • Ed

    I was part of this bonus program. I never thought about 3k when working with my students. However, I do believe that merit pay can work. Its all about % of salary. If 50% of a teacher’s salary was a bonus (like how finance bonuses work), it would definitely change the way teachers teach. But 3k when you make 60k or for some teachers upwards of 90k-100k, won’t make a difference.

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  • Christina Holden Shea

    It’s all about getting back to teaching the basic three “r”s in elementary levels so we can go on to calculus and physics reading comprehension in the later years. My three kids have been the victims of “problem solving” and other cleverly named garbage that passes for an education. I especially love the the ability to have a second chance to correct everything after a failing grade. Ooh the working world applauds that one! Lets bring reality and real skills back to the schools please. “Modern” education (the New Math) screwed me and my children. Don’t even think about my Grandchildren!

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  • michael

    Dictator Bloomberg’s empire is falling apart pretty fast. All that money spent on those programs that failed, test scores that were inflated,were a waste of taxpayer money. That money could have been spent on reducing class size by adding more teachers.

  • Epnev5

    One fault is how tests cannot measure growth of a student too far behind to even take the test. If a child is 3 years behind in reading, how can you test that child using a test he/she cannot read? Test to show growth instead of “one test for all.” Merit pay is useless if the testing material is faulty.

  • Michael M. (parent still)

    I reject the concluding sentence. The author could have just as easily concluded the teachers DO know what matters in the metrics, but there simply isn’t the direct If-Then linkage in the classroom that the incentivizers THINK there is waiting to be found. And to dismiss this ambiguity as a matter of “effort” indicates the author’s prejudices.

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  • Neil Friedman3

    Teachers should be given latitude to teach, Teachers need meaningful professional development. Teachers should, like their peers in other countries, have time in their daily programs to meet with their colleagues to; review curriculum, plan lessons, and share information about the students in their classes. The issue isn’t the extra money. the issue is how we use the time we have with our students and our peers.

  • Will

    Given the fact that the 200 schools involved in the program were high-need, I would assume that they were subject to a high rate of staff turnover prior to and maybe even during the study. After all, Mayor Bloomberg tells us that these same schools would suffer the most under the existing LIFO structure for the teacher layoffs that are coming soon because they have more new teachers.

    But since these schools had lots of the newer teachers that Bloomberg wants to retain, why didn’t the schools do better even without a bonus plan?

    Another study is called for: Pay very experienced teachers bonuses to work at the schools and monitor results. It is my understanding that experienced teachers don’t really want to work in those schools, thus the high rate of staff turnover. Perhaps a significant bonus might serve to get the experience where it is needed most.

  • jenniecaline

    But isn’t it a little offensive to think that most teachers are just giving, let’s say, 75%, and they would give that other 25% if they were being pushed to in order to earn a living wage? I assume you’re not suggesting changing the base pay (like what they want to do with merit pay here in FL)…I teach French and my goal every single day is for my kids to learn to speak, read and write in French. My goal is not for them to pass some stupid standardized test written by someone who may or may not even be using the textbook we’re supposed to use as a base. But if 50% of my salary depended on my kids doing well on that test, then maybe I’d spend more time drilling them and doing practice tests like those who teach state-test subjects have to do already (by mandate). I don’t think that would make me a better teacher at all…

  • Dr. D. Jackson

    As a culture and educational system, New York City has demonstrated that student outcomes, including achievement, are not at the top of the list of priorities; certainly not higher than teacher benefits and protection. I was astounded to discover that historically, the achievement gap is wider in New York City than it is in Mississippi. Those who doubt this should check NAEP data through the 1990s.

  • Chaddy5

    . . .and kids that punch someone should be arraigned on assault charges, kids who don’t do homework should be “fired” from school, and schools should choose which kids to enroll, right? wake up! School is NOT the same as adult life. Do you really think that kids who don’t learn concepts should be refused the opportunity to learn? It’s a good thing that you are not a teacher!

  • Suzlux

    Hello out there. Fryer is the same guy behind cash incentives for grades, attendence and behavior. Hmmmmmm

  • suzlux

    Regarding merit pay, where is the incentive to work with special needs students like Epnev5 mentions? I’ll shed my co-teachers and in-class support sections, pick up higher level students and not worry. As a veteran teacher (yes, experience counts in the classroom, just like it does on an operating table) I’m good with these kids but not at the risk of losing my job.

  • Setlifl

    I thought it was interesting that the schools chose to spread the bonuses across all curricular areas and not just give the bonuses to the teachers whose test scores rose. In NC we only have 5 subject areas that are state-tested. Therefore, incentive pay would only effect about 15 out of 90 teachers. But the rest of the school supports all the students.

  • Lisa

    I think the “3 R’s” are the basics of education, but should not eliminate the arts for cultural and diversive thinking. I think that if a child can’t read by the 3rd grade, (s)he needs more remediation – and quickly. How can these children make it to high school and not read and expect to graduate?

  • teacherincharlotte

    The main result of these incentives is to increase the stress level and distract energy from the primary objective of teaching the subject, rather than preping for a test, which is quite a different matter. I would be intersted to knkow where Fryer sends his kids, and I would bet money that the school he would choose for his children would be a traditional school.

  • idyllhorse

    i receive merit pay…and it does NOT make a difference on how I go about my craft..I would much rather be acknowledged in other ways…books to add to my library…workshops….material for the classroom..for parent programs…While I am not rich, I do not feel money is the answer….STUDIES ON JOB SATISFACTION SUPPORT THIS

  • Shelly46

    Perhaps the problem is that teachers really do not know what to in order to change outcomes. Offering me incentives are not likely to change my performance also unless one assumes I was not working hard enough let alone smart enough as implied in my first point. Throwing money at problems fo which we don’t have solutions will not change things.

  • MLP

    It occurs to me that schools can’t be run like a business. Our clients are people not inanimate objects that can be sent back to the factory is they aren’t up to par! The majority of teachers got into the profession because they wanted to make a difference. Lord knows it wasn’t to get rich!

  • ncteacher

    I work in NC and our district has state tests for many subject areas. Are you including HS? I teach in Elementary school where they currently only test 3.

  • Klock in Chicago

    The idea of merit pay includes an underlying assumption that teachers are operating at well below their capacity: in other words, merit pay should only be expected to work if teachers are, in fact, mostly being lazy, and are capable of much better work simply by applying themselves.

    That assumption is pretty clearly embedded in the US’ current public image of teachers. My own experience as an educator, however, indicates that such teachers are actually a minority of the active field of teachers. Most of the teachers I work with are working pretty near their capacity (and so couldn’t be realistically expected to raise their performance in response to any sort of incentive…)

    Instead, if we want to improve the quality of teaching, we need to find ways of increasing teacher capacity!

  • Markspilman

    Not surprising… the reward for teachers is not money, but rather the success of his/her students. When we try to trick teachers into caring more about money and less about the students, this is what happens. Yes we all need money to survive, but teachers do not get into the business to become rich.

  • ncteacher

    We do strategic staffing in NC where high performing teachers are invited to teach in high poverty schools, even if you are working in a high poverty school. They offer an extra $20,000 over 3 years. You have to commit to 3 years. The schools have had good results because they also move effective principals into those schools but the people I know who went hated it. too many behavior problems. worse than regular schools

  • ncteacher

    They are trying hard to change our system here in NC. They want to model us off of Denver. It is going to be bad if the results of all these other districts is correct, which I think it is.

  • BiG Al

    It is nice to get confirmation on what we teachers already know.

  • FloridaTeacher

    As a teacher it’s true that I didn’t get into teaching for the money; however, I do need to earn a living. Since I began teaching in Florida 10 years ago, my raises have just barely surpassed inflation. To never get much of a raise, even when you’re learning and growing so much during your first 10 years in a profession, doesn’t seem to match the way that professionals in other careers are compensated.

  • Dan

    OK, let me get this straight: teachers teach for love of kids; money incentives are of no interest to good teachers. Why, then, do teachers still “withhold services” for more pay and benefits? Why are teachers storming state capitals to scream about having to pay a bit of their pension contributions? “We just love kids sounds” hollow. Dan

  • erisvet

    When will Obama administration and all other smaller state administrations understand that teaching is an art, not a production line? You can rise productivity on a conveyor line, but children are not items on a production line!!!

  • Golfdude

    Really? The last sentence about how much effort to exert implies there are different “effort levels”…how about, like most of us on the job, maximum effort?

  • Jodi5678

    What I wouldn’t give to have the students that the teachers have in Kenya and India, where students are taught at home that getting an education is a vital part of getting ahead and that teachers are to be valued and honored. When they give parents and students merit pay, I think things might change. Unfortunately, our legislators would not pursue this because those folks are voters.

  • Jodi5678

    We have often been told that we couldn’t be paid more because the district/state were paying for the pension. We do love kids. Would you do your job for free or for less than you make now?

  • friendskin

    3000 dollars is not much of an incentive. It is 16 dollars a day (180-day school year). I wonder if a 30,000 dollar incentive would inspire change.

  • friendskin

    3000 dollars is not much of an incentive. It is 16 dollars a day (180-day school year). I wonder if a 30,000 dollar incentive would inspire change.

  • DKJM29

    Teachers may love teaching and kids, but they too have bills to pay.

  • Joel

    How odd that standardized tests are used to measure teacher effectiveness. Is that what Bloomberg, Gates, Duncan, Fryer, Weingarten, etc., want us to teach — how to take a test?? Is that going to improve student readiness to enter an intellectually demanding workplace? Do teachers really go into teaching for the money? The teachers I work with earn a living wage, and that’s what teachers need. Beyond that, the incentive is all about the teaching–connecting with students and seeing them learn and think, not “succeed” on a standardize test. I cannot think of any teacher I work with who would be motivated by $3000 to take time out of teaching their subject to teach to a test. The teachers I know are already giving 100 % because it is what they like to do. More money will not change that.

  • Guest

    And a class size that is reasonable to support students’ learning to think critically, speak responsibly and persuasively, write for an audience, read with sensitivity…

  • Guest

    Experience doesn’t guarantee success when an experienced and successful teacher changes schools–after 17 years as a very successful teacher in a small rural district, when I moved to a large suburban school I spent a year feeling like a total failure, and being barely adequate, before I figured out why everything that had been working for for me in one setting had to be revised. Once I did, success again.

  • Starfish Teacher

    Teachers can only control so much; We are only one part of the equation…the rest of the equation is the students, how they are raised, and administrative support. Teaching is NOT like other businesses where if the incoming product or raw material is poor or damaged, you can throw it out and start over to be successful. Offering incentives suggests that education can be run like other businesses…it’s like saying “if we can only ‘fix’ the teachers or make them do better, test scores will rise”. Kids from low-income and poverty areas come into the classrooms with multiple problems that hinder successful learning and teaching. Even “Super Teacher” can’t fix all those problems and get kids passed those problems so that real learning can take place…especially when parents can’t or won’t do their part and when administration doesn’t offer consistent and effective support for teachers and students when trouble arises (ie. counselors in primary schools, detention rooms for disruptive students, etc). Until we find ways to consistently target the long-term social and emotional issues of families from low-income or poverty (ie. developing parenting skills, motivating students to stay focused on
    their education, holding parents accountable, keeping crime at bay so kids can feel safe to
    be focused on learning, etc) then we will never overcome the adversity teachers face in the
    classroom and thus the resulting low test scores and lack of educational growth in our kids.

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