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This project was supported with funds from the the National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education.
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COMMITTEE ON NATIONAL STATISTICS
BURTON H. SINGER (Chair),
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University
NORMAN M. BRADBURN,
National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago
MARTIN H. DAVID,
Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin, Madison
ANGUS S. DEATON,
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
NOREEN GOLDMAN,
Office of Population Research, Princeton University
LOUIS GORDON,
Department of Mathematics, University of Southern California
JOEL B. GREENHOUSE,
Department of Statistics, Carnegie Mellon University
ROBERT M. HAUSER,
Department of Sociology. University of Wisconsin, Madison
GRAHAM KALTON,
Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan
WILLIAM A. MORRILL,
Mathtech, Inc., Princeton, New Jersey
DOROTHY P. RICE,
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco
JOHN E. ROLPH,
The RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California
DONALD B. RUBIN,
Department of Statistics, Harvard University
MIRON L. STRAF, Director
Contents
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INTRODUCTORY REMARKS |
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CONFERENCE BACKGROUND |
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THE NCES PERSPECTIVE |
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CHOOSING TEACHERS AND CHOOSING TO TEACH |
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SUMMARY OF CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS |
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STATE DATA ON TEACHER SUPPLY, EQUITY, AND QUALIFICATIONS |
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DEVELOPING A REGIONAL DATA BASE ON EDUCATORS IN THE NORTHEAST: PROBLEMS, PRODUCTS, AND PROSPECTS |
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Utility of Administrative Data for Educator Supply, Demand, and Quality Models |
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OVERVIEW AND DISCUSSION OF NATIONAL DATA BASES RELEVANT TO TEACHER SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND QUALITY |
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WHO WILL TEACH? |
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DISCUSSION: TEACHER SUPPLY AND DEMAND RESEARCH WITH STATE DATA BASES |
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DIRECTIONS FOR THE FUTURE |
Contributing Authors
STEPHEN M. BARRO is president of SMB Economic Research, Inc., Washington, D.C. Since earning a Ph.D. in economics from Stanford University in 1974, he has conducted research in education finance, teacher supply and demand, and comparative education, as well as in other topics. His monograph entitled Cost-of-Education Differentials Across States was published in 1991.
ROLF BLANK is project director, State Education Assessment Center, Council of Chief State School Officers. He has conducted research in education and program evaluation on such topics as magnet schools and high school organization and management. He is currently directing research on systems of indicators of science and mathematics education in the fifty states. He earned a Ph.D. in sociology from Florida State University in 1976.
ERLING E. BOE served as codirector of the conference. A professor of education at the University of Pennsylvania, he has conducted research on the role of incentives in behavior and in psychometrics, as well as on other topics. He is currently investigating teacher supply, retention, transfer, and attrition topics with national data bases and state policies designed to restructure public education. He received a Ph.D. degree in experimental psychology from Washington State University in 1962.
CHRISTOPHER T. CROSS is executive director-education initiative, The Business Roundtable, Washington, D.C. Previously he was assistant secretary for educational research and improvement in the U.S. Department of
Education. As such, he was responsible for the department's efforts in statistics gathering, assessment, research and development, and information dissemination. Cross's other prior experiences include serving as vice chairman of Macro Systems, Inc., a Maryland-based professional services company; president of University Research Corporation, a Maryland-based professional services research and information services company; Republican staff director and senior education consultant for the U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on Education and Labor: and deputy assistant secretary for legislation (education) in the U.S. Department of Health. Education and Welfare (1970–1973). His publications and presentations include an elementary/secondary education data redesign project for the National Center for Education Statistics in 1985.
EMERSON J. ELLIOTT is acting commissioner of education statistics, U.S. Department of Education, and director of the National Center for Education Statistics. A federal agency administrator and policy analyst, he headed the Department of Education planning and evaluation office and issues analysis staff and directed a Congressionally mandated school finance study. He was the first deputy director of the National Institute of Education and has headed the Institute for Educational Leadership educational staff seminar. Prior experience with the U.S. Office of Management and Budget included serving as chief of the Education Branch and a deputy chief of the Human Resources Programs Division. He received an M.P.A. from the University of Michigan.
DOROTHY M. GILFORD served as codirector of the conference. Formerly, she served as director of the National Center for Education Statistics and as director of the mathematical sciences division of the Office of Naval Research; currently she is director of the National Research Council's Board on International Comparative Studies in Education. Her interests are in research program administration, the organization of statistical systems, education administration, education statistics, and human resource statistics. A fellow of the American Statistical Association, she has served as vice president of the association and chairman of its committee on fellows. She is a member of the International Statistics Institute. She received B.S. and M.S. degrees in mathematics from the University of Washington.
GUS W. HAGGSTROM is a statistical consultant at RAND. Since earning a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Illinois in 1964, he has conducted research in education and human resources, statistical methods and research design, marriage and the family, as well as in other topics. His recent work has included studies of high school graduates, scientists and engineers, and assessing teacher supply and demand.
THOMAS L. HILTON is senior research scientist, Division of Cognitive Assessment Research, Educational Testing Service. Since earning a Ph.D. in educational psychology from Harvard University in 1956, he has conducted research on student achievement in high school and college and on the origins and supply of scientists and engineers, as well as on other topics. He is currently pursuing studies in talent flow in higher education and persistence in science of high-ability minority students.
MARY M. KENNEDY is professor of education and director of the National Center for Research on Teacher Education at Michigan State University. She has conducted evaluative research of the Chapter 1 Compensatory Education Program and the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975, as well as research in other topics. Her recent work includes publications on teacher education. She received a Ph.D. in educational psychology from Michigan State University,
RONALD E. KUTSCHER is associate commissioner, Office of Employment Projections, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Since completing graduate study in economics at the University of Illinois in 1956, he has conducted research on economic and technological development, including implications for employment patterns and skill and education requirements of the work force, as well as in other topics. He is currently directing development of medium-term economic projections of the U.S. economy and the preparation of the Occupational Outlook Handbook.
RICHARD J. MURNANE is professor of education at the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University. Since earning a Ph.D. in economics from Yale University in 1974, he has conducted research in labor markets in education, school effectiveness and quality, as well as in other topics. He recently chaired the National Research Council's Committee on Indicators of Precollege Science and Mathematics Education. His recent research has concerned the operation of teacher labor markets and the connections between education and the productivity of the work force.
PAUL PLANCHON is associate commissioner for elementary/secondary education statistics of the National Center for Education Statistics. Since earning a M.A. in sociology and anthropology from Kent State University in 1966, he has served in several federal government positions conducting survey research on physicians and civil litigation and on educational, welfare, and income statistics, as well as on other topics. He is currently directing a number of projects on large-scale national survey research and data base development in elementary and secondary education.
ALBERT SHANKER has served as president of the American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, since 1974. Among a large number of appointments, he has been a public school teacher, president of the International Federation of Free Teachers' Unions, and a member of the National Academy of Education and the President's Education Policy Advisory Committee. Since December 1970, he has written a weekly column, ''Where We Stand,'' on education, labor, economic, and human rights issues, for the Sunday New York Times.
LEE S. SHULMAN chaired the Conference on Teacher Supply, Demand, and Quality. He is the Charles E. Ducommun professor of education at Stanford University. He served on the Faculty of Education at the Michigan State University before moving to Stanford University in 1982. He has conducted research on teaching and teacher education, as well as on other topics. He is currently investigating new strategies for the assessment of teaching at the elementary and secondary education levels. He is past president of the American Education Research Association and the current president of the National Academy of Education. He received a Ph.D. in educational psychology from the University of Chicago in 1963.
JAMES B. STEDMAN is a specialist in social legislation for the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress. Since earning an M.A. in history from Harvard University, he has performed nonpartisan research for members and committees of Congress in teacher reform, school reform, school desegregation, as well as in other topics. He has recently authored a report entitled Teachers: Issues for the 102d Congress.
JAMES M. WILSON, III, is senior project analyst and principal investigator for the Northeast Teacher Supply and Demand Study of the Institute for Social and Economic Research of the University of Massachusetts. He has conducted research on various aspects of teacher supply and demand, population forecasting, and minority access to and retention in postsecondary education. He is currently pursuing various studies of teacher supply and demand in the Northeastern region and the Virgin Islands. He earned an M.S. in resource economics from the University of Massachusetts in 1984.
ARTHUR WISE is president of the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education. Since earning a Ph.D. in educational administration from the University of Chicago, he has conducted research on legislated learning, school finance, and teacher supply and demand, as well as in other topics. He also currently serves as chair of the board of directors of the National Foundation for the Improvement of Education and as chair of the Government Liaison Committee of the American Educational Research Association.
Acknowledgments
The Committee on National Statistics and the Division of Education, Training, and Employment gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the many individuals who participated in the Conference on Teacher Supply, Demand, and Quality and gave generously of their time and knowledge.
The conference was convened in March 1991 at the request of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), the Office of Educational Research and Improvement of the U.S. Department of Education. The center's generous support of the conference and the participation of NCES staff members in the conference were essential to its success and are gratefully acknowledged. In particular, thanks are due to Emerson Elliott, acting commissioner of NCES, for his introductory remarks on the background to and purposes of the conference; to Paul Planchon, associate commissioner of NCES, for framing the relationship of the conference to NCES programs and plans; and to a number of other NCES staff members who contributed to planning the conference and these proceedings.
The contributions of several individuals to the identification and analysis of national data bases leading to the preparation of the tables of Appendix C are also recognized with appreciation. Alan Fechter of the National Research Council presented a helpful discussion of this topic at the conference and provided consultation leading to the development of this appendix. In addition, the initial review and organization of national data bases presented by W. Ross Brewer, of the Vermont Department of Education, and Stephen P. Coelen and James M. Wilson III, of the University of Massachusetts, served as the basis for developing the framework and content of Appendix C.
On behalf of all the conference participants, I want to acknowledge with gratitude the contributions of the staff. Jane Phillips and Laura Lathrop managed the logistical arrangements for the conference. Jane cheerfully and efficiently handled the numerous rounds of revisions in preparing the conference proceedings. Laura drafted many of the data base descriptions and identified the data elements relevant to teacher supply, demand, and quality in these data bases. Dorothy Gilford and Erling Boe served as codirectors of the conference. They shared responsibility for the conference, with Dorothy assuming primary responsibility for organizing the conference and administrative matters and Erling for preparing the draft proceedings. The conference report also benefited from the thoughtful comments of reviewers and the editorial assistance of Christine McShane and Eugenia Grohman of the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education.
Lee S. Shulman, Chair
Conference on Teacher Supply, Demand, and Quality