This study examines whether subject-specific teacher certification and academic degrees are related to teacher quality. The research design exploits contemporaneous, within-student comparisons made possible by a unique feature of the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS:88). Specifically, NELS:88 contains subject-specific outcomes for eighth-grade students in two subjects as well as data on their teachers for those subjects. The analysis of these data indicates that assignment to a subject-certified teacher is associated with higher test scores. However, these gains appear to be concentrated in social studies and mathematics. Furthermore, the authors also find that subject-certified teachers are not more effective at promoting the intellectual engagement of their students but are more likely to have negative opinions of a given student's performance.
Out-of-field teaching and student achievement: Evidence from 'Matched-Pairs' comparisons
Year of Publication:
2008Publication:
Public Finance ReviewVolume/Issue:
36(1)Pages:
7-32APA Citation
(2008). Out-of-field teaching and student achievement: Evidence from 'Matched-Pairs' comparisons. Public Finance Review, 36(1), 7-32.