The authors of this book argue that teacher effectiveness is too narrowly conceptualized and methods of measuring it are not attuned to the real contexts in which teachers work. They propose a model of differential teacher effectiveness which takes into account that
* teachers may be more effective with some categories of students than with others
* teachers may be more effective with some teaching contexts than others, and
* teachers may be more effective with some subjects or components than with others.
Jim Campbell is Professor of Education at the University of Warwick.
L. Kyriakides is Lecturer in Educational Assessment and Evaluation at Warwick.
Daniel Muijs is Lecturer in Quantitative Research Methods at the University of Warwick.
Wendy Robinson is Lecturer in Education at the University of Warwick.
Part 1: The background to teacher effectiveness research 1. Differentiated teacher effectiveness: Framing the concept 2. The range of teachers' work 3. Historical models of teacher effectiveness 4. Review of current research in educational effectiveness Part 2: Towards a differentiated model 5. A critique of teacher effectiveness research 6. developing a model of differentiated teacher effectiveness 7. Evidence in support of differentiated teacher effectiveness 8. Building theory and methodology Part 3: Values and policy implications 9. Effective teaching and values 10. Differentiated teacher effectiveness and teacher appraisal 11. Exploring policy implications Part 4: Differentiated teacher effectiveness research: The model in practice 12. A study of differentiated effectiveness