|
This article has been retrieved
times since October 29, 2004
Volume 12 Number 61
|
October 29, 2004
|
ISSN 1068-2341
|
The Support Gap:
New Teachers’ Early Experiences in High-Income
and Low-Income Schools
Susan Moore Johnson
Harvard University
Susan M. Kardos
Brandeis University
David Kauffman
Harvard University
Edward Liu
Rutgers University
Morgaen L. Donaldson
Harvard University
Citation:
Johnson, S. M., Kardos, S. M., Kauffman, D., Liu, E. & Donaldson, M. L.
(2004, October 29). The support gap: New teachers’ early experiences in high-income
and low-income schools. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 12(61). Retrieved
[date] from http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v12n61/.
Abstract
In this article, the authors consider three sources of support for new
teachershiring practices, relationships with colleagues, and curriculumall
found in earlier research to influence new teachers’ satisfaction with their
work, their sense of success with students, and their eventual retention in
their job. They find that a "support gap" exists: new teachers in low-income
schools are less likely than their counterparts in high-income schools to
experience timely and information-rich hiring, to benefit from mentoring
and support by experienced colleagues, and to have a curriculum that is
complete and aligned with state standards, yet flexible for use in the
classroom. Such patterns of difference between high-income and lowincome
schools warrant careful consideration because they reveal broad
patterns of inequity, which can have severe consequences for low-income
students. Survey data for this study were collected from random samples of
teachers in five states. One survey, focusing on hiring practices and teachers’
relationships with colleagues, was administered to 374 first-year and secondyear
teachers in Florida, Massachusetts, and Michigan. A second survey,
focusing on curriculum, was administered to 295 second-year elementary
school teachers in Massachusetts, North Carolina, and Washington. The
inequitable patterns of support for teachers reported here have important
implications for the work of state policymakers, school district
administrators, and principals. The authors describe these and offer
recommendations for policy and practice in the conclusion.
|
Access this article in PDF format.
|
The World Wide Web address for the Education
Policy Analysis Archives is
epaa.asu.edu
Editor: Gene V Glass, Arizona State University
Production Assistant: Chris Murrell, Arizona State
University
General questions about appropriateness of topics
or particular articles may be addressed to the Editor,
Gene
V Glass, glass@asu.edu or
reach him at College of Education, Arizona State University,
Tempe, AZ 85287-2411.
The Commentary Editor is Casey D. Cobb:
casey.cobb@unh.edu.
EPAA Editorial Board
EPAA Spanish & Portuguese Language Editorial Board
Associate Editors
Gustavo E. Fischman
Arizona State University
& Pablo Gentili Laboratório de Políticas Públicas
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
Argentina
- Alejandra Birgin
Ministerio de Educación, Argentina
Email: abirgin@me.gov.ar
- Mónica Pini
Universidad Nacional de San Martin, Argentina
Email: mopinos@hotmail.com,
- Mariano Narodowski
Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, Argentina
Email:
- Daniel Suarez
Laboratorio de Politicas Publicas-Universidad de Buenos
Aires, Argentina Email: daniel@lpp-buenosaires.net
Brasil
- Gaudêncio Frigotto
Professor da Faculdade de Educação e do Programa de
Pós-Graduação em Educação da Universidade
Federal Fluminense, Brasil Email: gfrigotto@globo.com
- Vanilda Paiva
Email:vppaiva@terra.com.br
- Lilian do Valle
Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Email: lvalle@infolink.com.br
- Romualdo Portella do Oliveira
Universidade de São Paulo,
Brasil Email: romualdo@usp.br
- Roberto Leher
Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Email: rleher@uol.com.br
- Dalila Andrade de Oliveira
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo
Horizonte, Brasil
Email: dalila@fae.ufmg.br
- Nilma Limo Gomes
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte
Email: nilmagomes@uol.com.br
- Iolanda de Oliveira
Faculdade de Educação da Universidade Federal
Fluminense, Brasil
Email: iolanda.eustaquio@globo.com
- Walter Kohan
Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Email: walterko@uol.com.br
Canadá
-
Daniel Schugurensky
Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education, University of Toronto, Canada
Email: dschugurensky@oise.utoronto.ca
Chile
- Claudio Almonacid Avila
Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la
Educación, Chile
Email: caa@rdc.cl
- María Loreto Egaña
Programa Interdisciplinario de Investigación en
Educación (PIIE), Chile
Email: legana@academia.cl
España
- José Gimeno Sacristán
Catedratico en el Departamento de Didáctica y
Organización Escolar de la Universidad de Valencia, España
Email: Jose.Gimeno@uv.es
- Mariano Fernández Enguita
Catedrático de Sociología en la Universidad de
Salamanca. España
Email: enguita@usal.es
- Miguel Pereira
Catedratico Universidad de Granada, España
Email: mpereyra@aulae.es
-
Jurjo Torres Santomé
Universidad de A Coruña
Email: jurjo@udc.es
- Angel Ignacio Pérez Gómez
Universidad de Málaga
Email: aiperez@uma.es
México
- Hugo Aboites
Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Xochimilco,
México
Email: aavh4435@cueyatl.uam.mx
- Susan Street
Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en
Antropologia Social Occidente, Guadalajara, México
Email: slsn@mail.udg.mx
-
Adrián Acosta
Universidad de Guadalajara
Email: adrianacosta@compuserve.com
-
Teresa Bracho
Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económica-CIDE
Email: bracho dis1.cide.mx
-
Alejandro Canales
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Email: canalesa@servidor.unam.mx
-
Rollin Kent
Universidad Autónoma de Puebla. Puebla, México
Email: rkent@puebla.megared.net.mx
Perú
- Sigfredo Chiroque
Instituto de Pedagogía Popular, Perú
Email: pedagogia@chavin.rcp.net.pe
- Grover Pango
Coordinador General del Foro Latinoamericano de Políticas
Educativas, Perú
Email: grover-eduforo@terra.com.pe
Portugal
- Antonio Teodoro
Director da Licenciatura de Ciências da Educação e do
Mestrado Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias, Lisboa,
Portugal
Email: a.teodoro@netvisao.pt
USA
- Pia Lindquist Wong
California State University,
Sacramento, California Email: wongp@csus.edu
- Nelly P. Stromquist
University of Southern California, Los Angeles,
California Email: nellystromquist@juno.com
- Diana Rhoten
Social Science Research Council,
New York, New York Email: rhoten@ssrc.org
- Daniel C. Levy
University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, New York
Email: Dlevy@uamail.albany.edu
-
Ursula Casanova
Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona
Email: casanova@asu.edu
-
Erwin Epstein
Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois
Email: eepstei@wpo.it.luc.edu
-
Carlos A. Torres
University of California, Los Angeles
Email: torres@gseisucla.edu
|
|
|