Aimee Craig

Chalkboard Project Communications Manager

Aimee Craig received her Bachelors from Lewis and Clark College in May 2006 and began with the Chalkboard Project in December 2006 as the Information and Technology Coordinator. After marrying her best friend in 2008, she attended the University of Chicago and received a Masters in Religious Studies. Missing the Northwest and believing that the creation of a progressive, thoughtful, critically-thinking community requires an equitable, high-quality education system, she returned to Chalkboard in July 2009 to take on the role of Communications Manager. Aimee’s husband is a 7th grade teacher and together they plan to do their part to strengthen education in Oregon.

There have been a number of different studies that explored the impact of educators on student achievement. Now many researchers have turned to the question of measuring effective teaching. How do you know it when you see it? What can we learn from highly effective educators?

A recent study by Tom Kane, Eric Taylor, John Tyler, and Amy Wooten set out to answer the question: Is there a correlation between teacher gain in classroom observation scores and gains in student achievement?

Using data from Cincinnati’s teacher evaluation system from 2000 through the end of the 2009 school year, the researchers found, in short, the answer is yes.

The Cincinnati evaluation system entails four separate classroom observations per school year during a teacher’s evaluation cycle. Teachers are graded on 1-to-4 scale on a number of different standards. With teachers that achieved an improved rank at least one point up on the scale, researchers also saw some gains in the reading and math achievement of their students.

The research seems to indicate, then, that there is a correlation between improved teacher evaluation scores and improved learning. The conclusion suggests that classroom observations and evaluations may actually be a good measure of teaching as it relates to student achievement.

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