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Can Principals Identify Effective Teachers? Evidence on Subjective Performance Evaluation in Education

Brian A. Jacob and Lars Lefgren ()

Journal of Labor Economics, 2008, vol. 26, pages 101-136

Abstract: We examine how well principals can distinguish between more and less effective teachers. To put principal evaluations in context, we compare them with the traditional determinants of teacher compensation—education and experience—as well as value-added measures of teacher effectiveness based on student achievement gains. We present “out-of-sample” predictions that mitigate concerns that the teacher quality and student achievement measures are determined simultaneously. We find that principals can generally identify teachers who produce the largest and smallest standardized achievement gains but have far less ability to distinguish between teachers in the middle of this distribution.

Date: 2008
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Journal of Labor Economics is edited by Derek A. Neal

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