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Preliminary Highlights from the Noyce National Program Evaluation May 30, 2013

Preliminary Highlights from the Noyce National Program Evaluation May 30, 2013 Ellen Bobronnikov Cris Price. Study Overview. Implementation study examines the Noyce Program across awards from PI, Faculty, Recipients, and K-12 Administrators’ perspectives

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Preliminary Highlights from the Noyce National Program Evaluation May 30, 2013

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  1. Preliminary Highlights from the NoyceNational Program Evaluation May 30, 2013 Ellen Bobronnikov Cris Price

  2. Study Overview • Implementation study examines the Noyce Program across awards from PI, Faculty, Recipients, and K-12 Administrators’ perspectives • Data sources: Web surveys and interviews • Impact study assesses program’s impact on teacher certification and employment in high-need districts • Data sources: Teacher certification and employment data from 5 states and annual “monitoring” data entered by PIs

  3. Selected Implementation Study Research Questions • What activities do teacher preparation programs use to prepare and support Noyce recipients? • What are STEM faculty responsibilities for preparing K–12 mathematics and science teachers? • What activities do Noyce recipients engage in?

  4. Noyce Has Funded Recipients Across the Country

  5. Number of Recipients First Supported Each School Year

  6. Results: Activities to Prepare and Support Noyce Recipients • Noyce recipients in teacher preparation, including TFs, enrolled in same range of courses available/required of all students in teacher preparation • Additional activities were available to Noyce recipients • Supports for Noyce recipients who were teaching included mentoring, PD, courses, conference support • Supports for MTFs included leadership training and educational resources • Supports for interns included hands-on experience with K–12 students, courses to introduce them to teaching, and internships in various settings

  7. Results: STEM Faculty Involvement with Noyce • After receiving the Noyce award… • Over half of faculty/PI respondents reported increased STEM faculty member engagement in training STEM K–12 teachers • About a quarter of STEM faculty respondents reported changes in their teaching due to the Noyce Program (e.g., focus on active learning, adapting course content to needs of teachers)

  8. Results: Recipient Experiences While in Teacher Prep • Most recipients decided to enter K–12 teaching during or after college • Just under half decided to teach in high-need districts at the time of application to Noyce • Almost all completed student teaching in a STEM subject area, and 80% taught in a high need district • Majority of recipients reported that they felt adequately prepared for teaching responsibilities

  9. Results: Recipient Experiences While Teaching • Induction supports were primarily received in the first year of teaching, other than support for conferences, which was received throughout • Common leadership roles held by Noyce teachers included mentoring, committee service, departmental leadership, advising student/school organizations • Almost all Noyce teachers reported that they plan to complete their Noyce teaching obligation and continue teaching science/ math in a high-need school district

  10. Results: TF Experiences • TFs must be in a Master’s Program and are required to teach in a high-need district for 4 years while receiving a salary supplement • Four-fifths of TFs reported that they had decided to teach some time during or after college; one-third were career changers • Almost all TFs indicated that their teacher prep program used a cohort model and included K-12 teachers as science/math mentors; half of TFs participated in a PLC during their first year teaching

  11. Results: MTF Experiences • MTFs are required to teach in a high-need district for 5 years while receiving a salary supplement • MTFs reported involvement in leadership activities prior to Noyce, but generally reported involvement in more leadership activities post-Noyce • The majority of MTFs planned to retain both classroom AND leadership responsibilities; fewer indicated plans to assume primarily leadership roles or to shift to higher education

  12. Results: Intern Experiences • One-third of respondents who had applied for the Noyce internship had not considered teaching prior to learning about Noyce • Common internship settings included math/science camps, research labs, schools, or museums • About half of intern respondents indicated their interest in workingas a K–12 teacher increased after participating in the Noyce internship Now, a transition to impact study …

  13. Impact Study Research Questions • Does an IHE’s receipt of a Noyce grant affect its production of graduates who are certified by their state to teach STEM content? • Does an IHE’s receipt of a Noyce grant affect its production of certified STEM teachers who take teaching jobs in high-need schools? • What is the impact of Noyce on student achievement?

  14. Years to Certification and Teaching • Among allrecipients: • Nearly two-thirds had received their teaching certificate • Among those who had enough time to complete program and earn certifications (2+ years from first receipt of support): • 83% have been certified to teach • Among recipients who have had at least 2 years to find a teaching position after certification: • 90% had taught in high-need districts, in fulfillment of their service requirement

  15. Program is being implemented as intended… • Most recipients received STEM certifications and entered teaching in high-need schools (according to monitoring data) • However, this alone does not answer the question: “Would recipients have earned STEM certifications and taught in a high-need schools in the absence of the program?”

  16. Preliminary Findings from Teacher Impact Study • Two of the 5 study states had significant positive impact estimates on STEM certification and employment in high-need schools • Impact represents an additional 4-5 teachers per IHE per impact year, about what we would expect from monitoring data • Two study states had impact estimates that were not significantly different than zero • One study state had a large significant negative impact estimate

  17. Teacher Impact Study Limitations • All study states except one had small numbers of Noyce IHEs that graduated recipients early enough to be included in state datasets • Year-to-year variation in numbers of recipients who were certified and/or employed within IHEs was often large relative to the expected size of the impact per IHE per year • Impact estimates are NOT from a randomized study • The quasi-experimental comparative short interrupted time series approach that was used to estimate impacts depends on models and assumptions

  18. Next Steps • Examine state contexts to better understand the mixed findings in the teacher impact study. • Collect certification and employment data from another large state to include in teacher impact study • Collect an additional year of data from some study states • Conduct student impact analyses in 3 districts • Prepare dissemination report

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