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Teacher’s time-on task: Quantity and nature of tasks

Teacher’s time-on task: Quantity and nature of tasks. Deepa Sankar SASHD, The World Bank New Delhi. Organization. Context Research Questions Methodology and sample Results Time –on- Task and correlates Allocated time (School Calendar) to Teacher’s Physical presence time in school

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Teacher’s time-on task: Quantity and nature of tasks

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  1. Teacher’s time-on task: Quantity and nature of tasks Deepa Sankar SASHD, The World Bank New Delhi

  2. Organization • Context • Research Questions • Methodology and sample • Results • Time –on- Task and correlates • Allocated time (School Calendar) to Teacher’s Physical presence time in school • Teacher’s Physical Presence time to Classroom time • Instructional time and nature of tasks • Learning achievement correlates • Conclusions

  3. Classroom snapshot tool and training Jane Stallings Tool Adaptation and concurrent technical support Technical Advisory Committee DFID Acknowledgements • State Field study Teams • DIVYA DISHA (AP) • SARED (UP) • Yadharth (MP) • New Concepts (Delhi) Research Team: Venita Kaul Deepa Sankar

  4. Context • SSA goals & MDG related to education : Universal primary stage completion by 2010/2015 • Progress in elementary education; significant improvements in access and participation • Increasing attention now towards quality issues in SSA. • Provision for More teachers (PTR) • Teaching Learning Materials (TLM) • Teacher Training • Teacher attendance • Classroom processes and assessment

  5. SSA : Quality Monitoring initiatives • Quality Monitoring Tools (NCERT) • Studies examining teacher and student attendance and factors affecting learning achievement (MHRD) • “Time-on-Task” study in 5 states (MHRD) • Present study “Time-on-Task” of teachers in 3 states (World Bank with MHRD concurrence)

  6. Research Questions • International studies on teacher absenteeism have highlighted significant concerns, leading to focus on ensuring teacher presence • The assumption informing this study  Mere teacher presence will not improve outcomes unless quantity and quality of interaction time with students improves • This study, therefore ventures beyond teacher attendance to explore evidence for the following questions: • What do we know about teacher presence time in school? • What causes the gap between academic calendar and teacher presence in school? • How is teacher time distributed when she is in school? • What is the distribution of classroom time among different tasks? • What is the impact of that on students’ learning time? • How does it correlate with student’s learning outcomes?

  7. Sample • Sub-sample of government schools drawn randomly from the larger sample used for MHRD study on Teacher attendance & private schools (20% of the no of govt schools) • AP  Average state; but high on teacher absenteeism (World Bank 2002) • MP  Traditionally laggard; but low teacher absenteeism • UP  Traditionally laggard; but high on teacher absenteeism • Selection of states and sample focused on understanding issues, and not to develop average statistics for the country/states

  8. Design • School Schedule • School characteristics • Teacher’s interviews • Characteristics • Feedback on training • Perceptions on how • children learn • Difficulties experienced • FGDs with students & • Community • Perception of TOT • involvement in monitoring 360 schools Time – on - Task • Classroom • Observations on TOT & • nature of activities • Mono-grade / multi-grade • Regular / para teacher • Public / private 920 teachers Learning achievement test Grade IV • Student Profile • Household socio-economic • characteristics • Opportunity to learn at home 5040 classrooms; 73000 snapshots 4800 students in Grade IV

  9. Definitions of TOT • Allocated time: No. of days school should function as per school calendar. • Available time: Time/days schools actually run within academic year. • Teacher’s Physical presence time: Balance time within school available time, after deducting • stipulated leaves, • Days worked for other departments • training days, • Meetings within education department away from school • Teacher’s Academic time in School: Teacher’s physical presence time in school after deducting • Administrative work • Other non-academic work • Classroom Time- on-Task - Balance time

  10. Classroom observations • Proportion of teacher’s and students’ time off-task and on-task • Proportion of time-on-task by: • Nature of activity • Materials used • Students’ involved (whole class, large/small group & individual) • Multi-grade / mono-grade • Subjects • Teacher characteristics (para/ regular)

  11. International evidences • Percentage of students’ TOT range from 38% to 96% (Smyth, 1985; Anderson, Ryan and Shapiro, 1989, Perie, Baker and Bobbitt 1997; Roth et al 2003). • Average instructional time in classrooms in Brazil - 72%, Ghana, 70%, Morocco 82% and Tunisia 86% (Abazi, 2006). • Academic learning time - two-thirds of total engaged time in US classrooms (Fisher et al., 1978) • Substantial time lost in writing lessons and problems on the board, because students lacked text books in Gambia and Burkina Faso. (Dia, 2003).

  12. Evidences on TOT and learning outcome linkages • 88 percent of studies showed positive influence of time on learning (Walberg and Fredrick 1991) • Teaching time by itself a poor predictor of student achievement; effective use of time a more accurate predictor (Reimers 1993). • Improved use of time devoted to learning, by facilitating more pupil-oriented teacher behavior  significant impact on learning processes & in higher achievement levels ((Tan, Lane and Coustère 1997 in Philippines) (Verwimp 1999; Ethiopia) • School-based instructional time to be especially significant for poor children, whose out-of-school learning time was limited (Suryadi, Green and Windman (1981) • Fuller and Clarke (1994)  instructional time is one of three major areas (in addition to teacher quality and textbook availability) in which consistent achievement effects obtain.

  13. RESULTS

  14. What do we know about teacher presence time in school? Findings • Prescribed days : 220 days • On average schools reported 229 Calendar Days • From 229, 37 days were lost • only 192 days or less were spent on academic activities in school

  15. What do we know about teacher presence time in school?

  16. What causes the gap between academic calendar and teacher presence in school? School specific holidays Allocated Time (School calendar) School Functioning days (Available Time) Teacher on Any duty Teacher’s personal leave Teacher on education- dept’s work Teachers’ physical presence time in school Teacher In classrooms Teacher deputed to other dept’s work Teacher in Education related work outside school (training, meeting etc) Teacher in non-academic work At school (administrative, other)

  17. What causes the gap between academic calendar and teacher presence in school?

  18. Instructional days leakage: Examples

  19. Within teacher presence time in school, how is time distributed? Findings • Classroom teaching - 56% • Time for quality inputs  only 22% • Remedial teaching only 7% • Planning  7% • Correction & prep of tests  8%

  20. Findings from Classroom observation

  21. Categorization of Activities in classrooms

  22. What is the distribution of teacher’s time among different tasks? • Teacher teaching - 80% of the classroom time • Teacher on student centric / higher order tasks – 24% of the time • Traditional teaching  56% • 18% classrooms – all teaching time was teacher centric or rote

  23. Teacher time in multi-grade situation • In mono-grade situation, teachers is able to focus mostly on the assigned grade. • In a multi-grade situation, 65% of teacher time focused on any one class.

  24. Students’ Time on task

  25. Teacher’s TOT & Student attendance & involvement

  26. What happens in Multi-grade situation? • Findings: • 66% time students in classes other than in the • focus class are left on their own. • Left on their own, 60% off task and 40% only • are on task. This points to a serious concern

  27. TOT by teacher characteristics

  28. Learning Outcomes

  29. Approaches to study role of Time on task on learning outcomes • Studies of instructional time are mainly related to two conceptual frameworks: • The “opportunity to learn” approach  School-based process variables like instructional time, which frame and delimit pupils’ learning opportunities, are key factors in determining pupil achievement • The “school effectiveness” approach examine how teachers actually manage instructional time in the classroom. They highlight how student achievements increase in learning-rich environments in which time-on-task activities predominate and decline in less motivating and ineffective learning-environments

  30. TOT & nature of tasks: Association with learning?? • Math & Language in Grade IV • NCERT tools + items from TIMSS for Math • Number of children tested  4800

  31. Conceptual model • Student factors • Gender • Social group • SES • Repetition • Parental Education • Home help Learning Achievement Level 1: Student level • Classroom factors • Multi/ mono-grade • Student attendance • Student participation • Teacher’s time on Student centric tasks • School factors • Location • Management • Infrastructure • PTR • Trained teachers • type of teacher Level 2: School level

  32. Hierarchical Linear Modeling

  33. Findings – home factors • Socio-economic background of the student’s family and student characteristics significantly related with learning as children from diverse backgrounds attending school now. • Household environment conducive to learning positively related to learning outcomes • Support at home provides more opportunities to learn • Parental education significant ; • First generation learner at disadvantage

  34. Findings- School factors • School management and location matters • Better school infrastructure is positively related to learning • Higher PTR has negative effects • Professional training of teachers, not academic qualifications positively correlated with better learning outcomes

  35. Major findings.. – Classroom • Student attendance & classroom participation levels have significant effects • Quality of instructional time, in terms of Category I tasks (student centric learning activities) more significantly related to learning outcomes as compared to just quantum of time. • Multi-grade teaching (as practised) negatively related to learning outcomes. • Diversity and deprivation due to home factors need to be addressed in classrooms.

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