Teacher Effectiveness: Accepting the Null Hypothesis

Authors

  • James T. Sanders

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v12i3.43777

Abstract

The contemporary behavioristic analysis of teaching and teacher effectiveness has assumed that there is a necessary empirical relationship between differences in teachers' classroom behaviors and levels of student achievement. It is argued that this assumption lacks both empirical support and conceptual plausibility. The consequences of " accepting the null hypothesis" of differential teacher effectiveness are discussed with reference to their implications for teacher evaluation , teacher accountability and teacher education.  

Author Biography

James T. Sanders

James T. Sanders is an Associate Pro fessor of Educational Psychology at the University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.

Published

2018-05-11

Issue

Section

Articles