Are Qualified Teachers Really of Good Quality? Rethinking Teacher Quality in Kenya
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Date
2015-05
Authors
Munyaka, L. W.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Kenyatta University
Abstract
Despite general agreement about the importance of high-quality teachers, researchers, policy makers, and the public are unable to reach consensus on specific characteristics of secondary school teachers contributing to desirable educational outcomes. Policy makers are left with many questions surrounding what counts as a quality teacher—information that could be valuable in guiding policies regarding whom to hire, whom to reward, and how best to distribute teachers across schools and classrooms. Answers to these questions have potentially important implications for the efficiency and equity of public education for sustainable development. Failure by policy makers to define teacher characteristics linked to desirable education outcomes will be detrimental to educational quality trends in Kenya. This paper explores what the most important teacher characteristics are with special focus on qualification, subject matter knowledge and pedagogical content knowledge
Description
This paper was presented at the International Conference on
‘Re-Engineering Education for Sustainable Development’ held on
18th – 20th May 2015 at Kenyatta University Conference Centre (KUCC) Nairobi, Kenya
Keywords
Teacher characteristics, Academic achievements, Teacher effectiveness, Pedagogical content knowledge, Teacher quality
Citation
International Conference on ‘Re-Engineering Education for Sustainable Development’ 18th – 20th May 2015