We use publicly available, longitudinal data from Washington state to study the extent to which three interrelated processes—teacher attrition from the state teaching workforce, teacher mobility between teaching positions, and teacher hiring for open positions—contribute to “teacher quality gaps” (TQGs) between students of color and other students in K–12 public schools. Specifically, we develop and implement an agent-based model simulation of decisions about attrition, mobility, and hiring to assess the extent to which each process contributes to observed TQGs. We find that eliminating inequities in teacher mobility and hiring across different schools would close TQGs within 5 years, while just eliminating inequities in teacher hiring would close gaps within 10 years. On the other hand, eliminating inequities in teacher attrition without addressing mobility and hiring does little to close gaps.
How Did It Get This Way? Disentangling the Sources of Teacher Quality Gaps Through Agent-Based Modeling
Keywords
Teacher Quality Gaps, TQGs, Teacher Attrition, Teacher Mobility, Teacher Hiring
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/pgkj-sa84
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Goldhaber, Dan, Matt Kasman, Vanessa Quince, Roddy Theobald, and Malcolm Wolff. (). How Did It Get This Way? Disentangling the Sources of Teacher Quality Gaps Through Agent-Based Modeling. (EdWorkingPaper:
-552). Retrieved from
Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/pgkj-sa84