A Foot in the Door: Exploring the Role of Student Teaching Assignments in Teachers’ Initial Job Placements

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
A Foot in the Door: Exploring the Role of Student Teaching Assignments in Teachers’ Initial Job Placements
Abstract
We use data from Washington State to examine two stages of the teacher pipeline: the placement of prospective teachers into student teaching assignments and the hiring of prospective teachers into their first teaching positions. We find that prospective teachers are likely to complete their student teaching near their college and hometowns but that prospective teachers’ student teaching positions are much more predictive of their first teaching positions than their hometowns. This suggests that student teaching assignments may contribute to the “draw of home” in new teacher hiring. We also find that more qualified prospective teachers tend to student teach in more advantaged districts, suggesting that patterns in student teaching assignments may contribute to the inequitable distribution of teacher quality.
Publication
Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis
Volume
38
Issue
2
Pages
364-388
Date
2016-06-01
Journal Abbr
Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis
Language
en
ISSN
0162-3737
Short Title
A Foot in the Door
Accessed
16/05/2022, 11:20
Library Catalogue
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: American Educational Research Association
Citation
Krieg, J. M., Theobald, R., & Goldhaber, D. (2016). A Foot in the Door: Exploring the Role of Student Teaching Assignments in Teachers’ Initial Job Placements. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 38(2), 364–388. https://doi.org/10.3102/0162373716630739