Rating Teachers Cheaper, Faster, and Better: Not So Fast

Published: 
May. 02, 2015

Source: Journal of Teacher Education, 66(3), p. 288-293, May/June 2015

This article evaluates the work of Gargani and Strong, who claim to have developed and validated an observation system that requires only 4 hr of training, but one that can identify effective teachers using just 20 min of one video-taped lesson.
They further contend that their six-item inventory requires little judgment from those who use it.
They describe their instrument, the Rapid Assessment of Teacher Effectiveness (RATE), as better, faster, and cheaper than other available instruments.

Although the authors find some aspects of their work (e.g., their work describing instrument development) as well done, they find, more generally, that their claims are premature and inflated.
Their work suffers from several problems including inattention to relevant historical work, no demonstrated ecological validity, no working theory, and lacks a clear conception of what RATE is. At this stage of development, the authors rate RATE as having limited, if any, capacity for improving teaching.

Updated: Dec. 06, 2015
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