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What do we know about teachers’ selection and professional development in high-performing countries?

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  • OECD

Abstract

High-performing countries use various mechanisms to select the best candidates to the teaching profession. In Finland, Hong-Kong (China), Macao (China) and Chinese Taipei, students who wish to enter teacher-training programmes must pass a competitive entry examination. In Japan, teaching graduates must pass a competitive examination to start teaching and in Singapore, they must complete a probation period. These requirements, however, are also found among some low-performing countries suggesting that early selection, while important, is not enough to ensure a highly qualified teaching force.Across OECD countries, the proportion of fully certified teachers has a positive, albeit modest association with student performance in PISA.In countries that performed above the OECD average in science, at least 80% of the students are in schools that invite specialists to conduct teacher training or organise in-service workshops for teachers or where teachers cooperate with each other. This is higher, on average, than what is observed among other countries.

Suggested Citation

  • Oecd, 2017. "What do we know about teachers’ selection and professional development in high-performing countries?," PISA in Focus 70, OECD Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:oec:eduddd:70-en
    DOI: 10.1787/87acdc87-en
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