Pago por desempeño / Incentivo salarial al desempeño
Bajo impacto, Bajo costo, Evidencia limitada
Technical Appendix
Definition
Performance pay schemes create a direct link between a teacher’s wages or bonus, and the performance of their class. A distinction can be drawn between awards, where improved performance leads to a higher permanent salary, and payment by results, where teachers get a bonus for higher test scores. These bonuses can be retrospective (payment after satisfactory pupil performance) or prospective (such as ‘loss aversion’ approaches where the bonus is given up front, but then paid back if the results are not satisfactory). A key issue is how performance is measured and how closely this is linked to outcomes for learners.
Search terms: performance/incentive pay; teacher incentives; performance-related pay; merit pay, loss aversion
Evidence Rating
There is one meta-analysis which was conducted in the last ten years. Most of the research tends to be correlational, although some studies with stronger causal warrant have emerged from the USA over the last few years. In general, it is hard to make causal claims about the benefits of performance pay on the basis of existing evidence. Overall the evidence rating is limited.
Cost Information
In the US, in one study, transfer incentive payments were $20,000 and retention bonuses $10,000, both over two years (approximately £7,600 and £3,800 per year respectively). Similar sums of between $15,000 and $5,000 have been awarded in merit pay schemes. However, in England, pay increases are usually of the order of £2,500 per teacher or £100 per pupil across a class of 25. We have used these figures to estimate the cost to schools in England. Overall cost estimates are therefore low.
References
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Evaluating the Impact of Performance-related Pay for Teachers in England
Labour Economics 16:3, pp 251-261
(2009)
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CMPO Working Paper Series No. 01/35
(2001)
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If You Pay Peanuts, Do You Get Monkeys? A Crosscountry Analysis of Teacher Pay and Pupil Performance
Economic Policy 26(65): 5-55
(2011)
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Teacher Merit Pay: What do we Know?
The Progress of Education Reform, 11(3)
(2010)
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Teacher Incentives and Student Achievement: Evidence from New York City Public Schools
National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 16850
(2011)
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Enhancing the efficacy of teacher incentives through loss aversion: A field experiment
NBER Working Paper. Cambridge, MA: NBER
(2012)
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Mathematica Policy Research, Inc./ IES
(2013)
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Evaluating the Effects of Teachers’ Group Performance Incentives on Pupil Achievement
Journal of Political Economy, 110(6), 1286-1317
(2002)
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Individual Teacher Incentives, Student Achievement and Grade Inflation
Centre for Globalization Research: Working Paper 29. Queen Mary, University of London
(2009)
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Teacher Performance Pay: Experimental Evidence from India
Journal of Political Economy, 119(1), 39 - 77
(2011)
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Teacher performance pay: A review
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26(4), 909
(2007)
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Teacher Pay for Performance: Experimental Evidence from the Project on Incentives in Teaching
Project on Incentives in Teaching, National Center on Performance Incentives
(2010a)
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District Awards for Teacher Excellence (D.A.T.E.) Program: Final Evaluation Report
National Center on Performance Incentives
(2010b)
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Teacher Performance Pay Programs
Seattle: WISPP
(2015)
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Cross-Country Evidence on Teacher Performance Pay
CESifo Working Paper No. 3151 Category 5: Economics Of Education Munich: CESifo
(2010)
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Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 35(1), 3-22
(2013)
Summary of effects
Meta-analyses | Effect size | FSM effect size | |||||||
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Washington State Institute for Public Policy (2015) |
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Single Studies | |||||||||
Fryer, R.G. (2011) |
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Fryer Jr, R. G., Levitt, S. D., List, J., and Sadoff, S. (2012) |
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Glazerman, S., Protik, A., Teh, B. R., Bruch, J., & Max, J. (2013) |
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Martins, P.S. (2009) |
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Muralidharan, K. & Sundararaman, V. (2011) |
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Weighted mean effect size | 0.02 |
The right hand column provides detail on the specific outcome measures or, if in brackets, details of the intervention or control group.
Meta-analyses abstracts
Teacher performance pay programs distribute bonuses to individual teachers and sometimes to school wide staff. Performance is usually measured as value-added student test scores alone or in combination with some other assessment (such as principal evaluations). These evaluations examine the impact on student test scores from short-term, pilot performance pay programs. 28 studies, impact on test scores 0.019.