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By Katherina Hruskovec

In response to growing awareness of the impact that teachers have on the quality of education and on student learning, the Human Development Network’s Education Sector at the World Bank recently launched the teachers’ component of its System Assessment and Benchmarking for Education Results (SABER).


Image taken from the website of the World Bank

SABER-teachers focuses on collecting data about teacher policies around the globe, analyzing it and then disseminating it through user-friendly tools. The primary output will be a set of 10-page country reports that classifies education systems according to eight policy goals for which all countries should aim. Other soon-to-be-released SABER products include a database allowing countries to compare teachers’ policies and a website providing access to all country reports.

The draft paper posted here “What are the teacher...
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By Katherina Hruskovec

In response to growing awareness of the impact that teachers have on the quality of education and on student learning, the Human Development Network’s Education Sector at the World Bank recently launched the teachers’ component of its System Assessment and Benchmarking for Education Results (SABER).


Image taken from the website of the World Bank

SABER-teachers focuses on collecting data about teacher policies around the globe, analyzing it and then disseminating it through user-friendly tools. The primary output will be a set of 10-page country reports that classifies education systems according to eight policy goals for which all countries should aim. Other soon-to-be-released SABER products include a database allowing countries to compare teachers’ policies and a website providing access to all country reports.

The draft paper posted here “What are the teacher policies of top-performing and rapidly-improving education systems?” by Emiliana Vegas and Alejandro Ganimian uses previous ‘benchmarking’ research to understand how top-performing and rapidly-improving education systems perform on SABER-Teachers.

The paper explains the methodology used to identify top-performing and rapidly-improving education systems, including Hong Kong, Finland, Belgium, South Korea, Japan, Hungary, Singapore, the Netherlands, Chile, Luxembourg, Israel, New Zealand and Mexico. It also evaluates how these systems perform on eight core policy goals of the SABER-teachers program.

The goals include setting clear expectations for teachers, attracting the best into teaching, preparing teachers with useful training and experience, matching teachers’ skills with students’ needs, leading teachers with strong principals, monitoring teaching and learning, supporting teachers to improve instruction, and motivating teachers to perform (Source: Vegas and Ganimian, 2011). 

Although there is variation among the different countries, some trends are evident from the authors’ analysis. For example, most successful education systems have between 550 and 650 annual hours of instruction. Additionally, in these systems, most teachers have an induction program and a base salary of between 60-80% of the GDP per capita. Also, principals devote 10-20% of their time in developing primary school teachers. These results will be complemented with additional data collected by SABER in the near future.

Meanwhile, the new SABER-teachers program promises to be a valuable and innovative tool for education policy research. It will enable countries to evaluate their systems and implement best practices to improve the quality of education worldwide.