WASHINGTON, March 23, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- More than 90
percent of all middle and high school teachers surveyed in the new
MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: Preparing Students for
College and Careers say that strengthening programs and resources
to help diverse learners with the highest needs meet college- and
career-ready standards should be a priority in education. Among
that group, 59 percent say helping diverse learners "must be done
as one of the highest priorities in education."
A large majority of parents of middle and high school students
in the survey (84 percent) say addressing the needs of diverse
learners should be a priority, including 57 percent who say it must
be done as a "highest priority" in education. Most business
executives from Fortune 1000 companies also agree that the needs of
diverse learners should be a priority (89 percent), but
significantly fewer (31 percent), in contrast to teachers and
parents, rate it among the highest priorities for education.
Many policymakers have championed a goal of graduating every
student from high school ready for college and a career regardless
of their income, race, ethnic or language background or disability
status. The new MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: Preparing
Students for College and Careers – the 27th in an annual
series commissioned by MetLife and conducted by Harris Interactive
– compares the perspectives on this emerging national goal of key
stakeholders: middle and high school teachers, students and
parents, and business executives from Fortune 1000 companies as a
voice of employers. The first part of the Survey, "Part 1: Clearing
the Path" released earlier this month, examines what college and
career ready means. Released today, "Part 2: Teaching Diverse
Learners," looks at student differences, how teachers are
addressing them, and how well students feel their needs are being
met.
Given limited resources, teachers say opportunities for
collaborative teaching (65 percent), access to online and
technology resources (64 percent), better tools for understanding
students' learning strengths and needs (63 percent) and
instructional strategies for teaching English language learners (62
percent) would have a major impact on their ability to address
different learning needs of individual students.
"We all have a role to play in ensuring that students gain the
knowledge and skills needed to be successful in their education,
careers and personal lives," said MetLife Chairman, President, and
CEO C. Robert Henrikson. "MetLife is
committed to sharing the views of teachers and others to help
launch an important discussion about priorities for education in
the 21st century."
A significant majority of middle and high school teachers (61
percent) say they are able to differentiate instruction "a great
deal" to meet the varying learning needs of students in their
classrooms. Their confidence in this ability to effectively
customize their teaching for each student, however, varies by
subject. Math teachers are the least likely (46 percent) to say
they are able to differentiate instruction a great deal to help
their students, compared with higher numbers of English teachers
(60 percent) and teachers of other non-math and English subjects
(65 percent).
Teachers' confidence in their abilities to meet the needs of
several types of learners also depends on their school. Teachers in
schools with a college-going school culture – that is, with high
proportions of students who will graduate college-ready – are more
likely than others to say they are able to differentiate
instruction. Among teachers who report that at least three-quarters
of students in their school will graduate high school ready for
college, 70 percent say they are able to differentiate instruction
a great deal. Among teachers who say less than three-quarters of
students will graduate high school ready for college, only 50
percent say the same.
While students overall give teachers a grade of B- on average
for teaching individual students according to their abilities and
needs, students who need the most help have a less positive
opinion. Students who have considered dropping out of school are
four times as likely as other students to give their teachers a
grade of D or F (45 percent vs. 11 percent). Learning-challenged
students are also more likely to give their teachers a D or F in
this area (19 percent vs. 14 percent).
The survey also examines the attitudes of parents, teachers, and
executives toward a number of solutions proposed to help improve
American education. Adult stakeholders opinions are divided as to
whether using measurements of teacher effectiveness that are based
in significant part on student achievement growth should be a
priority that takes precedence over others, given limited
resources. A majority of parents (92 percent) and executives (97
percent) believe such measurements should be a priority. However,
27 percent of teachers say that no additional resources should be
devoted to it.
"As we consider realistically how best to prepare each and every
student for success beyond high school, it is important to ask
teachers, and listen to what they tell us," said Dennis White, president and CEO of MetLife
Foundation.
About the MetLife Survey of the American Teacher:
Preparing Students for College and Careers
The MetLife Survey of the American Teacher: Preparing
Students for College and Careers, the 27th
in the series, examines the priority that all students
graduate from high school prepared for college and careers; what
being college- and career-ready entails; and the implications of
this goal for teaching. The results are based on a national survey
conducted between October 4 and November 11,
2010, of 1,000 public school teachers (grades 6-12) by
telephone, and 2,002 public school students (grades 6-12), 580
parents of public school students (grades 6-12), and 301 business
executives from Fortune 1000 companies online. The data were
weighted to key demographic variables to align with the national
population of the respective groups. No estimates of theoretical
sampling error can be calculated.
About MetLife
MetLife is a leading global provider of insurance, annuities
and employee benefit programs, serving 90 million customers in more
than 60 countries, with leading market positions in the United States, Japan, Latin
America, Asia Pacific and
Europe. MetLife Foundation places strong emphasis on education
and draws on the findings of the annual MetLife Survey of the
American Teacher to inform its grantmaking. For more information
about MetLife, please visit the company's web site at
www.metlife.com. Additional information about the
Foundation is available at www.metlife.org.
The reports for the entire series are now available online
at www.metlife.com/teachersurvey with links to the
ERIC (Education Resources Information Center) website:
http://eric.ed.gov.
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is one of the world's leading custom
market research firms, leveraging research, technology, and
business acumen to transform relevant insight into actionable
foresight. Known widely for the Harris Poll and for pioneering
innovative research methodologies, Harris offers expertise in a
wide range of industries, and serves clients in over 215 countries
and territories. For more information, please visit
www.harrisinteractive.com.
CONTACTS:
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Ted Mitchell (401)
827-3236 tjmitchell@metlife.com
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David Hammarstrom (401)
827-2273 dhammarstrom@metlife.com
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Tim Ebner (202) 955-9450 x
317 tebner@communicationworks.com
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SOURCE MetLife