Results from a Survey of Teach For America Corps Members, November 2005
I don't think the public at large
understands to what extent schools have control over their own success. I believe that a school can create a culture of
achievement and have success with even the most difficult and academically challenged student
populations.![]()
- - 4th Grade Teacher, New York City Corps
There is growing consensus among educators and policy makers that the gap in academic outcomes that exists along socioeconomic and racial lines is the most pressing educational challenge of our day. Given their daily work teaching in public schools in our nation's lowest-income urban and rural communities, Teach For America teachers—or "corps members"—bring a valuable perspective to the public discussion of this achievement gap.
This report is the result of a survey of nearly 2,000 of these teachers finishing their first and second years in the classroom, along with almost 200 incoming corps members who were just beginning their training. The survey addressed corps members' beliefs about causes of and solutions to the achievement gap, as well as their own experiences in the classroom.
Teach For America corps members work alongside thousands of committed, talented teachers in our nation's lowest-income urban and rural communities. We hope that in thinking about education reform, policy makers and the general public alike will draw on the perspectives of these teachers working on a daily basis to close the achievement gap for their students.
The topics addressed in the survey are complex, and corps members' responses reflected that complexity. At the same time, very strong trends emerged from the survey data. Of particular note were these key findings: