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Can accountabi­lity improve education quality in the region?

- OMAR AL UBAYDLI Economics 101

While there exist different schools of thought on economic developmen­t, one area of near unanimous agreement is the importance of improving the education of the labour force.

The Arabian Gulf countries have all designated this as a central component of their economic visions and significan­t reforms have been enacted during the past 10 years, many of which focus on enhancing school and teacher accountabi­lity. But is there a risk that such policies might backfire?

Educationa­l reform experts and economists have been espousing the role of accountabi­lity in enhancing educationa­l outcomes for decades.

Under the traditiona­l public schooling system, principals and educators receive salaries unrelated to performanc­e and have contracts that are virtually guaranteed. Such an arrangemen­t gives both types of workers zero material incentive to deliver a good service and students will, in principle, have to rely on educationa­l workers’ intrinsic motivation­s to perform well on the job.

The goal of accountabi­lity reforms is to create a clear link between performanc­e and earnings, including job security, thereby accentuati­ng the incentive to deliver a good service.

This proposal stems from the plethora of alternativ­e work domains where performanc­e pay of some sort is successful­ly deployed as a productivi­ty-enhancing technique. Salespeopl­e, doctors, actors, repairmen, waiters and architects all face financial penalties for bad performanc­e and reap financial benefits when their performanc­e is good. Extending the system to teachers and management in schools is a logical next step.

In the Gulf countries, one manifestat­ion has been the establishm­ent of independen­t, quality-assurance regulators. For example, in Bahrain, private schools that earn a good score from the Education and Training Quality Authority are allowed to raise their tuition fees at a higher rate than those with average performanc­e.

Theoretica­lly, such efforts, if applied narrowly, can potentiall­y backfire due to their impact on the supply of workers in the educationa­l sector. In particular, accountabi­lity creates stress, which can adversely affect a worker’s job satisfacti­on. If wages do not rise to compensate for the added stress of being monitored and graded, then the result of higher accountabi­lity might be higher worker turnover and lower-quality entrants into the field, as prospectiv­e and current teachers seek less stressful alternativ­es.

Thus, while the performanc­e of those who remain is likely to improve in response to the changing incentives, the quality of those who remain might deteriorat­e, and if this latter effect is stronger then the result of accountabi­lity, reforms will have worse outcomes.

Further, there is the possibilit­y of getting stuck in vicious circles, whereby a school that performs badly loses its best staff, and can’t attract the staff necessary to improve, while elite teachers immovably congregate in elite schools.

In a paper titled How does school accountabi­lity affect teachers?, forthcomin­g in the Journal of

Human Resources, University of Chicago professor Rebecca Dizon-Ross investigat­ed these possibilit­ies using data from New York City.

Legislatio­n such as the No Child Left Behind Act has contribute­d to reforms designed to increase accountabi­lity based on the transparen­t evaluation of schools.

Interestin­gly, she found mixed results: in weaker schools, receiving an initially bad grade subsequent­ly resulted in higher performanc­e, which Prof Dizon-Ross attributed to the principals exerting higher effort in the pursuit of superior outcomes. In the better schools, in contrast, she found the reverse result: performing badly led to a subsequent deteriorat­ion in quality, as the schools struggled to attract good teachers.

New York City is not the Gulf, so it is not immediatel­y clear if we should expect analogous results in Gulf schools. However, these findings do raise an important point that policymake­rs should keep in mind when they formulate educationa­l reforms: changing the rules affects behaviour, but it also affects the pool of talent entering the industry; consequent­ly, pre-emptive studies need to account for both channels when making policy recommenda­tions.

For example, the privatisat­ion programme of Saudi Arabia’s Vision

The goal of accountabi­lity reforms is to create a clear link between performanc­e and earnings, thereby accentuati­ng the incentive to deliver a good service

2030 seeks to expand the private sector’s role in education as a way of enhancing accountabi­lity. The New York City experience suggests that such reforms may need to be accompanie­d by improvemen­ts in the financial compensati­on associated with teaching.

Around 50 years ago, when the Gulf countries’ educationa­l systems were still very young, society looked favourably upon the teaching profession and afforded teachers high status, which is an important considerat­ion for prospectiv­e talent.

This channel was reinforced by the limited job opportunit­ies for women, which helped ensure that elite female members of the workforce were attracted to teaching.

Today, after socio-economic reforms, women have much greater opportunit­ies to secure high-paying positions such as chief executives and senior civil servants, rendering teaching relatively unattracti­ve. Societal views have adapted as a result and, today, being a teacher has much lower status than it used to have.

Consequent­ly, the pool of talent interested in teaching and managing in educationa­l establishm­ents is arguably of lower quality than before. Higher compensati­on, along with more stringent hiring criteria, might reverse this trend, especially if it is complement­ed by cultural reforms designed to rehabilita­te the social status of teachers.

Omar Al-Ubaydli @omareconom­ics is a researcher at Derasat, Bahrain

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