Abstrak
Teacher Certification in Indonesia: A Confusion of Means and Ends
Mohamad Fahmi, Achmad Maulana, Arief Anshory Yusuf
Universitas Padjadjaran, Prosiding Riset Kebijakan Pendidikan Anak di Indonesia Prosiding ini disusun berdasarkan seminar riset yang dilaksanakan di The Aryaduta Lippo Village, Tangerang 17 November 2011
Bahasa Indonesia, Bahasa Inggris
Universitas Padjadjaran, Prosiding Riset Kebijakan Pendidikan Anak di Indonesia Prosiding ini disusun berdasarkan seminar riset yang dilaksanakan di The Aryaduta Lippo Village, Tangerang 17 November 2011
impact evaluation, Indonesia, propensity score matching, teacher certification
In 2006 Indonesia started implementing a nation-wide program of teacher certification with the aim to certify as many as 2.3 million teachers by 2015 with the budgetary cost of as much as US$5.6 billion. Using data from a teacher survey, we applied two different impact evaluation techniques, namely Propensity Score Matching (PSM) and Difference-in-Difference (DD) to evaluate the impact of certification. These techniques can be used to estimate the difference in student’s performance (in this casenational exam score) attributed to the certification. Both methods suggest that teacher certification has no impact on student’s achievement. The Certification program may have improved teacher’s living standard as remuneration increase is an elemental part of it, yet its formally-stated goal to improve the quality of education as should be indicated in better students’ performance may not have been achieved. This program, being the largest in the nation’s history, may have confused means and ends. We propose some policy recommendations. Two of them are: first, the government should implement a reward and punishment scheme to motivate teachers to continuously perform well; second, the government should introduce a teacher performance indicator as close as possible to student’s performance as key evaluation criteria, and the reward-punishment scheme must be based on these criteria.