International Journal of Emerging and Disruptive Innovation in Education : VISIONARIUM
Research Highlights
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The Problem: The researcher addresses how specific policy-relevant teacher quality levers—namely pre-service training, formal teacher education background, and cumulative teaching experience—influence the reading and mathematics achievement of primary school students within the low-capacity education system of Cambodia.
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The Method: The study applies an ordinary least squares regression framework to an empirical education production function model utilizing 3,028 grade five student observations spanning 2,813 rural and 215 urban school settings from the 2019 Southeast Asia Primary Learning Metrics assessment dataset.
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Quantitative Finding: Teacher pre-service training is positively correlated with student achievement in mathematics at a coefficient of 2.52 (p < 0.01) and reading at a coefficient of 2.08 (p < 0.05); advanced formal teacher education credentials including upper secondary certificates (coefficients of 6.88 math; 6.35 reading), bachelor's degrees (4.83 math; 3.88 reading), and master's or doctoral degrees (6.47 math; 7.09 reading) display statistically significant positive relationships with student scores compared to primary-level teacher education; teacher experience of 1–5 years or 6 or more years shows no measurable or statistically significant effect on student outcomes; student socioeconomic status relates positively to achievements with a coefficient of 5.81 for mathematics and 6.60 for reading (p < 0.01); non-repetition correlates with positive performance shifts of 6.25 in mathematics and 6.13 in reading (p < 0.01); urban school locations link to positive adjustments of 15.97 in mathematics and 10.62 in reading (p < 0.01); male student gender reflects negative outcome coefficients of -1.75 in mathematics and -4.71 in reading (p < 0.01).
Abstract
The relationship between teacher quality and student learning achievement remains complex and somewhat inconsistent across the literature. For example, Roorda et al. found that the association between teacher–student relationship quality and student achievement was positive in most studies, but negative in others. Similarly, Yang and Kaiser reported that teaching quality showed significantly positive, non-significant, and even significantly negative relationships with student learning outcomes. In the Cambodian context, Chhin and Tabata examined the relationship between teacher quality and student achievement and found that teacher economic status, job satisfaction, and teaching experience significantly influenced student learning outcomes; however, these variables explained only 20 percent of the variance in student achievement. These mixed findings highlight the importance of further investigating the factors underlying the relationship between teacher quality and student learning outcomes.
Therefore, this study examines the relationship between teacher quality and students’ academic achievement in reading and mathematics among Grade 5 primary school students in Cambodia. Specifically, the study focuses on three teacher-related variables: teaching experience, educational background, and pre-service training. The analysis is guided by the education production function model to examine how these teacher characteristics influence students’ learning achievement. This study employs a quantitative research design using data from the Southeast Asia Primary Learning Metrics conducted in 2019 across six Southeast Asian developing countries, which assessed Grade 5 students’ performance in mathematics, reading, and writing.
The findings indicate that students’ socio-economic status (SES), non-repeater status, and attendance at urban schools are positively and significantly associated with both mathematics and reading achievement. In contrast, male students show lower performance than female students in both subjects. Parents’ educational attainment demonstrates a partial association with students’ academic performance. Regarding teacher characteristics, students taught by teachers with pre-service training perform significantly better than those taught by teachers without such training. Similarly, compared with teachers who completed only primary education, teachers with lower secondary, upper secondary, bachelor’s, master’s, or doctoral qualifications are more likely to positively influence students’ mathematics and reading achievement. However, teaching experience does not show a statistically significant relationship with student achievement in either subject, regardless of whether teachers have 1–5 years or more than 6 years of teaching experience. This suggests that teaching experience alone may not be sufficient to improve student learning outcomes.
When comparing rural and urban contexts, the results show that teachers with pre-service training are positively associated with students’ mathematics achievement in rural schools only. Meanwhile, teachers with higher educational qualifications demonstrate positive associations with student achievement in both rural and urban schools. However, teaching experience remains statistically insignificant across both contexts.
Future research should further explore how school and household environments interact to support children’s academic development. In addition, the use of richer longitudinal or panel data would allow the application of fixed-effects models, which may provide more robust and reliable estimates of the relationship between teacher quality and student learning achievement.
Recommended Citation
Hoeun, Sreymech
(2026)
"An Analysis of Teacher Quality and Primary School Students’ Learning Achievements in Cambodia,"
International Journal of Emerging and Disruptive Innovation in Education : VISIONARIUM: Vol. 4:
Iss.
1, Article 8.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.62608/2831-3550.1051
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.lindenwood.edu/ijedie/vol4/iss1/8
Date
2026/05/12
Included in
Arts and Humanities Commons, Educational Leadership Commons, Elementary Education Commons, Elementary Education and Teaching Commons, Other Teacher Education and Professional Development Commons