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What Makes a Good Teacher? Republicans and Democrats are Likely to Agree

Study: Support for students is one value that both Democrats and Republicans alike value in a teacher.

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If you follow , it can seem like K-12 schools in the United States are a .

Some conservative parents and advocacy groups are lobbying to from classrooms and libraries, most often those that highlight .

Some civil liberties groups, librarians and progressive parents, meanwhile, , saying they are a form of .

Parents and school boards also are clashing over a range of other issues, ranging from and which use, to whether teachers should .

Beyond this evidence of political polarization, though, there’s another, less divisive reality. Ask people to name their best teacher, and regardless of their political affiliation, they will likely offer a similar answer. Most people will say that they learned a lot from a teacher who knew them, cared about them and made learning relevant to their lives.

Over five years, from 2020 through 2025, 2,000 Americans, including Democrats, Republicans and independents, what makes a very good teacher. deep partisan divides. something rare: genuine, cross-partisan agreement.

How we ran the study

We began in 2020 with a of 334 adults, asking them to recall a teacher they learned a lot from. We then asked the survey participants to look at 10 statements that might describe a good teacher and rank them from most to least important.

Five of the statements we offered focused on relationships – like caring about students, making educational lessons relevant and giving students individualized support. The other five focused on whether teachers covered a lot of material, rewarded top performers with grades or prizes, and whether they applied rules consistently to all students.

Respondents generally focused on highlighting the same seven out of 10 statements, giving us a vision of how they perceived a very good teacher. People prioritized the same factors – how much the teachers cared about their students and whether they supported them – regardless of their age, race, gender or political affiliation. Republicans and Democrats were indistinguishable in their descriptions of effective teaching.

People did not prioritize whether teachers covered a lot of material, made students compete or ran a strict and disciplined classroom.

In 2022, we conducted a of 179 teachers in Arizona and California. The results echoed our 2020 survey participants’ view: Teachers also defined very good teachers as ones who emphasized relationships, made lessons relevant and knew the subject matter.

Given the prominence of education debates, we were a bit surprised by our results. We began to wonder: Do people privately agree on what it means to be a good teacher, but change their opinion if their image of good teaching is associated with an ideological orientation they disagree with?

A student gets a hug from a teacher at a Garden Grove, Calif., elementary school on the first day of class in September 2024. (Getty Images)

Adding a partisan label

To explore this question in late 2024 and early 2025, we ran a third experiment with a nationally representative sample of 1,562 adults from a range of political backgrounds.

We gave all participants the same description of a very good teacher, identified in our previous experiments. We then randomly noted if these descriptions of a good teacher were endorsed by Democrats, Republicans or people with no political affiliation.

When the participants read the teacher descriptions without any political labels attached, about 85% of Democrats, Republicans and independents agreed with the description of a very good teacher.

When we added a note saying that a political party the survey participant did not identify endorsed a particular description of a good teacher, they became less likely to support the statement.

The effect was sharpest among Republicans: Support fell from 85% to 64% when the description was tied to Democrats. Democrats’ agreement slipped less, from 86% to 76%, when the description was tied to Republicans.

Even with these caveats, nearly two-thirds of Republicans and Democrats still agreed on what it means to be a good teacher.

Political scientists call this : How we react to an idea depends not just on the idea, but on who we think supports it.

At the national level, education is often .

Yet at the individual level, many Americans continue to . Our findings suggest that part of this gap may be driven by how issues are framed rather than by fundamentally incompatible beliefs.

Regardless of political affiliation, people are less likely to prioritize whether teachers cover a lot of material or ran a strict and disciplined classroom. (Getty Images)

This matters more than you might think

Federal and state education policy over the past four decades, including laws like , which mandated routine federal testing in reading and math, emphasize testing and competition. These priorities don’t always match what Americans across the political spectrum say they value most.

Americans continue to differ on many important education questions, including , and .

But these disagreements coexist with a shared beliefs about what good teaching looks like in practice.

Recognizing this gap could open new possibilities for education reform. When debates focus exclusively on disagreements, they can obscure areas of agreement that might otherwise serve as starting points for collaboration.

We encourage readers to go ahead and run a similar, small experiment: Ask people about their best teacher, then listen to what they say. The answer, it turns out, is likely more unifying than you expect.The Conversation

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