Teacher PD – Week 10 – Reading Notes

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2015). Science Teachers Learning: Enhancing Opportunities, Creating Supportive Contexts. Committee on Strengthening Science Education through a Teacher Learning Continuum. Board on Science Education and Teacher Advisory Council, Division of Behavioral and Social Science and Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. [Read Summary, Chapters 6 & 9; also recommended: Chapter 8]

  • “A Nation at Risk” – book
    • Warned of the risks of neglecting improvements in the quality of teaching in public schools
    • Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) was a response to the book
  • Teachers are the ones who will deliver these new standards
  • Conclusions
    • Will require teachers to alter the way they teach
    • Teachers do not have adequate CK
    • Teacher PD is selected and opted-in by individual teachers
    • Teachers need better preparation
      • Differentiation
      • CK
      • PCK
    • PD programs features
      • Analysis of own practice and student work
      • Content focused
      • Alignment with district policies and practices
      • Duration
    • Online PD is effective
    • Learning occurs within and outside of school
      • PD
      • Learning communities
      • Coaching
      • etc…
    • Schools need to be supportive of PD
    • PD must be contextualized
    • Administration’s support is central to advance learning
    • Teacher leaders – support and train new
    • Closing the gap – must attend to teacher’s different learning needs
    • US lacks a coherent and well-articulated system for PD
  • Recommendations for Practice and Policy
    • Understand what are the current teacher learning opportunities
    • Support teacher PD within own context
    • PD outside of school and embedded in the work day
    • Use research-based PD
      • Clear learning goals for teachers
      • Content specific
      • Student specific
      • Link to classroom instruction analysis
      • Interact with peers
      • Analyze data on student’s learning
      • Opportunities for collaboration
    • Develop internal capacity & partner with external expertise
    • Revise policies to encourage teacher learning opportunities
    • Explore new formats and media for teacher learning
  • Chapter 6 – Professional Development Programs
    • Definition
      • Purposefully designed to support particular kinds of teacher change
      • Include a focused, multi day session for teachers that takes place outside of the teacher’s classroom or school
      • May include follow-up opportunities over the school year
      • Have a finite duration (although they can take place over a period of 2 to 3 years)
    • Several PD opportunities in catalogue (over 1000 in 1 year)
      • Disjointed and incoherent
    • Core features of research-based PD
      • Focus on content
        • Subject matter content
        • How students learn that content
      • Active learning
        • Observing expert teachers
        • Reviewing student work
        • Leading discussions
      • Coherence with learning activities
        • Aligned with other learning opportunities
        • Aligned with school, district, and state policies
    • Structural features of research-based PD
      • Form of the activity
      • Collective participation of teachers from the same school, grade, or subject
      • Duration of the activity
        • Total number of hours
        • Span of time
    • Summary
      • PD can lead to sustainable changes in teacher’s knowledge and beliefs and their instruction
      • Little research that links directly to student outcomes – but seems to work
      • More to add to the consensus model
        • Content learning is intertwined with pedagogical activities such as analysis of practice. (Heller et al., 2012; Roth et al., 2011).
        • Analysis of student learning – artifacts of practice: student work and lesson videos (Greenleaf et al., 2011; Heller et al., 2012; Roth et al., 2011)
        • Focus on teaching strategies (Greenleaf et al., 2011; Johnson and Fargo, 2010; Penuel et al., 2011; Roth et al., 2011).
        • Reflect on and grapple with challenges to their current practice (Greenleaf et al., 2011; Johnson and Fargo, 2010; Penuel et al., 2011; Roth et al., 2011).
        • Scaffolded by knowledgeable professional development leaders (Greenleaf et al., 2011; Heller et al., 2012; Penuel et al., 2011; Roth et al., 2011).
        • Analytical tools support collaborative, focused, and deep analysis of science teaching, student learning, and science content (Greenleaf et al., 2011; Roth et al., 2011).
      • Must have better designed PD research
        • Research Design
          • “Few studies used strong research designs incorporating pre-post measures of both sets of outcomes shown in Figure 6-1 (teachers’ knowledge and instruction and students’ learning) and a control or comparison group.”
        • Research Scope and missing data
          • No studies look at schools organization and context
          • No studies look at role and expertise of PD providers and facilitators
      • Online Programs
        • Explosion of PD programs offered in this media
        • Still little research on it – early stages
        • Most programs use social constructivist approach
          • Problem-based learning
          • Inquiry-based learning
          • Mentoring
          • Communities of Practice
        • Most research is Qualitative – need more Quantitative?
        • Still need expert guidance and facilitation – open discussion forum is not enough (same as face-to-face efforts)
        • Teachers are more reflective online than on face-to-face
        • Technocentricity – online is not enough – has to be well designed in the first place
    • Conclusions
      • Evidence is still not very robust
      • Few studies employ control or comparison groups
      • Most studies look at 1 study, in 1 location, with few volunteer teachers

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  • Chapter 9 – Conclusions, Recommendations, and Directions for Research
    • Need better designed PD
    • Need better policies and practices in schools
    • Need support from Administrators
    • Recommendations for Research
      • Create system to collect data on
        • Current workforce
          • Qualifications
          • Experience
          • Preparation
        • General trends and consensus of best-practices
        • PD opportunities
      • Improve research methods
        • Include more quantitative data
        • Use control or comparison groups
      • More research on
        • Professional learning communities
        • Mentoring
        • Coaching
        • Online Learning
        • Teacher Networks
        • Teacher evaluation
        • School Organization
        • School Context
        • Principal and Leaders influence in PD
      • Formal Recommendations
        • 1: Focus Research on Linking Professional Learning to Changes in Instructional Practice and Student Learning
        • 2: Invest in Improving Measures of Science Instruction and Science Learning
        • 3: Design and Implement Research That Examines a Variety of Approaches to Supporting Science Teachers’ Learning
        • 4: Commit to Focusing on Meeting the Needs of Diverse Science Learners Across All Research on Professional Development
        • 5: Focus Research on Exploring the Potential Role of Technology
        • 6: Design and Implement Research Focused on the Learning Needs of Teacher Leaders and Professional Development Providers

The New Teaching Project (2015). The Mirage: Confronting the hard truth about our quest for teacher development. New York: TNTP. [Read through the Recommendations; no need to read appendices.]

  • Findings (“In short, we bombard teachers with help, but most of it is not helpful—to teachers as professionals or to schools seeking better instruction.)
    • Districts are making a massive investment in teacher improvement—far larger than most people realize.
    • Despite these efforts, most teachers do not appear to improve substantially from year to year—even though many have not yet mastered critical skills
    • Even when teachers do improve, we were unable to link their growth to any particular development strategy.
    • School systems are not helping teachers understand how to improve—or even that they have room to improve at all.
  • Recommendations
    • REDEFINE what it means to help teachers improve
      • Define “development” clearly, as observable, measurable progress toward an ambitious standard for teaching and student learning.
      • Give teachers a clear, deep understanding of their own performance and progress.
      • Encourage improvement with meaningful rewards and consequences.
    • REEVALUATE existing professional learning supports and programs
      • Inventory current development efforts.
      • Start evaluating the effectiveness of all development activities against the new definition of “development.”
      • Explore and test alternative approaches to development.
      • Reallocate funding for particular activities based on their impact.
    • REINVENT how we support effective teaching at scale
      • Balance investments in development with investments in recruitment, compensation and smart retention.
      • Reconstruct the teacher’s job.
      • Redesign schools to extend the reach of great teachers.
      • Reimagine how we train and certify teachers for the job.

Hill, H.C. (2015). Review of The Mirage: Confronting the hard truth about our quest for teacher development. Boulder, CO. National Education Policy Center.

  • “… public districts invest heavily in teacher professional development, what is offered is often a poor fit to teacher needs and ultimately ineffective as a means to improving teacher evaluation scores.”
  • “… mis-match between the behaviors rewarded by teacher evaluation and the professional development features…”

Story 2: Fired, Hired, and Inspired by Kathleen Aldred

  • The story of “Mr.Z”, a ‘late-hire’ who missed the PD and involvement with the the New Teacher Institute
  • Rowdy students would not respond to his instructions
  • Previously a chef – received no teacher training
  • “Do now” strategy to quiet students down – shook hands of all incoming students
  • Teacher evaluation went bad
  • Fired
  • Re-hired by a more ‘progressive’ school