Title: Designing Professional Development That Works
1Designing Professional Development That Works
Access Center District Information Sharing
Meeting Bea Birman April 28, 2006
2This Presentation
- Characteristics of Effective Professional
Development (PD) - District Management and Implementation of PD
- Implications for Designing and Evaluating PD
3What is High-Quality Professional Development?
- Think about a particularly effective professional
learning activity that you participated in and
the factors that made it effective. - Share with your neighbor.
4Emerging Consensus on Quality PD
- Clear mission anchored in student learning of
core discipline and skills - Analysis of student learning of specific content
in specific settings - Embodies theory of adult learning
- Develops, reinforces and sustains group work
- Active participation of school leaders and staff
- Sustains focus over timecontinuous improvement
- Models of effective practice
- Uses assessment and evaluation
- From Elmore, 2002
5What does research tell us?
- This consensus is reasonable, but few empirical
studies so far - Empirical studies discussed today support
consensus, but much more needed - Need studies that tie PD to teacher practice and
student outcomes
6Core Features of High-Quality PD
- Focus on content knowledge
- Active learning discussing classroom practice,
being observed, sharing knowledge, evaluating
student work - Coherence continuity of learning, alignment,
professional community - from National Study of Eisenhower Professional
Development Program - (Garet et al., 1999)
7Structural Features of High-Quality PD
- Type traditional vs. reform
- Duration large amount (hours) and sustained over
time - Collective Participation participation among
teachers of the same school or subject or grade
level - from National Study of Eisenhower Professional
Development Program - (Garet et al., 1999)
8Relationships PD Features and Outcomes
Sponsorship Structure Quality Outcomes
Time Span
.27
Sponsor (IHE vs District)
Focus on Content Knowledge
.08
.10
.27
.33
-.11
.08
.30
.06
Contact Hours
Active Learning
Change in Teaching Practice
Enhanced Knowledge Skill
.44
.14
.30
.21
.05
.10
.09
Type (Traditional vs Reform)
.21
.08
.42
.25
.13
Controls Schools Poverty School
Minority Teachers Gender Subject (Math
Science) Grade Level (El, Middle, High) In-field
Certification Teaching Experience
.10
.-13
Coherence
Collective Participation
.08
9Few Teachers Participate in High-Quality PD
- Regardless of focus, content or teaching
methods, the majority of teachers reported
receiving 8 or fewer hours of professional
development in the previous year. (NCES, 2005) - 95 of teachers reported attending traditional
professional development, compared to 42
reported participating in mentoring, peer
observation or coaching. Few teachers report
active learning. - But there is great variability in what districts
provide and teachers experience.
10What Shapes Quality of District-sponsored PD
Activities?
- Building a vision for professional development
- Alignment with standards and assessments
- Coordination with other programs working
together and co-funding - Implementation
- Continuous improvement indicators, needs
assessments, evaluation, and guidance to
schools and providers - Teacher participation in planning
11Effects of Management and Implementation on PD
Quality
Building a Vision Implementation Portfolio
Features
.15
.40
Alignment
Participation in Reform Types Activities
Average Duration
.12
.16
Continuous Improvement
Opportunities for Collective Participation
.14
.16
Coordination (Co-funding)
.20
Opportunities for Active Learning
Teacher Participation in Planning
.15
.20
Controls District Poverty District Size
Cluster Status Consortium Status
.17
.16
Targeting
.19
12Data for Designing High Quality PD
- Information about what students are learning
- Information about what teachers are learning
- Information about what teachers are teaching
13Professional Development Activities Log
- Number of hours spent on each activity and its
duration - Whether the activity is a one-time event or a
continuous one (i.e., recurring over a number of
months) - Type of activity (e.g., workshop, summer
institute, study group) - Purpose of activity (e.g. strengthening subject
matter knowledge) - Content focus
- Instructional practice instructional topics
covered in each activity (e.g., use of
calculators, computers or other educational
technology) - PD quality features (e.g., active learning,
coherence, collective participation) - Materials used during each activity
14Summary
- Encourage content focus, long duration,
opportunities for active learning, coherence. - Continue to emphasize alignment with standards
and assessments, co-funding of activities from
multiple programs, continuous improvement process
using data.
15Conclusions
- Large-scale change in teaching practice would
require districts and schools to be more
strategic. - Requires substantial district capacity content
knowledge, data systems and understanding data,
continuous improvement process, partnerships
(with providers and universities), resources
(financial and human). - High quality professional development may be
costly, but is a necessary investment.